Sixty years have passed since Ulli and Isaac met in a bar in post World War II Berlin. Now eighty years old, Isaac traveled to Morocco where Ulli was hotelier of the Hotel Atlas. Ulli, although taken aback, was not really surprised to see him. The reader will be privy, through flashbacks, to view the tangled web of life, love, laughter, and sadness stemming from a coincidental meeting between a German girl and two American soldiers.
Ulli was being groomed to take over her father's typewriting business in Berlin. After all, her father was able to keep the business afloat during the war. Her English mother taught her to speak English. Ulli chose to venture out on her own at the end of the war. She found a vacated apartment hoping the tenants were safe but unable to return. Her knowledge of English enabled her to translate for American soldiers desiring companionship with German girls. she did not expect to bond with two American soldiers.
Isaac's father was a Menshevik. The family was allowed to live in France as refugees but without passports or the right to work. They boarded a ship to America. Isaac was a tall, introverted bookworm. As an asthmatic, he was unfit for combat. Leo, a stocky handsome Pennsylvania boy with a weak heart, was excused from active duty as well. Leo enlisted to escape Johnstown, PA, the area of the Great Flood of 1889. He feared being swept away by water. Ulli, Isaac, and Leo met and had drinks at a bar. Time spent that evening spilled over into a stay at Ulli's apartment for the winter. War had ended and many dwellings were reduced to rubble. They, however, were warm and cozy, able to procure food and drink. The simplicity of living in a cocoon of safety changed in spring when a knock on the door confirmed that Ulli was not the authorized tenant of the apartment. They had to vacate immediately.
If it is true that the more things change, the more they stay the same, the love shared by this triumvirate will stand the test of time. Relationships may shift, globetrotting might became a cure for restlessness and children will be raised. Now after forty years, Isaac felt the need to reconnect with Ulli and unravel some smokescreens and deceptions that perhaps would have changed the course of their history.
"Winter Kept Us Warm" by Anne Raeff is a poignant story of love and longing in the aftermath of World War II. Raeff, in an understated manner, let's the reader view the tender, supportive trio while they navigate a seesaw of emotions traveling the ever changing path of life.
Thank you Counterpoint Press for an ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review.