Germany, 1941. Felix Thalberg lives with his mother Kerstin and father Arno in Berlin. He’s a printer’s apprentice, his mother works as a midwife and his father isn’t working due to his metal state. Arno has three Jewish grandparents and he’s classed as a Jew, he’s forced to wear a yellow star and Felix is classed as a Mischling. They have to leave their apartment, move to a cheaper one in Wedding, and life for the Thalberg’s is getting harder.
Felix tries to stay hopeful, but it’s hard and he’s very worried about his father's health. One night he goes out to the Ballhaus, to dance and he meets a beautiful young woman called Hannah Huber. He’s totally infatuated by her, later he tries to find her and she’s disappeared. Felix assumes the worst, so many Jewish people are being arrested and maybe Hannah is one of them?
Felix’s luck runs out, he’s arrested and sent to a concentration camp called Sachsenhausen. Here, he’s working in barrack 18, he and other engravers are creating fake passports, identity papers and money for the German officers and doctors. When Felix becomes ill, he’s sent to the hospital, a dangerous place to be, Dr. Max Eichel's in charge and he has a reputation of killing his patients and not curing them.
One day Dr. Eichel brings his young wife Inge to tour the camp, in the hospital window, Felix is sure he sees Hannah and her arm is being held by Dr. Max Eichel. Felix has no idea, Inge was forced by her parents to marry Dr. Max Eichel, the evening he met her at the dance, her friend Liesl Huber convinced her to enjoy one last night of freedom and Inge didn’t tell him her real name.
Felix is transferred to another camp, the conditions are much worse, he’s freezing, starving, and keeping him alive are his thoughts of Hannah and the letters he writes to her. Inge’s a prisoner in her marriage, her husband's controlling, threatens her, locks her in a room and physically harms her.
The Fortunate Ones takes you on a journey, from the inhumane concentration camps, to the ruins of Berlin, to Argentina where many who commited the crimes lived, and to the court rooms for the war crimes trials. It's a story that will stay with you, a well written by Catherine Hokin and a very powerful one. I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review and five stars from me.