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The Caged Bird Sings

A Young Man's Untold War Chronicles

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

1940, in the Nazi-occupied city of Rouen, France: Despite Germany's stranglehold on the French, Benjamin Cohen, an introverted but musically talented adolescent, alters the course of his life when he defies his father to study the fifty-five bell carillon in the Catholic cathedral. A coming-of-age epistolary novel, this story explores wartime dynamics between Catholic and Jewish, boy and girl, father and son, and two estranged brothers on their journeys through love, tragedy and war. Can Benjamin's budding mastery of the carillon and his love affair with the troubled novitiate nun, Marie-Noëlle, give him le courage he needs to perform the one act that can save his people from Nazi arrest and earn back the respect from his father he craves? Or will it doom them all? Adventurous and unforgettable, filled with charm and unsettling alarm, this novel will leave its impact on readers of all ages.

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    • Kirkus

      Shaw and Orey offer a coming-of-age World War II story as seen through the eyes of a French Jewish teenager with a gift for music. Benjamin Cohen celebrates his bar mitzvah in Rouen, France, just as the Nazis begin their assault on the country in 1940. As a gift, he receives a cockatiel that he eventually names Fr�re Jacques, in whom he often confides revealing details of his life. As the second son of a doctor, Benjamin doesn't have the clear ambitions of his father or his older brother, �mile, his parents' favorite child, who's studying for a future career in medicine. As the German military takes over the town, �mile leaves his studies to work for the French Resistance, unbeknownst to his family. Meanwhile, Benjamin excels at playing the violin, but as he listens to sounds of the carillon playing at a nearby cathedral, he yearns to learn how to play it himself. Benjamin convinces M. deTarot, the carillonneur at St. Julian's, to teach him all he knows about the instrument. At the cathedral, Benjamin calls himself Benjamin Simone, as he believes it sounds "more French"; he meets Marie-No�lle, who also plays music there, and, later, while exploring hidden passageways and rooms at St. Julian's, he becomes acquainted with Jacques-Milan, a man with significant war injuries. M. deTarot's declining health eventually requires Benjamin to play the carillon for weekly concerts at a critical juncture in the story. Over the course of this novel, Shaw and Orey present a tale of secrets, love, and hope in which Benjamin must quickly mature as war rages around him. Each of the secondary characters is revealed as a complex human being, and their stories effectively intertwine with Benjamin's. As the narrative goes on, the authors express the tragedy of war in dramatic detail through the teenager's diary entries, which he writes with the encouragement of his psychotherapist to help with stress; along the way, salient details about Rouen and Benjamin's family members are revealed. An intriguing and worthy novel that benefits from its youthful perspective.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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