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The Plum Trees

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A poignant tale about one woman's quest to recover her family's history, and a story of loss and survival during the Holocaust. Consie is home for a funeral when she stumbles upon a family letter sent from Germany in 1945, which contains staggering news: Consie's great-uncle Hermann, who was transported to Auschwitz with his wife and three daughters, might have escaped. This seems improbable to Consie. Did people escape from Auschwitz? Could her great-uncle have been among them? What happened to Hermann? Did anyone know? These questions are at the root of Consie's excavation of her family's history as she seeks, seventy years after the liberation of Auschwitz, to discover what happened to Hermann. The Plum Trees follows Consie as she draws on oral testimonies, historical records, and more to construct a visceral account of the lives of Hermann, his wife, and their daughters from the happy days in prewar Czechoslovakia through their internment in Auschwitz and the end of World War II. The Plum Trees is a powerful, intimate reckoning with the past.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 25, 2021
      Shorr’s immersive latest (after Midnight) delves into the fate of a Czech Jewish family sent to Auschwitz during WWII. Consie, a struggling writer raised in America with European Jewish roots, discovers a letter written by her late uncle, who was a soldier in Germany just after WWII. In it, she learns that her grandfather’s brother, Hermann, might have escaped from Auschwitz, prompting Consie to research Hermann’s fate. Through various historical sources, including an oral history made by Hermann’s late daughter, Magda, Consie absorbs accounts of the brutal treatment of the Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe and later at the death camps. Shorr draws from real-life accounts for gruesome details of the latter, in which babies were burnt alive, young girls with “beautiful skin” were turned into gloves, and survival “was less a matter of heroic triumph than of simple chance.”
      After Consie remembers a story Magda had told her about Hermann, she imagines a continuation of his life, as the elusive search for Hermann’s story teaches her to embrace the Holocaust victims “all as heroes.” This moving account makes clear the need to remember the horrors of war.

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  • English

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