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Wunderland

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
USA TODAY BESTSELLER • “Searing . . . a heartbreaking page-turner.”—People
 
“Both heartbreaking and hopeful, this story of a daughter searching for the truth about her mother’s secret past, tangled up in old secrets and terrible lies, kept me up late turning pages.”—Martha Hall Kelly, bestselling author of Lilac Girls
 
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY REAL SIMPLE
Once inseparable, Berlin teenagers Ilse Fischer and Renate Bauer find their friendship ripped apart by their nation’s abrupt swing into fascism. Ilse, a so-called Aryan, throws her lot in with the Nazi Party, while Renate sees her once-secure world dismantled by Adolf Hitler’s race laws and then shattered by a shocking betrayal. Decades later, that same betrayal will upend the life of Ilse’s daughter, Ava, as she discovers long-buried truths about her mother’s past. A harrowing page-turner, Wunderland traces the lives of three women across two generations—and the devastating repercussions of choices made in the dark days of wartime Germany.
Praise for Wunderland
“Engrossing . . . Epstein reveals the devastating choices these women make.”Real Simple
Wunderland is both an engrossing family drama and a foray into a dark period of history . . . a wholly original angle to the WWII novel. You’ll read it in one shivered sitting.”Refinery29
“A vividly written and stark chronicle of Nazism and its legacies.”Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“A wealth of history turns Wunderland into a novel that’s both beautiful and devastating. . . . Epstein taps into the 1930s prewar era, laying out an unsparing narrative that details tragic events and horrifying legacies . . . opening a new door that may lead to redemption and joy for future generations.”BookPage (starred review)
“[A] heartbreaking historical tour de force . . . Man’s inhumanity to man—and the redemptive power of forgiveness—is on stark and effective display in Epstein’s gripping novel, a devastating tale bound for bestseller lists.”Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2018

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 11, 2019
      Epstein’s heartbreaking historical tour de force (after The Painter from Shanghai) juxtaposes Nazi-era Germany and 1980s New York City to devastating effect. The story opens in 1933: German schoolgirls Renate Bauer and Ilse von Fischer are best friends as Hitler comes to power and Jews become increasingly demonized. Renate is dating a young white supremacist and, along with Ilse, tries to join the Nazi-sponsored Bund Deutscher Madel. But after Renate discovers that her now-Christian father was born Jewish, Renate and her family are subjected to Gestapo questioning and blackmail. Ilse coldly drops her best friend, and, caught up in the growing nationalism, she betrays Renate’s family. In the East Village in 1989, Ava Fischer receives her estranged mother’s ashes and a sheaf of letters that outline her mother’s biggest regrets. She’s always felt unwanted by her mother, after being left for years in a German orphanage. But after she obtains the package, which contains a shocking secret about her parentage, everything suddenly makes a strange sort of sense. Epstein doesn’t stint on the horrifying details of the indignities dealt to Jews during Hitler’s reign. Man’s inhumanity to man—and the redemptive power of forgiveness—is on stark and effective display in Epstein’s gripping novel, a devastating tale bound for bestseller lists. Agent: Amelia Atlas, ICM Partners.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2019
      A daughter strives to unlock the secrets of her mother's past, which her mother has ample reason to hide, in Epstein's (The Gods of Heavenly Punishment, 2013, etc.) third novel.Three women carry the narrative weight of this searing novel, set in pre- and post-World War II Berlin and New York City in the 1970s and '80s. Now that she's a mother herself, Ava, a struggling artist in the East Village, is determined to confront her own mother, Ilse, who left her in an orphanage in the waning days of the war, eventually retrieving her but never telling her the identity of her father or much about her own past. Ilse's sections, set in the '30s during the years leading up to Kristallnacht, make it abundantly clear why. Ilse joins the Hitler Youth female division, the Bund Deutscher Mädel, and becomes an enthusiastic Nazi, to the horror of her former best friend, Renate. As the noose slowly tightens around Berlin's Jews, Renate and her family are not immediately affected by the oppressive racial laws, since she and brother Franz are Mischlings, only half Jewish; her mother, a psychiatrist, is "Aryan" and her father considers himself a Lutheran until the Nazi registration system exposes his Jewish ancestry. The stories of Ilse and Renate are viscerally quotidian in detailing how Nazism distorts their adolescence. Renate's gradual ostracism by her school--formerly a top student, she is subjected to racism-dictated grade deflation--and even by those she counted as friends, is excruciating to read. The characterization of Ilse is more challenging, but her enthusiastic embrace of the lifestyle of a Hitler devotee is authentically depicted, as is her dogged refusal to be disillusioned despite various rude awakenings to the role envisioned for women in the Reich. Representing the German postwar generation, Ava holds her own here and is not merely an afterthought; her relationship with Ulrich, son of an Auschwitz victim, is particularly poignant and echoes the friendship of Ilse and Renate, which neither ever truly renounces, at least psychically.A vividly written and stark chronicle of Nazism and its legacies.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 1, 2019
      Epstein's (The Painter from Shanghai, 2008) absorbing exploration of friendship, betrayal, and coming to terms with the past begins in 1989, when Ava Fischer receives a cache of letters written by Ilse, her recently deceased mother. The letters were addressed, but never sent, to someone named Renate. The novel unfolds across two time lines, one that takes the reader on a deep dive into the particulars of Ilse and Renate's lives in Germany, 1935-39. The other time line is Ava's, and it loops backward from 1989, when she is a single mother living in New York City, to 1946, when she is temporarily stranded in a German orphanage. Ilse and Renate are best friends, but Hitler's rise sets them on very different paths; while Ilse enthusiastically joins the Nazi youth movement, Renate discovers that she is a Mischling?one who has both Aryan and Jewish ancestry. As for Ava and Ilse, their postwar relationship is shadowed by Ilse's refusal to talk about the past or divulge the identity of Ava's father. Suggest this to fans of novels like Jessica Shattuck's The Women in the Castle (2017) and Martha Hall Kelly's Lilac Girls (2016).(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2019

      New York, 1989: Broke, distraught, and struggling with her teenage daughter, Ava Fischer receives her estranged mother's ashes, sent from Germany with a bunch of never-mailed letters from Ilse's childhood best friend, Renate, that clarify some of the mysteries of Ilse's life. Initially inseparable, she and Renate were forced apart by the Nuremberg Laws in 1930s Berlin, with one friend finally betraying the other to long-term, catastrophic effect. From the author of the internationally best-selling The Painter from Shanghai and The Gods of Heavenly Punishment, which won 20132014 Asian Pacific American Association of Librarians honors

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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