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An achingly beautiful, timeless picture book by bestselling author Jonathan Freedland and illustrated by Emily Sutton, inspired by a story from Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, author of The Passenger
It's King Winter's birthday, and he wants his party to be really special. He asks all of his brothers and sisters to be there: Queen Spring, King Summer and Queen Autumn.
But the wind and the trees whisper a warning, and as the four play magical games, something strange begins to happen outside.
Inspired by a story from Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, written while he was interned on the Isle of Man during the Second World War, this timeless fairy tale is a celebration of nature's rhythms, and of a chaotic world restored to balance.
When the whole world is lying, someone must tell the truth.
Berlin, 1943. A group of high-society anti-Nazi dissenters meet for a
tea party one late summer afternoon. They do not know that, sitting
around the table, is someone poised to betray them all to the Gestapo -
revealing their secret to the Nazis' most ruthless detective.
They form a circle of unlikely rebels, drawn from the German elite: two
countesses, a diplomat, an intelligence officer, an ambassador's widow
and a pioneering headmistress. Meeting in the shadows, rescuing Jews or
plotting for a future Germany freed from the Führer's rule, what unites
them is a shared loathing of the Nazis, a refusal to bow to Hitler and
the courage to perform perilous acts of resistance. Or so they believe.
How did a group of brave, principled rebels, who had successfully
defied Adolf Hitler for more than a decade, come to fall into such a
lethal trap? And who betrayed them?
Undone from within and pursued to near-destruction by one of the
Reich's cruellest men, they showed a heroism that raises a question
with new urgency for our time: what kind of person does it take to risk
everything and stand up to tyranny?
THE INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2022
BAILLIE GIFFORD PRIZE SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2022 WATERSTONES BOOK OF
THE YEAR SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2023 RATHBONES FOLIO PRIZE LONGLISTED
FOR THE 2022 WINGATE LITERARY PRIZE 'Thrilling' Daily Mail
'Gripping' Guardian 'Heartwrenching' Yuval Noah Harari
'Magnificent' Philip Pullman 'Excellent' Sunday Times 'Inspiring'
Daily Mail 'An immediate classic' Antony Beevor 'Awe inspiring'
Simon Sebag Montefiore 'Shattering' Simon Schama 'Utterly
compelling' Philippe Sands 'A must-read' Emily Maitlis
'Indispensable' Howard Jacobson Anne Frank. Primo Levi. Oskar
Schindler . . . Rudolf Vrba. April 1944. Nineteen-year-old Rudolf
Vrba and fellow inmate Fred Wetzler became two of the very first
Jews to successfully escape Auschwitz. Evading the thousands of SS
men hunting them, Vrba and Wetzler made the perilous journey on
foot across Nazi-occupied Poland. Their mission: to reveal to the
world the truth of the Holocaust. Vrba's unique testimony would
save some 200,000 lives. But he kept on running - from his past,
from his home country, his adopted country, even from his own name.
Now, at last, Rudolf Vrba's heroism can be known.
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