Book Review: A Child in Berlin

Book Review:  A Child in Berlin

A Book Review and a Cuppa

You may remember from my previous book review that I’m neither a coffee drinker nor a tea drinker, but Paula’s blog tagline here at Between the Bookends–Books, Cuppas, Conversations, and Friendships–always makes me think of sitting down with something warm to sip while I read. So today I’m sharing my recipe for (sugar-free) Warm Citrus Spice Mix, a tangy, cinnamon-y mix you stir into warm water that you can enjoy while reading this beautiful book. Find the easy recipe at that link!

My Review of “A Child in Berlin”

I connected with author Rhonda Lauritzen quite a few years ago now because the business she and her friend Rachel Trotter run, evalogue.life, has such a sweet overlap with mine. They are in the business of life stories: teaching classes to help people tell their stories, along with offering life story-writing services including biographies, family histories, and memoirs, and one-on-one coaching.  They are regular presenters at the annual RootsTech conference, too.

I have quoted Rachel’s or Rhonda’s wisdom many a time over the last decade in blog posts such as

because while they focus on the telling of life stories, I focus on preserving our stories and memories with our photos.

As I said, it’s a sweet overlap!

So, when I saw that Rhonda published a book late last year called A Child in Berlin: the poignant story of Heidi Posnien and her mother during the fall of Germany, I knew it was a must-read before I even opened it.

A gripping true story of childhood mischief and deprivations in Nazi-infested Berlin, a mother’s courageous choices, and a young girl’s ultimate resilience to survive alone.

A Child in Berlin is the true story of a mother, a daughter, and their courage in the face of Nazi terror. Käthe is a mother who must choose between her dreams as a rising star in the opera and her conscience. She discovers the truth about her Jewish friends around the time she attends a dinner party presided by Adolf Hitler himself. She realizes she cannot remain among Nazi society and makes the gut-wrenching choice to leave the opera. To support herself and young Heidi, she joins Berlin’s black-market network and ends up dealing with more than just food. As others evacuate the capital, Käthe harbors a secret that anchors them in the epicenter of danger.

While Käthe becomes ever more preoccupied with survival, Heidi and a roving pack of friends make mischief in Berlin’s rubble. The war devolves, and Heidi braves hunger, cold, and feelings of abandonment as shuttles between Berlin and the Polish countryside. Heidi’s ultimate test comes when she must survive alone in a bombed-out apartment during the final weeks of World War II. Her moxie shows how children are capable of far more than adults realize.

I loved reading this book. As you know, I only recommend clean reads, so this is a safe-to-share and safe-to-recommend book. We all love a good hero story, and I found this book absolutely remarkable in that way. The courage both Heidi and her mother displayed throughout one of the most horrific times in history is absolutely heroic. It’s powerful, inspiring, and moving.

I will tell you, too, that I’m a sensitive soul (a Highly Sensitive Person, as Elaine Aron describes it), so I have a really hard time reading about/listening to/watching movies about traumatic things such as the atrocities of war. This book focuses more on Heidi’s (and Käthe’s) courage and resilience, and although it doesn’t gloss over the horrors, it’s a memoir of Heidi’s childhood experience told from her point of view as she lived it, so it was–to me–a manageable and sensitive way to read about the realities of World War II in Germany.

This is a beautiful memoir about courage and resilience! Heidi’s experiences from her young life are both sweet and heart-wrenching, and her grit and strength are inspiring. Lauritzen’s telling of Heidi’s story from weekly, recorded interviews with Heidi (who is now in her late 80s) is well-done, piecing together an impressive narrative from Heidi’s sharp memory and letters and photos.

A line from the preface stuck with me throughout my reading of the book: “She [Heidi] says, ‘When people tell me they don’t remember their childhood, I tell them it’s because happy childhoods are not that eventful. When you go through something like a war, you remember everything.” So many things she went through as she lived in Berlin at the end of World War II are unimaginable, and as I went back to re-read the preface to quote here, another statement Heidi made seems to me, now, to be the best description of this book: “I’ve eaten this big, beautiful life; I never let it eat me.”
~Jennifer’s amazon.com review of A Child in Berlin
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I highly recommend A Child in Berlin by Rhonda Lauritzen! I’ll be back next month with my next Personalized DIY Books post, so in the meantime, pick up this book now. I’m not kidding when I say: Don’t wait! It would make a great book club read, a lovely gift, and a beautiful way to inspire your own heart.

See this post In The News at evalogue.life.


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2 thoughts on “Book Review: A Child in Berlin

  1. Jen, I love WWll historical fiction and memoirs. I’m going to look this one up for sure. As always I appreciate you’re reviews and recommendations.

    1. Oh, I didn’t know that, Paula! Well, you are going to LOVE this book, then! It’s non-fiction and just an absolutely incredible story. You’ll have to tell me when you’ve read it. 🙂

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