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Surviving The Forest

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Five shots on Saturday morning changed their fate …
She was a beautiful and happy young woman who lived a fairytale life. Shurka, her beloved husband and their two small children lived in a pretty house in a village in Poland, surrounded by a little garden with lilies. This was their life and nothing could harm it, or so they thought…

WWII broke out and though the happy family thought the Germans would never reach their idyllic village, they quickly understood they were wrong and their happiness came to a brutal end. The family had to flee their house and find shelter in a neighboring Ghetto where they realized that the Gestapo was taking Jews away on trucks every night, and they were never seen again.

The family decided to escape into the deep dark forest. There, surrounded by animals, they knew that this was their only chance to get away from the real beasts. They had no idea what would await them, but they knew that doing nothing was not an option if they wanted to survive.

197 pages, ebook

Published May 5, 2019

3615 people are currently reading
6405 people want to read

About the author

Adiva Geffen

20 books122 followers
Adiva Geffen is a prolific writer and playwright. She lectures and leads many writing workshops, and she's a board member of the Israeli writers Association. Adiva has published 21 books, including children's stories, reference books and, most famously, suspense novels; most of which were best-sellers. In fact, Adiva is widely regarded as the best suspense writer in Israel. Her plays have appeared on major stages in Israel.

Drawing from rich life experience and pure imaginative force, Adiva Geffen creates compelling characters and captivating scenarios in which suspense, humor, passion and joy are woven into an almost addicting emotional thrill-ride. Her latest duo, detectives Sami and Dikla, have become staples in Israel's literary community.

Geffen began her career as a special-ed teacher. After leaving the education field, she served as the spokesperson for the Habima National Theater for more than a decade. She founded and subsequently led the Israeli Theater Award for 10 years.

Born in Haifa and the mother of three sons, Geffen now lives in Tel Aviv, Israel, with her partner Aharon Meidan.

Her latest book "Klara's Boys" is set to be published in 2017.

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5 stars
2,522 (46%)
4 stars
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3 stars
819 (15%)
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1 star
56 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 397 reviews
Profile Image for Maria Espadinha.
1,162 reviews517 followers
November 5, 2025
A Half Happy Ending


It started with “Once upon a time...” and ended... and ended... well, it seems I’m kinda stuck here, so I’d better give it some thoughts before proceeding:

In this story I met a Jewish lady — an Holocaust survivor who buried “her fallen loved ones in the forest”:

“This is the story of a woman called Sarah, who made it out of the forest, where the graves of her fallen loved ones would forever remain”

So...I believe this sounds a lot like a half happy ending, right?!
Profile Image for Joseph Sciuto.
Author 11 books171 followers
August 23, 2023
A couple of days ago I was looking at President Biden signing a cooperation agreement with Japan and South Korea at Camp David. I turned to my wife, who knows her history, and asked, "How many Americans do you think know how significant this agreement is?"

She replied, "Maybe one percent."

I agreed with her. It is often forgotten what the occupying Japanese did to the Korean people before and during World War 2 (not to mention what they did to the Chinese and the Philippine people). It could easily be called a Holocaust or genocide.

For a good part of my life, I refused to ever visit Germany, Japan, or Italy because of their crimes against humanity. I eventually dropped Italy from the list, mainly because they were fairly inept when it came to warfare, and partly because all my ancestors are Italian and they did not, from what I studied, participate in Mussolini's dream.

Adiva Geffen's book, "Surviving The Forest," is about a beautiful and happy young woman named Sarah, but called, Shurka, and her family having to move from their village, where supposedly the Jews and Gentiles, got along beautifully...celebrating holidays and birthdays together into a neighboring Ghetto and then into the depths of a forest to survive against the Nazis (and also the Polish turncoats) desire to eliminate all Jews.

Shurka's story is similar but unique like all stories about the Holocaust. It examines the inhumanity that different races and religions can practice against other human beings...literally no different from them.

What makes Ms. Geffen's story somewhat unique is that the story does not end with the end of the war but continues and examines the pogroms against Jews in Poland and elsewhere on the continent after the war...not nearly to the extent of what the Germans managed to do but they nevertheless existed.

Israel did not exist as a country until 1948 and the British who controlled the area, refused to let Jewish refugees into what is known today as the country of Israel. It is especially during this time that the pogroms against many of the Jewish people continued as they waited to travel and live either in America or Israel. Inhumanity has no boundaries, as we are now, once again, seeing here in the U.S.A.

Ms. Geffen lives in Israel and is regarded as one of the best writers in the country. "Surviving The Forest,"is her examination of the holocaust before, during, and after World War 2 and it is well worth reading.

I imagine if the Jewish and Korean people have managed to cooperate with the once brutal regimes of the Japanese and Germans anything is possible and surely preferable. But one should never forget history because that is when such brutality tends to repeat.
Profile Image for Jennie Louwes.
Author 16 books50 followers
December 12, 2019
Although I'm giving this book a 3.5 star rating, I've read it and think to myself, "Why has no one turned this book into a movie?"

The story is moving; but, written in a slightly detached manner, it's not moving enough. More emotion would have made everything more real for the reader. More emotion would make your heart race, make you frightened, make you feel all wrung out, bone tired, weary, with a sadness that makes your soul heavy. Instead, the reader may feel as if they're in the forest; but, for how perfunctory the text is written, it reads as if you're in a perpetual state of shock. Seeing everything in the moment and yet from a bit of a distance. I suppose this does make sense in that the author is telling the main character's story from hearing it outside of the time and place in which everything within the book unfolded. Even so, readability is lacking, ever so slightly; my 3.5 stars must stand.

Despite the above, people's life stories are meant to be told. Whether this be moments or a life's entirety, shared we're all able to learn something. We learn about each other more intimately and about humanity as a whole. True stories need to be told, over and over again; especially, when there are deep seated, life lessons to be learned. Each gleans what they need; and, no story is ever wasted.

I step away viewing the main character, Shurka, as having been blessed. Her's is a story not only of survival but of being protected, cherished, and loved. Hers was a happy home from the time of her childhood into her own adult married life. Her family was good, strong, better together, bonded within unconditional love for one another. Despite all of the atrocities, the evil, the unbearable, the unspeakable things that took place; despite Shurka having lost the majority of her family members to death, in its various forms, I still call her blessed. Blessed among women for love propelled her forward and it was love that saved her.

My deepest respect to Avraham. An additional main character who was well connected, smart, knew when to act, and how to save his family. You had to be wise as a serpant and yet viewed to be harmless as a dove in order to navigate within Poland during World War II. He was both wise and harmless, gentle, and good; an upstanding man of integrity whose connections afforded his family more than the average Jewish family would have been given during the war. Thanks be to God for Avraham; and, then too, to his successor Menachem. Men of valor and strength; but, also men capable of kindness, peace, and above all else, love.

It's this overarching love that makes this book one meant to be read by all. It's love that will stir your heart and it's this love that will carry you through this book page by page. It's love that many of us have never felt; but, have always wished for. It's love so immense, wide, and deep that words fail its description and depiction everytime. It's a love worth talking about as it's love that will never die.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Píaras Cíonnaoíth.
Author 143 books204 followers
February 18, 2019
A wonderfully written and richly descriptive novel…

Author and playwright Adiva Geffen weaves an exceptional WW2 Historical Novel based on a true story of a Jewish holocaust survivor. With fascinating twists and turns, and emotional highs and lows this book will captivate the reader from the first page to the last. The author paints an all-encompassing human dramatization of love, loss and survival in a very vivid and convincing way. In addition, the characters are drawn with great credibility and conviction. It’s a fast-paced novel that will keep you engaged from the first page to the last.

The book description gives a powerful preview: ‘She was a beautiful and happy young woman who lived a fairytale life. Shurka, her beloved husband and their two small children lived in a pretty house in a village in Poland, surrounded by a little garden with lilies. This was their life and nothing could harm it, or so they thought…

WWII broke out and though the happy family thought the Germans would never reach their idyllic village, they quickly understood they were wrong and their happiness came to a brutal end. The family had to flee their house and find shelter in a neighboring Ghetto where they realized that the Gestapo was taking Jews away on trucks every night, and they were never seen again.

The family decided to escape into the deep dark forest. There, surrounded by animals, they knew that this was their only chance to get away from the real beasts. They had no idea what would await them, but they knew that doing nothing was not an option if they wanted to survive…’

Surviving The Forest had every element a good story should have. A solid plot, attention to detail, but best of all fleshed out, well-written and well-rounded character development. There’s an abundance of well-illustrated scenes that make you feel like you are right there in the story, and that’s something I really look for in a good book.

Captivating and commendable this work had me immersed from the beginning. Inspired by real events, it’s a well-crafted fiction interwoven with true-life historical drama. The story flowed from scene to scene with ease, and the author shows exceptional ability when it comes to storytelling. There are plenty of attention-grabbing moments in this page turner that will take the reader on a truly compelling and mesmerizing journey!

It’s one of those books that comes along once in a while that makes you want to read it non-stop until you get to the end. I’m giving nothing further away here. And this, I hope, will only add to the mystery and enjoyment for the reader! The result is a wonderfully written and richly descriptive novel, its brilliantly drawn characters driven by love and the will to survive.

I’ll be looking forward to reading more from this author in the future. I would highly recommend this book. A well-deserved five stars from me.
Profile Image for Grady.
Author 51 books1,820 followers
April 5, 2019
A touching and compassionate novel

Israeli author Adiva Geffen is both a writer and a playwright and shares her expertise in writing workshops while her plays are widely performed on stages. She lives in Tel Aviv.

In a sensitive author’s note Adiva describes the story of this bracing novel – ‘This is a story of a simple, regular woman who lived in some Polish village, whose whole dream was to raise her babies, milk the cows, and curl up under a heavy quilt with her husband in their little hut. The war came and destroyed everything, the Germans came and she understood that it was all over, but she did not let her spirit wither, the war did not destroy that strongest instinct of all, the love of life that pulsed within her.’

Though many books about the Holocaust and its effect on survivors remain high on the list of readers’ favorite novels, few have shared that experience better than Adiva Geffen’s story. At once a true story of Sarah Shidlovsky, a fact that makes the story feel even more vital, and also a masterfully written novel as crafted by an author who understands the impact of theater.
Sampling the flavor of Adiva’s writing opens the portal to the significance of this book: ‘The house of Yaakov Mendel and Taiba Shidlovsky stood on the eastern side of the small Polish village of Wolka Zablocka. It was a peaceful village, inhabited for hundreds of years by farmers who worked the land. Although there were not many people, there was affection and friendship among its inhabitants, Jews and Gentiles alike. They lived alongside one anoth¬er in the village in amicable harmony. The Jews lived their lives as Poles but kept up the Jewish tra¬ditions at home; they made sure to observe the Sabbath, to fast on Yom Kippur, and build sukkahs on Sukkot to which they would invite their neighbors. On Hanukkah they lit the meno¬rah candles, and on Passover they sat around the Seder table with their relatives from the neighboring villages, or would go to celebrate the holidays with their families in the neighboring town of Ostrow Lubelski. The Jews of the small village made sure to invite their Gentile neighbors to the holidays and family events to celebrate with them, and made an effort to visit the Christians in their homes to celebrate on their holidays….’ And from that harmony comes the discord of the Holocaust, related with skill and compassion. Adiva Geffen is indeed an important writer. This is a fine book that satisfies on every level.
Profile Image for Bonnye Reed.
4,696 reviews109 followers
September 1, 2019
I received a free copy of this historical novel from TheFussyLibrarian and Goodreads Giveaway, Adiva Geffen, and publisher ebookpro. Thank you all for sharing your hard work with me. I have read 'Surviving the Forest' of my own volition, and this review reflects my honest opinion of this work.

Adiva Geffen takes us into Poland just prior to the beginning of WWII, a time when there were over 5.3 million Jews living peacefully in Poland. World War II officially began on 1 September 1939, with the invasion of Poland by Germany. Changes in the lives of Polish Jews happened slowly in the smaller communities but like a barrel rolling downhill, the damage was eventually damning.

We follow the family Shidlovsky. Sarah - Shurka her more familiar name, was one of two daughters of Yaakov Mendel and Taiba. In the late 1930's Shurka was married to Avraham Orlitzky, son of a trader, and they were the parents of Irina, about 3, and Yitzhak, born frail in the winter of 1941, born into a Poland now under severe German command. The conditions of all Jewish residents quickly deteriorating as they lived through pogroms, sporadic and mass shootings, middle-of-the-night moves to smaller, cruder, safer places, abandoning all they owned save clothing and shoes and pots and blankets, and finally by the summer of 1942, as ordered, four generations of the extended Shidlovsky family including the Orlitzky's moved to the ghetto at Ostrow Lubelski. But they all knew in their hearts the next step would be cattle cars on the train to a death camp. Their only chance of making it through the war alive was to escape from the ghetto. It was too late to try to go east to Russia. The only place left to hide was in the foreboding, swamp infused Parczew Forest.

At the end of the war, there were 40,000 to 100,00 total Jews in Poland who survived the Holocaust. Another 150,000 Jewish refugees returned to Poland at the end of the fighting. By 1946 the first peacetime Kielce Pogrom took place, with 42 deaths and 80 wounded of the 200 Jews then living in that city.

Moving the tattered remains of the Shidlovsky family to Israel would not be fast or easy. Life there would not be simple. But Israel was not a destination. It would be home.

Publishing date May 5, 2019
received August 28, 2019
Reviewed at Goodreads on August 30, 2019. Reviewed on Amazon.Smile and Barnes & Noble on Sept 1, 2019. Not available at BookBub, Kobo or GooglePlay.
Profile Image for Anca Adriana Rucareanu.
498 reviews68 followers
February 25, 2025
În liniștea pădurii, departe de orice urmă de civilizație, nu se aude răpăitul de arme, mersul cadențat al bocancilor grei nu dictează firea lucrurilor. Ordinele râvnite sunt stinse de ciripitul păsărilor și de zumzetul vieții. Nu tot timpul este asa. Uneori, atunci când raidurile naziste strică liniștea pădurii, locuitorii ei se ascund în buncăre săpate în pământul dur și rece. Nimeni, nici măcar un copil mic, nu are voie să se miște, să vorbească, să suspine. Toți tac, toți strâng din pumni și speră ca adăpostul lor să nu fie descoperit.

Apoi, de îndată ce liniștea se așterne din nou, supraviețuitorii ies la lumină. Își adună morții, își numără pagubele și își mută tabără. Se duc mai adânc în pădure, sapă din nou alte adăposturi. Se ascund iar sub pământ pentru că, pe pământ, acolo unde ar trebui să trăiască, s-a dezlănțuit iadul. Iar ei nu mai sunt doriți. Sunt însemnați cu Steaua lui David, sunt închiși în vagoane de vite, mutați în lagăre insalubre, spălați cu acid și trimiși în crematorii.

"Eram ca niște triburi mici împrăștiate prin pădure. Ceilalți erau ca niște umbre care treceau pe lângă noi în noapte. Uneori întâlneam cunoștințe. Încercam să ne încurajăm unii pe alții.

#bookblogger #recenziapeblog
Profile Image for Morgan .
925 reviews246 followers
February 2, 2020
Every book I have read dealing with the Holocaust and survivors has introduced me to yet another horror. They leave me traumatizes and thinking about it for days if not weeks. But it seems I am addicted.
In “Surviving the Forest” it is beyond comprehension that these people were able to survive for as long as they did in an inhospitable forest living in ‘bunkers’ dug out by their own hands.
Unfortunately my 3-star rating is because I found the writing overly simplistic. Maybe it was the translation. In any case this is another harrowing story of survival.
Profile Image for River.
186 reviews7 followers
March 19, 2019
This is a beautiful of love, loss, perseverance, and beauty. I loved following the life of Shurka. This amazing woman survived as a Jew by hiding with her family and young children throughout various places including a dangerous forest and swamp. As I read the book I recalled other stories that I had read of those who endured this hell on earth. The difference? This story is true. It’s obvious in the way it nearly breathed with a life of its own. I’m honestly blown away!
Profile Image for Czytam Sercem.
235 reviews9 followers
February 6, 2024
Mam problem z ocenianiem literatury pięknej na temat Zagłady. Niestety wyłapałam tu kilka merytorycznych nieścisłości. Nie są może bardzo rażące, ale pozostawiają ślad, mam ich świadomość. Z drugiej jednak strony głęboko współczułam głównym bohaterom i chciałam kontynuować lekturę, by poznać ich dalsze losy. Jestem empatyczną osobą i tym razem emocje wzięły górę. Przeczytałam historię rodzinną autorki głównie sercem, obiektywności powinno niemniej stać się zadość, dlatego pozwalam rozumowi odjąć jedną gwiazdkę.
Profile Image for Jeff Dawson.
Author 23 books106 followers
July 24, 2023
Another excellent retelling of the Holocaust. Adiva does an excellent job in recreating and telling Sarah “Shurka” Shidlovsky’s story and her life in Poland before, during and after the war.
As a child, she was warned time and time again not to venture into the Parczew Forest. There was nothing but swamps, giant mosquitoes and evil spirits that thrived on consuming souls and eating small children. That would be enough information for me to stay out.
For hundred of years, the Poles, Gentiles and Jews had habitated in relative peace. All of the communities thrived and for the most part, accepted each other.
The invasion of Poland and a few dollars or the lure of Vodka would change all that. Hitler’s constant raving about World Jewry would awaken dormant prejudices to an appalling level.
She lived a happy normal life in Wolka Zablocka. Her family was hard working farmers who took care of not only their family but many of their friends. She grew up, married, started her own family and looked forward to a long happy life. On September 1st, 1939 that would start changing. Before the war stared people from Berlin and other German cities began crossing their paths with stories of horror and brutality towards their race. It was difficult for her and her family to fathom such depravity. The family decided that because of their isolation and small town they had nothing to fear. How many times have we read this from the survivors? Hitler never hid his aims or goals. It was in the laws he passed, the speeches he gave and newspapers. They believe they were indispensable to the war effort and no ill fortune would befall them. They were wrong as were so many of their brethren.
When the reality of the horror was revealed and they were placed in a Ghetto, survival became the key note.
She and the family knew they had to leave the Ghetto and escape. But where? The only place that offered any type of security was Yehiel Greenspan and his partisan band in the Parczew Forrest. They spent at least two if not three years in the forest hiding and surviving the ravages of the NAZI regime and the local Polish Home Guard.
In the end, she would lose an infant, a husband and her entire family through raids, starvation and betrayal. Only she and her daughter Elena would live to see the Russians liberate them.
She will remarry but that doesn’t mean the danger has passed. Not at all. After the war pogroms were still taking place in Poland. Why? I have no idea. She never felt safe until she and her family had gotten to the American Zone of Occupation and began planning their trip to the promised land.
Another great story describing and defining how much adversity the human spirit can endure when faced with insurmountable odds.
The only thing that would have made this an outstanding work would have been a more definite timeline.

Five Stars
Profile Image for Pam.
4,625 reviews67 followers
July 29, 2019
Surviving the Forest: A WW2 Historical Novel Based on a True Story of a Jewish Holocaust Survivor was written by Adiva Geffen. This novel is really more of a biography than fiction. The story of Sarah and how she managed to survive the Holocaust with her young daughter is true. The author heard the story from Sarah herself when Sarah was about 91. Of course, many of the details are made up. However, the story takes the reader to a different place than most novels or memoirs do, it takes us to the forest in Poland where many partisans hid and attacked the Nazis from. It also hid many refugees who were trying to survive. It was only through the help of others that anyone survived the forest. Without cooperation from everyone, none of the partisans or the families they protected would have survived. This novel gives a clear description of how this particular group handled being in the forest and having to move often.
I definitely recommend this book for anyone reading about the Holocaust.
Profile Image for Jacqueline K. Hand.
14 reviews
June 18, 2019
Truly Remarkable Life

I have read many books about the Holocaust. This was not like any of them in an area of which I knew little. I spent the whole day reading it. It grabbed me right away knowing it was a true story about a remarkable woman in a horrible time.
5,704 reviews38 followers
May 3, 2019
this was heartbreaking.. it was good but so sad in so many places. i enjoyed reading it
Profile Image for Jk.
375 reviews6 followers
June 18, 2019
I received a free Kindle copy of this book via the Goodreads Giveaways program and would like to thank anyone involved in that process.

This is a very moving story of the horrors many Jews and one family in particular faced during World War II in Poland. I knew of the Jewish refugees who hid in the Parczew forest but it was really interesting to read about the details of these people’s everyday lives in that situation. The story ultimately has a happy ending and the resilience of these people is astonishing to me. I don’t believe that I could have persevered and moved forward in the same way if I had been subjected to the things these people lived through.

This did have some minor typos and some confusing timeline jumping but overall this is an amazing and important story and I am grateful that I got the chance to read it.
238 reviews1 follower
September 27, 2020
The subject matter is compelling, but the author's writing style is not my favorite. Her writing is stilted? Simplistic? I'm struggling to find the right word to describe it. As I read the book it was as if a voice in my head was reading it aloud like you'd read a story aloud to a child. So, yes, maybe it is simplistic. Also, I tended to skip ahead a bit as she spent a great amount of time describing the chickens, the storks' nest, etc., but not much detail about how they hid in the forest, how they survived months and months without food, how they handled the fear. The book read more like a fable about good versus evil and not as novel. This may be a case of something actually getting lost in translation, as the author likely wrote this in her native language and I read an English translation. But still, the style just didn't work for me.
Profile Image for Michelle.
630 reviews43 followers
June 7, 2019
This is a richly described novel of one woman’s survival as she and her family are forced to deal with Nazi takeover of Poland. Tightly packed with the history of WWII, it’s both heartbreaking and inspirational. I’ve always been interested in this period and thought I knew enough about it to not be shocked, but this was so deeply personal and Shurka’s tragedy with her son tore me to pieces.

It also leaves us with haunting “what if” questions and what it means when humanity itself hangs in the balance.

Thank you to Goodreads and the author for offering this free review copy.
Profile Image for Mel {The Emerald Reader}.
80 reviews7 followers
June 14, 2019
Amazing! This book was absolutely incredible. The author did an amazing job of creating a smooth timeline full of so many events, both personal to the main characters and important historical details . Surviving the Forest is beautifully woven to read like a fairy tale, with rich details about life during this horrible time in history. It's a tragic and lovely story that I would highly recommend to anyone, not just history buffs.
8 reviews2 followers
March 9, 2019
This book follows one Jewish woman who survived the German occupation of Poland. It was touching and informative. While reading the book i felt the emotions that would have been prevalent during that time. All together this was a good story and I would recommend it.
Profile Image for Hope Adkins.
17 reviews
June 4, 2019
Sad and inspiring

I like to read about survivors of WW2. I find their courage in the face of certain dead inspirational. We should never forget the devastation and horrors from the past.
Profile Image for Alanna.
321 reviews
March 10, 2021
Rating Holocaust survival books feels weird.

The story was heartbreaking and inspiring and left me amazed at the characters’ resilience as well as horrified at the devastation they experienced. The book was translated, and I felt as though I missed a lot not reading it in the original language.
Profile Image for Stacie Grootenboer.
2 reviews
May 13, 2019
Book of heroes

The people in the book only wanted to survive and keep their families safe. These survivors are true heroes. I couldn't believe how genius they were while hiding.
Profile Image for Donald McCloud.
1 review1 follower
June 8, 2019
Stirring book to read

True story of a persons ability to survive unbelievable odds. Hard to realize what the Jewish people went through. Interesting reading.
Profile Image for Susan P.
636 reviews10 followers
September 30, 2021
Good, true story about a Jewish family who lived in bunkers in the forest in Poland during WW II.
Profile Image for Heather.
148 reviews5 followers
March 2, 2022
Touching

Loved reading about the love, and hope of the author. The strength that was all of those that went through such a difficult time.
Profile Image for Leigh Allin.
2 reviews2 followers
March 24, 2024
Although it is important to read about the accounts of what happened during the holocaust and WWII, this book was very poorly written. The characters were not personable and the plot line was boring.
6 reviews
April 18, 2024
O carte care îți taie respirația! Suferința, tenacitate, suspans, viața și moarte se împletesc într-un dans amețitor. Și, peste toate, iubirea triumfă.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Nicole Wilbourn.
174 reviews13 followers
August 30, 2023
This is a shorter book but it is amazing. Shurka lost everyone but her daughter. The forest saved her and her daughter. I’m glad she found happiness after the war. She deserved it after everything she had gone through.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Shelby Phares.
87 reviews7 followers
March 23, 2024
This is a true story and while I did learn about the situation of WWII in East Poland, this book was just kind of boring.
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