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Ribbon Leaf

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Would you risk your life to help a friend?

In Nazi Germany, friendship between an Aryan German girl and a Jewish German girl is strictly verboten, and an act of kindness might mean death. Sabine and Edie have been best friends since Kindergarten. Then Kristallnacht hits in 1938, shattering Jewish shop windows, synagogues, and their friendship. The girls, who once dreamed of stardom together, now take different paths — Edie escapes to Canada, and Sabine remains to experience life in her Nazi-controlled southern German town, eventually rescuing and supporting Edie's beloved Papa who poses as Sabine's grandfather.

Even though the girls are separated, the yellow ribbon that once decorated their identical dresses binds the girls' families in ways that contradict Nazi ideology. Throughout the seven long years of WWII, Sabine confronts how far courage can take her, while Edie finds her own strength to deal with leaving her father behind, integrating into a new country, and coming to terms with her sexual orientation. Each girl comes of age, experiencing first loves, loss, and joy. Without knowing how the other is doing across the ocean, they keep hope alive that their bond of friendship remains.

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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2022
      Growing up together in a small German town, Edie and Sabine are the best of friends. As Hitler rises to power, things worsen for Edie, who is Jewish. She flees to Montreal with her mother after Kristallnacht, leaving behind her father and a heartbroken Sabine, whose own family is splintered by their different feelings about and involvement in Nazism. As the girls grow, their individual circumstances and the horrors of the world become terribly real, and each must make choices about who they will be and how they will live in dangerous times. While the goals of the story are worthy of respect, the relationships and plot points come across as heavy-handed and didactic rather than organic and dynamic. The narrative voices of the two protagonists often blend together despite their disparate experiences. Edie and Sabine are vessels for a narrative that tries to pull on readers' heartstrings while lacking the complexity and depth of feeling this time in history deserves. It's noteworthy that the details of Sabine's German cultural milieu feel more fully realized than Edie's Jewish heritage, which is touched on relatively lightly, often in moments that make a wider point about antisemitism rather than highlighting other aspects of Jewish life. This righteous gentile meets star-crossed friendship parable is a familiar tale that has been executed more effectively many times before. Well-meaning but does not add much to well-explored territory. (author interview) (Historical fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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