Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Book Tour Review: Hidden Yellow Stars by Rebecca Connolly

Hidden Yellow Stars by Rebecca Connolly

About the Book:

Based on the true story of two World War II heroines who risked everything to save Jewish children from the Gestapo by hiding them throughout Belgium.

Belgium, 1942

Young schoolteacher Andrée Geulen secretly defies the Nazis in Belgium, who are forcing Jews to wear a yellow Star of David. Andrée is not Jewish, but she feels a maternal connection to her students, who are living in constant fear, and decides to take action. No child should have to suffer under such persecution. But what can one woman do against an entire army?

Ida Sterno is a Jewish woman who works with the Committee for the Defense of Jews in Belgium, a clandestine resistance group tasked with hiding children from the Gestapo. She wants to recruit Andrée because her Aryan appearance can provide crucial security measures for their efforts. Andrée agrees to join and begins work immediately by adopting a code name: Claude Fournier.

Together, Andrée and Ida, and their undercover operatives, work around the clock to move Jewish children from their families and smuggle them to safety through the secret channels established by the resistance. As each child is hidden, Andrée commits to memory their true name and history. Someday, she vows, she will help reunite as many of these families as she can.

But with the Gestapo closing in and the traitorous Fat Jacques who has turned from ally to enemy and is threatening to identify and expose any Jew he meets, Andrée and Ida must work even harder against increasingly impossible odds to save as many children as possible and keep them safely hidden—even if it might cost them their own lives.

My Review:
 

Just when I think I know all the different aspects of a slice of history, I discover something I knew nothing about. The way this author told the story made me feel like I was there observing and there are some hard parts to process. Hidden Yellow Stars is a touching, inspirational, and sometimes heavy story, but one that needs to be told, and it is very beautifully told.


The story follows a couple of women and they come to life on the pages. I can’t even imagine the bravery and determination it took to save the children. I can’t imagine the horrors and abuse suffered to protect them at all costs. My heart pounded in anxiety and fear for them. I was touched and pondered about this difficult part of the past a lot.


Many thanks to Rebecca Connolly, Shadow Mountain Publishing, and Austen Prose for the review copy and for bringing this book to light.


⚠️war-time violence/fear (not too graphic); feelings of peril


*I received a complimentary copy. All thoughts and opinions are my own and were voluntarily given.*

 

AUTHOR BIO


Rebecca Connolly is the author of more than two dozen novels. She calls herself a Midwest girl, having lived in Ohio and Indiana. She's always been a bookworm, and her grandma would send her books almost every month so she would never run out. Book Fairs were her carnival, and libraries are her happy place. She received a master's degree from West Virginia University.

While doing research for this book, she discovered information about her own family history, including the fates of several unknown family members who perished in the concentration camps of World War II.

Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Book Tour Review: Finding Jane Fairfax by Robbin J. Peterson

 

BOOK DESCRIPTION

Jane Fairfax knows she is truly fortunate. Most orphans face lives of hardship, whereas she was adopted by doting surrogate parents who elevated her place in Society and love her as their own. Yet even they cannot shield her from the grim realities of life without a suitable marriage. In moments of despair, Jane comforts herself with a well-worn memory: that of a young man whose kind words when they were children once soothed her heartbreak. But now that boy has grown into a dashing gentleman―and their lives could not be more distant.

Frank Churchill is a prisoner of his station. His inheritance is held in the balance by his demanding aunt, and the weight of her expectations is suffocating him. But when a chance encounter brings the lovely Miss Fairfax back into his life, he discovers what it is to truly live. As the pair secretly become acquainted amid the confines of Society’s strict rules, their friendship blossoms into love. But in a world ruled by unyielding traditions, endeavoring to build a life together would mean inviting a scandal that would shake the very foundation of the ton.

MY REVIEW

Austen's books are so wonderful and I loved the liberty this author took in creating a prequel to Emma.

Jane Fairfax and Frank Churchill are such vivid characters and it was a treat to learn more about them. My heart went out to each of them because of the hardships of their backstories and I craved the moments they had any slight interaction. I also feel a little bad when I'm harsh on a character. It was enjoyable to see what shaped and developed this characters.

I was completely captivated with the story and couldn't get enough. It felt so believable--about what really could have happened--and I loved feeling immersed in a fresh Austenesque book. From childhood memories to secret friends to grown up expectations, Finding Jane Fairfax is a winner.

Content: orphaned; controlling aunt; mild, slow-burn romance

*I received a complimentary copy. All thoughts and opinions expressed are my own and were voluntarily given.*


AUTHOR BIO

Robbin J. Peterson is the author of Going Home, Conviction, and 13 Days of Girls Camp. She earned her degree in English literature from Utah State University and her associate of arts degree from Snow College. She has six kids, plays the viola, and works as an elementary school librarian.