Hamlets Children, Richard Kluger
Hamlets Children, Richard Kluger
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Hamlet's Children

Author: Richard Kluger

Narrator: Paul Woodson

Unabridged: 21 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 09/24/2024


Synopsis

When grave misfortune leaves thirteen-year-old Terry Sayre without relatives to care for him in the summer of 1939, his only option to elude foster care is to accept asylum abroad with his mother's Danish kin, people he met only briefly as a child. Terry begins life anew in his grandparents' home, but within months of his arrival, the Second World War breaks out. Terry's older self recounts his precarious coming of age as an alien marooned in a disconcerting new land throughout its long national nightmare. Spared the savage treatment Nazi Germany dealt other countries it conquered, Denmark was allowed to remain nominally self-governing. Good fortune, though, did not allow the proud, peaceloving little kingdom to escape the toll the war took on its people's collective soul. Hamlet's Children by Richard Kluger is the story of a young American's wrenching assimilation with his Danish relatives and of how he is pinioned in the same cruel vise with his adopted countrymen as they cunningly attempt to subvert the Germans' iron grip on their kingdom. Paramount on this agenda of defiance is the Danes' persistent effort to keep their Jewish neighbors out of the Nazis' murderous hands. Vibrant with memorable characters and fraught with tension, this artfully crafted narrative, both heartbreaking and uplifting, is a testament to the human spirit in its bleakest hours.

About Richard Kluger

Richard Kluger won the Pulitzer Prize for Ashes to Ashes, a history of the cigarette industry, and is a two-time National Book Award finalist (for Simple Justice and The Paper). He lives near San Francisco.


Reviews

Goodreads review by BillEpstein on October 24, 2023

plodding novel of rural Denmark WW2 Disappointing. I thought it was as about the escape of Denmark’s Jews to Sweden. That was less than 10% of the novel. Most of the novel was in the voice of a young boy. Not so interesting his growing up pangs and first loves. His perception of the other characters......more

Goodreads review by Margaret on January 11, 2024

you don’t have to be Danish to be proud The details that get young Terence from pre-war America to Denmark as as interesting as what transpires in the world and in the boy. Older and sometimes wiser, terry watches his family and the small Danish village act and react to the Nazi invasion of the defen......more