
My Review: A harrowing and haunting story of the will to survive. Barbara has done a fabulous job bringing 2018 and 1942/43 to life through Rachel and Celine.
In this dual timeline you find yourself emersed and lost in the story of Rachel whose mother died when she was young and was raised by her grumpy, closed off granddad and his storybook of a Little Fish. With him now in a care home, sickly with a failing memory, she takes off to France to find love and uncover secrets from the past. Will she like what she finds? How will it affect her future?
Celina is with her brother Max on her way back to her life in America after losing her husband. First she wants to see his childhood home, this is where they crash the car and the course of events change. Celina stays and discovers a new way of life.
I love the twists and turns in their stories and how it all came together beautifully, even under the cloud of World War II. 5 stars.

Book Description:
“Nobody outside the village knows the orphanage exists, Celina. We’re hidden by the mountains and everyone is sworn to secrecy. Please don’t give the soldiers a reason to come here…”
In a quiet village in German-occupied France, schoolteacher Celina ushers young Jewish children into her classroom. Watching their bright smiles as they learn how to write, she and sweet, handsome Remy promise to protect them. Every day she pretends to send them home, waving at the local police roaming the streets, as instead they sneak away to hide upstairs.
But Celina can’t stop thinking about the note left on her bedside table last night. Written in the secret code used by the Resistance, it told her a baby she’s sheltering could be reunited with its mother. Will Remy ever forgive her if she attempts to take the baby home? If she’s caught, they could discover the orphanage…
New York, present day. Haunted by a loss he refuses to speak about, Rachel’s grandfather is slowly losing his memories. Then Rachel finds a name scribbled into the old children’s book he used to read to her, which leads her to a French village with a dark and dangerous past.
Nothing can prepare Rachel for what she finds behind the orphanage’s crumbling façade. But as her own future becomes entwined with her grandfather’s wartime secrets, she will learn just how much courage it takes to follow your heart.
A breathtaking, emotional historical novel that will sweep you away to World War Two France, to the dangers of Nazi occupation, and the hope that prevailed in the darkest of times. For fans of Victoria Hislop, Soraya Lane and Fiona Valpy.
Author Bio:
Barbara Josselsohn is a best-selling novelist and journalist who loves crafting stories about strong protagonists facing a fork in the road. Her newest book is The Secret Orphanage, a multigenerational novel about an American schoolteacher who becomes embroiled in the French Resistance and a present-day librarian compelled s to discover her grandfather’s wartime secrets. Her earlier historical novels include the Sisters of War series (Secrets of the Italian Island, The Lost Gift to the Italian Island, and The Forgotten Italian Restaurant). She is also the author of five contemporary novels: The Lilac House, The Bluebell Girls, The Lily Garden, The Cranberry Inn, and The Last Dreamer. Barbara has written hundreds of articles and essays in major and regional publications about family, home and relationships. She lives just north of New York City and enjoys escaping to the beach whenever she can. Other than writing, her biggest passion is her family: her husband, her three kids, and her rescue pup, a mini-schnauzer named Albie. She is currently at work on her ninth novel.
https://www.facebook.com/BarbaraJosselsohnAuthorhttps://www.instagram.com/barbara_josselsohn_author/
https://tiktok.com/Barbara_Josselsohn_Books
Sign up to be the first to hear about new releases from Barbara Josselsohn here: https://www.bookouture.com/barbara-josselsohn
Buy Link:
Amazon: https://geni.us/B0FCG2XFMSsocial
You can sign up for all the best Bookouture deals you’ll love at: http://ow.ly/Fkiz30lnzdo


Leave a comment