Isabel Allende's latest novel weaves together two distinct yet resonant stories of childhood displacement. In 1938 Vienna, five-year-old Samuel Adler is sent alone on a Kindertransport train to England, fleeing Nazi-occupied Austria after his father's disappearance. Eight decades later, in 2019 Arizona, seven-year-old Anita Diaz is separated from her mother at the US border, having fled danger in El Salvador. Both children grapple with loss, separation, and the search for belonging, connecting across time through their shared human experience.
Why You Should Read?
- Explores the poignant human cost of historical and contemporary refugee crises.
- Features Isabel Allende's compelling narrative style, interweaving past and present.
- Delves into themes of resilience, family bonds, and the enduring power of the human spirit.
- Offers a timely and empathetic look at the impact of political events on individual lives.