This novel gave me layers, layers, and more layers! But first, let’s talk about the beginning. The reader is immediately thrown into the shocking detail of Julia, our heroine's, way of making a living. Immediately, I knew I wasn’t in for an easy breezy read. Julia is a Jew, trying to survive in occupied Amsterdam during World War II, but she is discovered, arrested and shipped to a Jewish prison camp, The Paradise Ghetto, a place for ‘privileged’ Jews. Here she meets Suzanne, and an intense relationships develops between the two girls. They decide to write a book together as a way of coping with the atrocities around them, and soon it becomes a way of exploring their feelings and confronting the hidden demons of their pasts. They decide for it to be a revenge story, where they are able to pour out their anger and hurt into their characters, and take vengeance on the perpetrators. Their story takes us along the path of another heroine, Birkita, an enslaved warrior woman from Roman Britain. We take turns flitting between the Paradise Ghetto and their book, and it becomes clear how the book is an escape from the harsh realities of the prison camp. I even found myself wanting to escape to the more dynamic plot of their story, far away from the grey, starving and monotonous conditions of Julia and Suzanne’s surroundings.
I was impressed by O’Connell’s ability to create two such hypnotising worlds. However, the final chapter added a twist, and while thought-provoking, it dragged it down to a confusing end. It was one too many layers. Despite this, The Paradise Ghetto was a memorable read, that has left a lasting impression through its use of allegories. An unusual story of survival, the power of the written word, and finding love in the unlikeliest of places.