Showing posts with label Ten Boom - Corrie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ten Boom - Corrie. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Laura’s Top Fourteen Books of 2019





I am behind on my top books list for 2019, but better late than never, right? I read a lot of outstanding books this past year and had a hard time narrowing my list down to only the top ten, so instead I am doing a top 14 books of the year.  I also noticed most are historical fiction or historical non-fiction books, you can definitely tell my favorite genre. These books were not necessarily books published in 2019, but they were books I read in 2019.  I did not include books that I was rereading, but only books that I’ve read for the first time. They are only in the order of when I read them through the year of 2019.  Click on the titles for the full review of the book.  And now without further ado, my top ten books of 2019.

The Gown by Jennifer Robson – The Gown was one of the first books I read in 2019 and it was one of the best.  It told the riveting story of the women who made Elizabeth II’s wedding gown and was a great look at the bleakness of life in post WWII era England.  

The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas – I read The Hate U Give as part of the Kewaunee Library book club and I don’t know if any other book has every prompted so much discussion on race and current news topics.  It was an eye-opening novel that gives you a different perspective.

The Huntress by Kate Quinn – The Huntress was set during and after WWII and told the story of three different women.  One is a daring aviatrix flying bombing raids for Russia, the other is a young girl in post WWII America with suspicions about her Step Mom, and the third is the Step Mom who may be more than she lets on with a secret cruel past in Nazi Germany.

Courting Mr. Lincoln by Louis Bayard – I still keep thinking about this novel.  It was a wonderful book about the relationship between Mary Todd Lincoln, Lincoln, and his best friend, Joshua Speed.  I couldn’t put this book down. I loved that the story framed Lincoln as the enigmatic lead that both Mary and Joshua loved.  The story was told through their point of view.  It reminded me again why Louis Bayard is one of my favorite historical fiction authors.

The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom – This non-fiction book was written in the 1970’s and tells Corrie Ten Boom’s story of her family, faith, and survival after being persecuted by the Nazis for helping Jewish people escape.  It was an inspiring read.
 
Refugee by Alan Gratz – This middle grade fiction read should not be missed by adults.  It is set in three different time frames and tells the story of a Jewish boy trying to flee German on a boat to America, a Cuban girl trying to flee Cuba to America, and a boy trying to flee Syria to Germany.  It gives a great understanding to the plight of a refugee and connects the stories wonderfully at the end.  This is a must read.

The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See – The Island of Sea Women told a part of history that I sadly knew nothing about.  The Island of JeJu is off the coast of Korea and is a matriarchal society run with its main industry being deep sea diving for fish by the women of the island.  As WWII looms, both Japan and Korea force atrocities on the island that will change their lives forever.  This is an unforgettable story.
 
The Summer Country by Lauren Willig – The Summer Country was another wonderful historical fiction novel that explores race and love.  This was another book I couldn’t put down once I started reading it.  It was a multi-layered Victorian story with a mystery involved.  Set on Barbados, the story dug into what it meant to be a slave and to own slaves in the society.  This novel was a Jane Austen manners novel, mixed with Charlotte Bronte gothic, with a modern look at race relations.  It also includes a Cholera epidemic, which is fitting for this year’s reading.

Midnight in Chernobyl by Adam Higginbotham – Midnight in Chernobyl is a fascinating look at what lead up to the incident in Chernobyl and the aftermath.  It is non-fiction, but reads like fiction.

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens – I loved the mystery, nature, and romance of this novel.  I felt like it was a grown-up version of A Girl of the Limberlost.

The Martian by Andy Weir – Quite simply, The Martian is one of the best science fiction novels I’ve ever read.  The story itself was a fast-paced adventure, and I loved the real science involved.

The Only Plane in the Sky:  An Oral History of 9/11 by Garrett M.  Graff – The Only Plane in the Sky was the best audiobook I have ever listened to.  It was another book I just couldn’t stop listening to.  It used first person narration to tell the story of 9/11 in real time.  I think this is another must read for all Americans.

They Called Us Enemy byGeorge Takei – My 11-year-old son Daniel and I read this graphic novel together.  I have been a lifelong fan of George Takei loving him in Star Trek and now loving him on social media.  I love that he took the story of his life and has been telling it in person, with a play, and with this graphic novel so that we can take an honest look at our past and see that we did not always treat our citizens right.  Takei’s look at his childhood in the Japanese internment camps is both heartbreaking and eye opening.

The Testaments byMargaret Atwood – I was amazed that Margaret Atwood was able to follow up the unforgettable The Handmaid’s Tale with the Testaments, a novel that continues the story in the world of The Handmaid’s Tale and turns everything you thought you knew upside down.  This was another book that kept me up too late at night.

Other books I loved this year, but didn’t quite make my top 14 included:



For more top reads from the past, check out my lists from 2018, 2017 & 2016, 2015, 2014, 2010, 2009, 2008, and 2007.

What were your favorite books of 2019?

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom


The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom is a compelling non-fiction narrative of a family of unlikely resistance fighters in the Netherlands during World War II.  Corrie was a fifty
something year old watchmaker working with her father in their century year old family business.  She lived together with her father and older sister in the building that housed their business.  Their family includes a brother that is a Dutch Reformed Church pastor that runs a home for the elderly with his family, and a sister who has an entire family helping to hide Jewish people.

Father, Betsie and Corrie want to help out when they see that their Jewish friends and neighbors are being persecuted by the Nazis.  Corrie becomes the neighborhood leader in the resistance movement.  Through the network, various “Mr. Smit’s” arrive at their home and help them to build a secret room and install a buzzer system to warn the tenants when they need to hide.  Corrie mostly helps Jewish people find other homes, but they keep people in their home that no one else will take as they are too hard to hide for various reasons.  It becomes an open secret in their town that the Ten Boom’s are helping Jewish people.  It was only a matter of time before their secret was out and the Gestapo came for them.  Although Corrie was sick at the time, all of the Jewish residents were able to hide.  The Ten Boom’s were taken away, but luckily the people hidden in their home were able to escape later and all except one survived the war.

As the family is taken away, the Gestapo chief says he will allow Father’s freedom if he promises not to cause trouble, but Father answers, “If I go home today, tomorrow I will open my door again to any man in need who knocks.”  This is a death sentence for Father.

The Ten Booms were a truly Christian family that lived by their faith.   This had problems at times such as when they wouldn’t lie, but always told the truth even when they were hiding Jewish people from the Nazis or when Father said his line to the Gestapo.  Their faith allowed them to help people in need even though they knew it could cause, personal devastation to their family.  I only hope that if I were put in such a situation, that I could be so good.

Betsie and Corrie’s faith keeps them going as they are moved from a work camp in the Netherlands to Ravensbruck Concentration camp in Germany after D-Day.  They live in inhumane conditions, but their faith and the power of trying to be positive keeps them going.  My favorite was when Corrie couldn’t take it that they had fleas in their living quarters, but Betsie said God but them there for a reason.  Corrie was not happy with Betsie’s thought, but later on they are able to have privacy because the guards will not come into the barracks because of the fleas. 

I have never read about Christians in concentration camps, although I knew that the Nazi’s put a variety of people besides Jewish people in concentration camps including, but not limited to, people working with the resistance or hiding Jewish people, homosexuals, handicapped people, Communists, and gypsies.  It inspired me to hear of their secret prayer meetings where Catholics, Lutherans and Dutch Reformed women prayed together and read from their hidden Bible.

This book is the May selection for the Rogue (aka FLICKS) Book and Movie Club.  It should provide interesting discussion at book club tomorrow.  This is a different type of book (non-fiction and includes a lot of talk about faith) than we typically read, but it was an inspiring book and fits into our love of World War II historical fiction.

I will admit that a lot of items in this book hit too close to home with the descriptions of the treatment of people based on their ethnicity and the blind following of a leader.  I had to keep reminding myself that it was written in the 1970s and was a true account of the 1930s and 1940s and not a description of current events.

Overall, The Hiding Place is a book that everyone should read to get a true understanding of not only World War II from the civilian side, but also what it means to be human and to help out your fellow human being even if it causes great personal sacrifice.  If the world had more people like the Ten Boom’s – we’d be in a much better place.

Book Source:  Kewaunee Pubic Library