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Loading... After the Trainby Gloria Whelan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Gentler version of the Jewish holocost in Germany. Ten years after the war, Peter learns that he is not who he thought he was. His parents reluctantly share the story of how they rescued him from the arms of his mother, who was sentenced to a concentration camp and was being herded abord a death train. Now he seeks to find out who he really is and how it affects who he has been. ( )Ten years after the end of the Second World War, the town of Rolfen, West Germany, looks just as peaceful and beautiful as ever, until young Peter Liebig discovers a secret about his past that leads him to question everything, including the town's calm facade and his own sense of comfort and belonging. Why was this book so disappointing? I guess I didn't read much about the plot before I checked it out--I was hoping for another Boy in the Striped Pajamas. But whatever the reason, this story really failed to captivate in any meaningful way. I doubt I'll remember it a year from now. I would not necessarily recommend this book to parents or avid readers. Children's Books Too Cool For School I was distinctly underwhelmed by this little post-Holocaust tale set in Germany shortly after the war. Although it seemed to want to have a strong didactic bent, trying to drive home messages about tolerance and the importance of history, the story's very distance in time, location, and circumstance to its own ideal reader makes that message likely to fall flat. It is a highly literary little volume, but for all that, I wonder who's going to read it? And more to the point, love it? After the Train tells the story of a young German boy sick of hearing about the Jews. Not that he suffers from any antisemitic notions, but rather that for a young boy who doesn't really remember the war, the whole thing seems so distant now. However, a few things in his life make him begin to question these feelings. He notices that not everyone seems to have moved beyond Jew-hatred. Then the real bombshell drops -- he finds he's adopted, and (not surprisingly) Jewish. So what does that make him? Should he eat pork? Should he go to synagogue? And how will this change how the world around him reacts to him? While interesting in premise, the whole thing may be just a wee bit to cerebral for this age. There isn't any real driving crisis or moment of tension. It really is mostly a quick read about a boy's image of himself after he discovers the story of his rescue from a cattle car headed to a concentration camp. It's very well-written, but, again, it doesn't really seem to have an audience. On the plus side for those that like to introduce a subject like the Holocaust with gentleness, the book is remarkably free of violence and only very lightly touches on the subject of Nazi behavior towards Jews. Good for girls and boys around 10-12. no reviews | add a review
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