clear currency - money converter & exchange rate
Travel and Finance
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Clear Currency could be the best currency app, downloaded and loved by millions, featured on App...
NOW TV per iPad
Entertainment and Sports
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NOW TV è la internet TV di Sky, senza contratto, che puoi disdire quando vuoi! Guarda subito in...
Soccer Scores
Sports and Entertainment
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Live soccer scores, real-time data for live football / soccer scores for the Premier League...
Liar, Temptress, Soldier, Spy: Four Women Undercover in the Civil War
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Karen Abbott, the New York Times bestselling author of Sin in the Second City and “pioneer of...
Betrayal (Infidelity, #1)
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One week. No future. No past. No more. Alexandria Collins has one week to live carefree—no ghosts...
Behind His Eyes: Consequences (Consequences, #1.5)
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From New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Aleatha Romig comes the much-anticipated first...
Only Love (One and Only #3)
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A gorgeous former Marine with a tortured soul. The beautiful, compassionate therapist living next...
A Silken Thread
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For readers who love a heartwarming romance and a rich historical setting comes a tale of a young...
1890-1913 Progressive Era USA Historical Fiction Chrisian Fiction Romance Cotton
Under the Southern Sky
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Two childhood friends discover that love—and family—can be found in unconventional ways in this...
ClareR (6244 KP) rated Send For Me in Books
Sep 7, 2021
This was a different take on other books set at this time, and I liked that about it very much. I haven’t read many books about those who managed to escape the Nazi regime and immigrate to safe countries before the Holocaust really began. But it’s no less saddening for that. Annalise desperately misses her parents, and life is so utterly different in the US.
The story swaps between Annalise and her granddaughter, Clare, whose life couldn’t have been any more different. Clare has the much more liberated life of an American woman - whether that’s what she really wants, remains to be seen.
I really enjoyed seeing the juxtaposition between a 1930s immigrant and a modern young woman. Annalise’s fear of being in a big city with no English is palpable - I panicked along with her. It must be so scary to move somewhere that’s completely different to your own life experience, and not even have a common language - something that people have always had to endure for their own safety throughout the ages.
This is a really moving novel, made more so when I learnt that the letters between Annalise and her mother Klara were real - just that the names were changed.
