“Sometimes what you want is given to you in a way that is so very different from how you had pictured getting it.”
— Susan Meissner, The Last Year of the War
Goodreads Synopsis
Elise Sontag is a typical Iowa fourteen-year-old in 1943–aware of the war but distanced from its reach. Then her father, a legal U.S. resident for nearly two decades, is suddenly arrested on suspicion of being a Nazi sympathizer. The family is sent to an internment camp in Texas, where, behind the armed guards and barbed wire, Elise feels stripped of everything beloved and familiar, including her own identity.
The only thing that makes the camp bearable is meeting fellow internee Mariko Inoue, a Japanese-American teen from Los Angeles, whose friendship empowers Elise to believe the life she knew before the war will again be hers. Together in the desert wilderness, Elise and Mariko hold tight the dream of being young American women with a future beyond the fences.
My Thoughts:
There’s no shortage of dual any different angles. I liked that this one focused on a German American family. You hear about the Japanese internment camps in America, but I’ve never heard much about what happened to Germans living in America.
What I liked about the book:
- Focus on female friendship and how the bond remains despite decades of separation
- the German American focus
- the Sontag’s are an average family who considered themselves Americans