This is a story that was both emotionally difficult to read, yet important to our history. While the story itself is fiction, the historical events described in the book are sadly all true. The setting is during World War II, and the Vel d'Hiv Roundup, when over 10,000 children and their families were taken from French homes and sent to concentration camps. The Vel d’Hiv is not commonly known, as it was French police that sent the children away, not Nazi soldiers. Sarah’s Key tells a tragic story about a girl who hides her brother in a cupboard and promises to come back for him. The story chronicles her life well into adulthood, and is interwoven with the story of woman in present-day France who discovers Sarah’s past.
While one certainly wouldn’t necessarily call the book heart-warming (the connotation of that word implies feel-good moments and periods of pure joy), the novel tugs at your heart strings and makes you appreciate all of the good things in your life—including your childhood. Sarah’s Key is the type of book that we don’t read often enough. The book that we need to read in order to remember; lest we should forget and are doomed to repeat the horrors of our past.
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