Thursday, December 9, 2010

Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

This is Tatiana De Rosnay who is British and French
She wrote our last book recommended by Donna Smith.
As it turned out it was deemed a winner by all who
attended last night.
We had nine people who gathered at my house for
pizza, salad, and December birthday cake.
The birthday celebrants were Madeleine, Betsy and Diana
who managed to join in from Florida by skype. Others present
were Julie, Donna S., Donna R. Sarah, Kathy, Carol and Nettie.
Sarah's Key has 2 parallel stories about the July 16, 1942
roundup of Jewish people by the French police ordered
by the Nazi's in occupied France. At first it is told
from the view point of a young girl Sarah who is one
of the victims. Then it is told from the view point of an
American reporter investigating the incident 60 years later.
What we learned was that this incident which hauled in
13000 Jews to the Vel De Hiver and eventually 76000 total
sent to the death camps was completely swept under the
rug by the French people and only recently has it even
come to light. The two stories seamlessly gets pulled together by
the author but we missed the voice of the little girl after
she grows up. A movie is currently being filmed in
which Kristen Scott Thompson stars.
The moral of the story is that we should never forget the
horror of the holocaust and should never let this
ever occur again.

We decided on February 9, 2011 for the next meeting.
Kathy chose "Scottsboro" by Ellen Feldman which is
a fairly large book so we are allowing 2 months. The book
is available at the library we discovered and at Amazon.com
for a mere penny plus $3.99 shipping. Kathy suggests
that we not skip the prologue as that is the meat of
the story. It is about a southern rape case where several negro
boys are framed by a town and 2 women of dubious repute.

1 comment:

  1. So good cried the first chapter... makes you realize how bad children suffered and how strong they were.If you can make it through the beginning without tears, it's well worth reading. A story that will stay with you, although the end was not as strong.

    ReplyDelete

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I am a person who enjoys life and the people I meet along the way. I don't want to miss out on anything so I am not afraid to investigate new experiences.
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