Memories of Glass by Melanie Dobson pulled me in right from the start. I loved the format of this book switching back and forth from Holland during the Nazi occupation to seventy-five years later in the present day. In the present time Memories of Glass transported us to New York, Amsterdam, Uganda, Africa and Oregon. The characters were complex, intriguing and believable. I listened to this book on audio CD read by Nancy Peterson. I never wanted to turn it off. The story captured my heart right from the start to the very last sentence. It instilled feelings of hope, love, bravery, desperation, greed and deception, loss, strength and friendship.
Memories of Glass by Melanie Dobson explored how childhood friends Josie van Rees and Eliese Linden found themselves linked through the act of saving Holland's children from the Nazis. Growing up Josie and Eliese became best friends. They often played on Holland's waterways with Josie's brother and another friend. Josie's brother fell instantly in love with Eliese and never forgot her even when Eliese fell in love with an American man, William Kingston. Eliese and William had a son but William never knew. He left Eliese to go back to America before she discovered she was pregnant. Eliese held on to the hope of reuniting with William and marrying him someday but she received no communication from him ever again. When Josie discovered Eliese's secret about William she was so devastated for her brother who worshiped Eliese and still loved her. Josie felt that Eliese betrayed her brother's love for her. At the same time, around 1942, when the girls rediscovered each other, the Nazis began to deport hundreds of Jewish children from Amsterdam. Eliese, who had moved to Holland from Germany as a young girl with her father, was Jewish, making her son Jewish. She knew that she had to get her son out of Amsterdam any way she could. Eliese begged for Josie's help with this endeavor. Josie, with her brother who was active in the resistance, was able to find a hiding place for Eliese's son. Eliese at this time was being forced to work in the converted theater in Amsterdam where all Jewish people left in Amsterdam awaited deportation. Her job was processing each person by typing their names and addresses. Since the theater was becoming so overcrowded, the Germans gave permission to house the children across the way in a children's home where Josie was helping to care for the children. It was there that the two friends rediscovered each other and formed a partnership that would end up saving hundreds of Jewish children from deportation. The two girls risked their lives everyday but they tirelessly tried to help save as many children as they could.
Seventy-five years later Ava Drake was working for her grandmother as the director of the prestigious Kingston Family Foundation. Years before, Ava's mother and almost two-year old brother were killed when their house was consumed in flames. Ava still had a hard time forgiving herself for not being able to save her brother, Andrew. She continued to have nightmares about that night and they lasted for many years. Finally, after being placed in foster care, Ava was reunited with her mother's family. Ava felt a sense of belonging. Her mother had cut all ties with her family a long time ago but never shared her reasons with Ava. Ava didn't know a lot about her new family but she was grateful to her grandmother for providing a safe and somewhat loving environment. Her two uncles and her cousins, though, seemed to dislike her and she felt that they wanted her gone from their family. At about this time, Ava began to become curious about the Kingston's and their past. The more she dug and discovered the more she began to question what secrets her new family, the Kingston's, were trying to hide from her. One afternoon, Ava's grandmother told her to go to Uganda, Africa to check on the validity of a grant Ava had proposed for Landon West's Uganda's coffee plantation. That trip and meeting Landon was about to change Ava's life. Ava also visited their facilities in Oregon and met Landon's sister and elderly great-grandmother. Ava soon discovered after many conversations, tears, and smiles, the connection between Landon's family and her own as Landon's great- grandmother revealed her story about Holland, World War II and its children.
This was one of the best books I have read in a while. It kept me guessing and hoping. Melanie Dobson's writing and character creations were brilliant. I so admired the strength of the women in Memories of Glass. It was disappointing when I was actually finished listening to this story. I wanted it to go on and on. I loved how the past and the present collided and yet found their way to inspire happiness. Please read this book. I highly recommend it.