
The two sisters take a very different approach to the war.
Vianne is married and when her husband is told to report to the French army,
she decides she will just try to survive and protect their daughter. Isabelle,
who is only 17 years old, is rebellious, impetuous, and willing to take big
risks. She finds a way to join the resistance movement from the start of the
war, and anyone caught by the Nazis in the act of helping the resistance is
immediately shot. The author skillfully tells the stories of the two sisters as
they struggle in their own ways. The author captured the ugliness of war along
with the beauty of the effort to survive.
I nearly put this one down at about the 30% mark because the
action was developing slowly and I have an aversion to holocaust books. But,
this not just a holocaust book. And my daughter who recommended it, said she
fought her way through the first third before she became captivated by it. The
decision to stay with it was well worth the effort. This is a story about
family and love under the worst of circumstances. The Nightingale gets my
strong recommendation.
Felt the same way about this book. I loved how you could really feel Vianne's incredulity and bewilderment about the war - the "is this really happening?" feeling as everything is falling apart around you. This book definitely wasn't a normal "holocaust" book - it bared human emotion in the truest sense. Amazing writing.
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