The German Girl: A Novel
4/5
()
- Immigration 
- Family 
- Identity 
- Survival 
- Friendship 
- Fish Out of Water 
- Family Secrets 
- Struggle for Survival 
- Search for Identity 
- Haunted Past 
- Power of Friendship 
- Star-Crossed Lovers 
- Mysterious Past 
- Journey 
- Journey of Self-Discovery 
- Cuba 
- Fear 
- Self-Discovery 
- Family History 
- Memory 
About this ebook
Featured in Entertainment Weekly, People, The Millions, and USA TODAY
“An unforgettable and resplendent novel which will take its place among the great historical fiction written about World War II.” —Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of The Shoemaker's Wife
A young girl flees Nazi-occupied Germany with her family and best friend, only to discover that the overseas refuge they had been promised is an illusion in this “engrossing and heartbreaking” (Library Journal, starred review) debut novel, perfect for fans of The Nightingale, Lilac Girls, and The Tattooist of Auschwitz.
Berlin, 1939. Before everything changed, Hannah Rosenthal lived a charmed life. But now the streets of Berlin are draped in ominous flags; her family’s fine possessions are hauled away; and they are no longer welcome in the places they once considered home. A glimmer of hope appears in the shape of the St. Louis, a transatlantic ocean liner promising Jews safe passage to Cuba. At first, the liner feels like a luxury, but as they travel, the circumstances of war change, and the ship that was to be their salvation seems likely to become their doom.
New York, 2014. On her twelfth birthday, Anna Rosen receives a mysterious package from an unknown relative in Cuba, her great-aunt Hannah. Its contents inspire Anna and her mother to travel to Havana to learn the truth about their family’s mysterious and tragic past.
Weaving dual time frames, and based on a true story, The German Girl is a beautifully written and deeply poignant story about generations of exiles seeking a place to call home.
Armando Lucas Correa
Armando Lucas Correa is an award-winning journalist, editor, author, and the recipient of several awards from the National Association of Hispanic Publications and the Society of Professional Journalism. He is the author of the international bestseller The German Girl, which is now being published in seventeen languages and has sold more than one million copies; The Daughter’s Tale; and The Night Traveler, for which he was awarded the Cintas Foundation Creative Writing Fellowship. He lives in New York City with his husband and their three children. Visit ArmandoLucasCorrea.com.
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Reviews for The German Girl
499 ratings50 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a very good book that brings a dark moment in history to life with passion. The characters are vivid and memorable. Some readers wished for more detail and length, giving it 4 stars. There is one unrelated review promoting a publishing platform. Overall, the book is enjoyed and appreciated for shedding light on the plight of refugees during World War II.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Oct 24, 2018 This one just really didn’t do anything for me. It was really just okay. I've read a lot of WWII fiction, I really didn't come away with any emotions with this one.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Feb 7, 2018 I must avoid all dual time period books. The story of one period is usually more interesting than the other and this book is no exception and the present story is much weaker. Unfortunately, I wasn't really engaged by the past story either but I might have liked it better if it hadn't been interrupted by the shifts to the present.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Dec 2, 2017 A very very good book. A dark momant in history brought to life sensitively and with passion. The characters zing off the pages in technicolor 3d and will live in my heart forever.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Nov 17, 2017 Lovely but sad book based on the horrible rejection of refugees during or before ww2. I would have liked the book to be longer with more detail of the lives lived. Therefore the 4 stars only.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Nov 17, 2018 Muiiiito chato!!! Personagens que parecem almas penadas sem nexo. Porque eles se obstinaram em permanecer em Cuba, ilha que eles detestavam cada dia mais??? Esse é um dos pontos onde o livro não faz sentido. Mas têm muitos outros. Bobinho...
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dec 4, 2017 I really enjoyed this book. Learned something new that I had never know. How awful for the refugees at that time to not be accepted with open arms by countries who had every ability to help.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5May 7, 2021 The books are totally deserving. I loved them, and I think they are must read. If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to hardy@novelstar.top or joye@novelstar.top
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5May 25, 2020 Fictionalized version of the movie "The Voyage of the Damned" that follows those few passengers in one family that disembarked in Cuba - I've never seen - I never knew what it was about, but might be interested now. Great characters and an interesting historical backdrop. A small amount of history and photos are included at the end of the book.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Feb 2, 2021 I think that in the current political climate, this book and this story is a must read.
 I had never heard of the story of the St. Louis or any of the other ships that were part of this horrific tragedy and oversight. Very well researched and a great story, although the start was a little slow, by the end I could not put it down and finished it one day.
 I recivied this book from netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Apr 5, 2022 An illustrative novel, with a bittersweet flavor, I loved it. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Feb 24, 2022 Abandoned. I had too many expectations. With so much fanfare on the cover announcing a masterpiece with great pomp and circumstance. I was disappointed. I love stories told in a child's voice, but this one didn't evoke even the slightest emotion in me. I kept waiting for something to happen. What a letdown. Boring. Reading shouldn't be an occasion to feel bad. That's enough for me, and onto something else. I do not recommend it. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Aug 22, 2018 This one just really didn’t do anything for me. It was really just okay. I've read a lot of WWII fiction, I really didn't come away with any emotions with this one.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Mar 11, 2021 I found it an entertaining book, but little more. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jan 8, 2021 A book where the tragedy of the Holocaust emerges again in this historical novel based on true events. A wonderful book followed by The Forgotten Daughter. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Apr 15, 2020 I found it to be an interesting novel because it is based on real events, and I was not aware of such an occurrence. With two protagonists having very different lives that eventually intersect. I really liked it. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Mar 26, 2020 First book I read by Armando, and I'm already eager to read "The Forgotten Daughter"... I liked how he narrates Hannah's story, especially with Leo and then with her granddaughter. Moreover, this is the first Holocaust book I read that doesn't discuss life in the camps, but rather life outside of them and how the journey to a new continent was. And the best part is that it includes real photographic material at the end of the book! Totally recommended! (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Feb 28, 2020 Short and intense novel. Do not read if you are feeling sensitive. I cried and suffered, it is very well written. Impossible not to remember the other Anna that we all know. Several tragic events in the history of humanity hit this family that tries to stand tall. Bravo for literature. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Feb 20, 2020 A story about World War II approached from a different perspective. It hooks you from the beginning. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jan 27, 2020 I was completely unaware of the theme of the novel, although I have read many books about the Holocaust, including the refusal of certain countries to admit refugees from the Nazi horror.
 I liked the book a lot, it was well-constructed and easy to read, although, as always in this kind of hard and traumatic literature. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jan 9, 2020 I have read several books about the Holocaust but had never read one about Cuba's refusal to shelter Jews.
 How can they see human evil and do nothing?
 How can they take away the innocence and happiness of children?
 What decisions they made! (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dec 29, 2019 Interesting, in my opinion, it gives you a glimpse into the situation that many Jews had to live through during the Nazi era, specifically the passengers of the St. Louis, as well as the marks that this era may have left on people. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Dec 13, 2019 I recommend it. A book that tells a part of the history of World War II that I didn't know and that also leaves a great reflection! (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Aug 21, 2019 The book covers Germany during WWII and the escape of Jews from Germany to Cuba and hopefully eventually to America. The story is told by two people. An elderly woman who escaped and her niece who now lives in New York. Very interesting read about Cuba before, during and after the revolution.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Apr 28, 2019 It's always interesting to read about the different stories that had gone on during the WW wars. Stories that weren't in any history book. Many of which end in tragedy, but also some not so tragic. So I applaud the author on his debut. Interesting read about the ship the St Louis and its passengers.
 I would definitely recommend.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Apr 7, 2019 It had been a while since I read anything inspired by real events. The truth is that it is evident the author has thoroughly researched everything that happened during that time. Highly recommended for those who enjoy books based on true stories or like to read about the year 1939. This one specifically talks about the St. Louis, 1939. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Feb 13, 2019 "On the cover of this magazine for pure young girls—the ones who don’t bear the stains of their four grandparents, the ones with small, snub noses, skin as white as foam,blond hair, and eyes bluer than the sky itself, where there is no room for any imperfection—there I was, smiling, my eyes fixed on the future. I had become the “German girl”
 This historical fiction novel depicts the story of Hanna Rosenthal, living in Berlin in 1939 just when the ethnic cleaning of the Nazi regime is taking effect. She looks like her mother, a Strauss, and becomes the ironic cover of the magazine described above. Hanna's story of fleeing Germany on the ocean liner, the St. Louis, and her eventual refugee existence in Cuba is one half of this novel. The other is Anna's story, living in New York and caring for her depressed mom as they both mourn the loss of their husband and father. Both girls are 13 as their stories begin to unfold. The uniqueness of the story is that Hanna is Anna's aunt and they eventually meet to revive the connections to their lives.
 There was some insight provided in reading this novel, translated from the Cuban author. But the writing was just okay.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dec 25, 2018 Very interesting story about German Jews and the problems getting into Cuba. Another tale of rejection for the Jewish people and one not often discussed. Well written and keeps the reader's interest by jumping between the present day and the war years.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Nov 11, 2018 Hannah shows us all the innocence at the age of 12, the story she tells us and the way it connects to Anna's life deserves to be read. The ending left me heartbroken, though I was practically that way throughout the entire book. I had not previously read stories related to St. Louis and the tragedy it carried with it, and I really enjoyed this one. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Nov 1, 2018 I had never read anything about this episode prior to World War II when the cleansing of the impure took place for the Nazis. A touching tale of two girls in two realities distant in time but united by pain. (Translated from Spanish)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sep 6, 2018 From this book, one learns that despite the problems of life, one must keep moving forward. But a key lesson is to FORGIVE because otherwise, one lives a life full of bitterness and pain that can carry on for generations.
 We must learn to live and be happy...even though for many, happiness may only be a utopia. (Translated from Spanish)
Book preview
The German Girl - Armando Lucas Correa
Hannah and Anna
Berlin–New York
Hannah
Berlin, 1939
I was almost twelve years old when I decided to kill my parents.
I had made up my mind. I’d go to bed and wait until they fell asleep. That was always easy to tell because Papa would lock the big, heavy double windows and close the thick greenish-bronze curtains. He’d repeat the same things he said every night after supper, which in those days had become little more than a steaming bowl of tasteless soup.
There’s nothing to be done. It’s all over. We have to leave.
 
Then Mama would start shouting, her voice cracking as she blamed him. She’d pace the whole apartment—her fortress at the heart of a sinking city; the only space she’d known for more than four months—until she wore herself out. Then she’d embrace Papa, and her feeble moans would finally cease.
I’d wait a couple of hours. They wouldn’t put up any resistance. I knew Papa had already given up and was willing to go. Mama would be more difficult, but she took so many sleeping pills, she’d be fast asleep, steeped in her jasmine and geranium essences. Although she had gradually increased the dose, she still awakened during the night crying. I would rush to see what had happened, but all I could make out through the half-open door was Mama inconsolable in Papa’s arms, like a little girl recovering from a terrible nightmare. Except that, for her, the nightmare was being awake.
Nobody heard my cries anymore; nobody bothered about them. Papa told me I was strong. I would survive whatever happened. But not Mama. The pain was gnawing away at her. She was the child in a house where daylight was no longer allowed. For four months, she had been sobbing each night, ever since the city was covered in broken glass and filled with the constant stench of gunpowder, metal, and smoke. That was when they started planning our escape. They decided we’d abandon the house where I was born, and forbade me to go to school, where nobody liked me anymore. Then Papa gave me my second camera.
So that you can leave a trail out of the labyrinth like Ariadne,
 he whispered. 
I dared to think it would be best to be rid of them.
I thought about diluting aspirin in Papa’s food or stealing Mama’s sleeping pills—she wouldn’t last a week without them. The only problem was, first of all, my doubts. How many aspirin would he have to swallow to give him a lethal ulcer, internal bleeding? How long could Mama really survive without sleep? Anything bloody was out of the question, because I couldn’t bear the sight of blood. So the best thing would be for them to die of suffocation. To smother them with a huge feather pillow. Mama made it clear that her dream had always been for death to take her by surprise while she slept. I can’t bear farewells,
 she would say, staring straight at me—or, if I wasn’t listening, she would grab me by the arm and squeeze it with the little strength she had left. 
One night I woke up during the night in tears, thinking my crime had already been committed. I could see my parents’ lifeless bodies but was unable to shed a single tear. I felt free. Now there would be no one to force me to move to a filthy neighborhood, to leave behind my books, my photographs, my cameras, to live with the terror of being poisoned by your own father and mother.
I started to tremble. I called out Papa!
 But no one came to my rescue. Mama!
 There was no going back. What had I turned into? How did I end up so low? What would I do with their bodies? How long would it take for them to decompose? 
Everyone would think it was suicide. No one would question it. My parents had been suffering constantly for four months by then. Others would see me as an orphan; I’d see myself as a murderer. My crime existed in the dictionary. I looked it up. What a dreadful word. Just saying it gave me the shivers. Parricide. I tried to repeat it and couldn’t. I was a murderer.
It was so easy to identify my crime, my guilt, my agony. What about my parents, who were planning to get rid of me? What was the name for someone who killed their children? Was that such a terrible crime there wasn’t even a word for it in the dictionary? That meant they could get away with it. Whereas I had to bear the weight of death and a nauseating word. You could kill your parents, your brothers and sisters. But not your children.
I prowled through the rooms, which to me seemed increasingly small and dark, in a house that would soon no longer be ours. I looked up at the unreachable ceiling, walked down hallways lined with the images of a family that was disappearing little by little. Light from the lamp with the snowy-white shade in Papa’s library filtered out into the corridor where I stood disoriented, unable to move. I watched as my pale hands turned golden.
I opened my eyes and was in the same bedroom, surrounded by well-worn books and dolls I had never played with, nor ever would. I closed my eyes and sensed it wouldn’t be long before we fled without a set destination on a huge ocean liner from a port in this country where we had never belonged.
In the end, I didn’t kill my parents. I didn’t have to. Papa and Mama were the guilty ones. They forced me to throw myself into the abyss alongside them.
The apartment’s smell had become intolerable. I didn’t understand how Mama could live between those walls lined with moss-green silk that swallowed what little daylight there was at that time of year. It was the smell of enclosure.
We had less time to live. I knew it; I felt it. We wouldn’t be spending the summer there in Berlin. Mama had put mothballs in the closets to preserve her world, and the pungent odor filled the apartment. I had no idea what she was trying to protect, since we were going to lose everything regardless.
You smell like the old ladies on Grosse Hamburger Strasse,
 Leo taunted me. Leo was my only friend; the one person who dared look me in the face without wanting to spit on me. 
Spring in Berlin was cold and rainy, but Papa often left without taking his coat. Whenever he went out in those days, he wouldn’t wait for the elevator but took the stairs, which creaked as he trod on them. I wasn’t allowed to use the stairs, though. He didn’t walk down because he was in a hurry but because he didn’t want to bump into anyone else from the building. The five families living on the floors beneath ours were all waiting for us to leave. Those who were once our friends were no longer friendly. Those who used to thank Papa or who tried to ingratiate themselves with Mama and her friends—who praised her good taste or asked for advice on how to make a brightly colored handbag match their fashionable shoes—now looked down their noses at us and could denounce us at any moment.
Mama spent yet another day without going out. Every morning when she got up, she would fasten her ruby earrings and smooth back her beautiful, thick hair—which was the envy of her friends whenever she appeared in the tearoom of the Hotel Adlon. Papa called her the Goddess, because she was so fascinated by the cinema, which was her only contact with the outside world. She would never miss the first night of any film starring the real screen goddess, La Divine
 Greta Garbo, at the Palast. 
She’s more German than anyone,
 she would insist whenever she mentioned the divine Garbo, who was, in fact, Swedish. But back then motion pictures were silent, and no one cared where the star had been born. 
We discovered her. We always knew she would be worshipped. We appreciated her before anybody else; that’s why Hollywood noticed her. And in her first talkie she said in perfect German: "Whisky—aber nicht zu knapp!"
Sometimes when they came back from the cinema, Mama was still in tears. I love sad endings—in movies,
 she explained. Comedies weren’t meant for me.
 
She would swoon in Papa’s arms, raise a hand to her brow, the other holding up the silk train of a cascading dress, toss back her head, and start talking in French.
Armand, Armand . . .
 she would repeat languidly and with a strong accent, like La Divine herself. 
And Papa would call her my Camille.
 
"Espère, mon ami, et sois bien certain d’une chose, c’est que, quoi qu’il arrive, ta Marguerite te restera, she would reply, laughing hysterically. 
Dumas sounds ghastly in German, doesn’t he?" 
But Mama no longer went anywhere.
Too many smashed windows
 had been her excuse ever since the previous November’s terrible pogrom, when Papa had lost his job. He had been arrested at his university office and taken to the station on Grolmanstrasse, kept incommunicado for an offense we never understood. He shared a windowless cell with Leo’s father, Herr Martin. After they were released, the two would get together daily—and that worried Mama even more, as if they were planning an escape she was not prepared for yet. Fear was what prevented her from leaving her fortress. She lived in a state of constant agitation. Before, she used to go to the elegant salon at the Hotel Kaiserhof, just a few blocks away, but eventually it was full of the people who hated us: the ones who thought they were pure, whom Leo called Ogres. 
In the past, she would boast about Berlin. If she went on a shopping spree to Paris, she always stayed at the Ritz; and if she accompanied Papa to a lecture or concert in Vienna, at the Imperial:
But we have the Adlon, our Grand Hotel on the Unter den Linden. La Divine stayed there, and immortalized it on screen.
 
During those days, she would peer out the window, trying to find a reason for what was happening. What had become of her happy years? What had she been sentenced to, and why? She felt she was paying for the offenses of others: her parents, grandparents—every one of her ancestors throughout the centuries.
I’m German, Hannah. I am a Strauss. Alma Strauss. Isn’t that enough, Hannah?
 she said to me in German, and then in Spanish, and in English, and finally in French. As if someone were listening to her; as if to make her message entirely clear in each of the four languages she spoke fluently. 
I had agreed to meet Leo that day to go take photographs. We would see each other every afternoon at Frau Falkenhorst’s café near Hackescher Markt. Whenever she spotted us, the owner would smile and call us bandits.
 We liked that. If either of us was later than expected, the first to arrive had to order a hot chocolate. Sometimes we’d arrange to meet at the café near the Alexanderplatz Station exit, which had shelves filled with sweets wrapped in silver paper. When he needed to see me urgently, Leo would wait for me at the newspaper kiosk near my home, allowing us to avoid running into any of our neighbors, who, despite also being our tenants, always shunned us. 
In order not to disobey the adults, I bypassed the carpeted stairs, which were increasingly dusty, and took the elevator. It stopped at the third floor.
Hello, Frau Hofmeister,
 I said, smiling at her daughter, Gretel, who used to be my playmate. Gretel was sad, because not long before, she had lost her beautiful white puppy. I felt so sorry for her. 
We were the same age, but I was much taller. She looked down, and Frau Hofmeister had the nerve to say to her, Let’s take the stairs. When are they going to leave? They’re putting us all in such a difficult situation . . .
 
As if I wasn’t listening, as if it was only my shadow standing inside the elevator. As if I didn’t exist. That’s what she wanted: for me not to exist.
The Ditmars, Hartmanns, Brauers, and Schultzes lived in our building. We rented them their apartments. The building had belonged to Mama’s family since before she was born. They were the ones who should leave. They were not from here. We were. We were more German than they were.
The elevator door closed, it started to go down, and I could still see Gretel’s feet.
Dirty people,
 I heard. 
Had I heard it right? What have we done for me to have to endure that? What crime had we committed? I was not dirty. I didn’t want people to think of me as dirty. I came out of the elevator and hid under the stairs so I wouldn’t meet them again. I saw them leave the building. Gretel’s head was still bowed. She glanced backward, looking for me, perhaps wanting to apologize, but her mother pushed her on.
What are you staring at?
 she shouted. 
I ran back up the stairs noisily, in tears. Yes, crying with rage and impotence because I could not tell Frau Hofmeister that she was dirtier than I was. If we bothered her, she could leave the building; it was our building. I wanted to hit the walls, smash the valuable camera my father had given me. I entered our apartment, and Mama could not understand why I was so furious.
Hannah! Hannah!
 she called out to me, but I chose to ignore her. 
I went into the cold bathroom, slammed the door, and turned on the shower. I was still crying; or rather, I wanted to stop crying but found it impossible. Fully clothed and wearing my shoes, I climbed into the perfectly white bathtub. Mama kept on calling to me and then finally left me in peace. All I could hear was the sound of the scalding water cascading onto me. I let it flow into my eyes until they burned; into my ears, my nose, my mouth.
I started to take off my clothes and shoes, which were heavier because of the water and my dirtiness. I soaped myself, smeared on Mama’s bath salts that irritated my skin, and rubbed myself with a white towel to get rid of every last trace of impurity. My skin was red, as red as if it was going to peel. I turned the water even hotter, until I couldn’t take it anymore. When I came out of the shower, I collapsed on the cold black-and-white tiles.
Fortunately, I had run out of tears. I dried myself, scrubbing hard at this skin I didn’t want and which, God willing, would start to slough off after all the heat I’d subjected it to. I examined every pore in front of the steamed-up mirror: face, hands, feet, ears—everything—to see if there was any trace of impurity left. I wanted to know who was the dirty one now.
I cowered in a corner, trembling, shrinking, feeling like a slab of meat and bone. This was my only hiding place. In the end, I knew that however much I washed, burned my skin, cut my hair, gouged out my eyes, turned deaf, however much I dressed or talked differently, or took on a different name, they would always see me as impure.
It might not have been a bad idea to knock at the distinguished Frau Hofmeister’s door to ask her to check that I didn’t have any tiny stain on my skin, that she didn’t have to keep Gretel away from me, that I wasn’t a bad influence on her child, who was as blond, perfect, and immaculate as me.
I went to my room and dressed all in white and pink, the purest colors I could find in my wardrobe. I went looking for Mama and hugged her, because I knew she understood me; even though she chose to stay at home and so didn’t have to face anyone. She had built a fortress in her room, which in turn was protected by the apartment’s thick columns, in a building made up of enormous stone blocks and double windows.
I had to be quick. Leo must have already been at the station, darting all over the place, trying to stay out of the way of people running to catch their trains.
At least I knew that he thought of me as being clean.
Anna
New York, 2014
The day Dad disappeared, Mom was pregnant with me. By just three months. She had the opportunity to get rid of the baby but didn’t take it. She never lost hope that Dad would return, even after receiving the death certificate.
Give me some proof, a trace of his DNA, then we can talk,
 she always told them. 
Maybe because Dad was still a stranger to her in some ways—mysterious and solitary, a man of few words—she thought he might reappear at any moment.
Dad left unaware I would be born.
If he’d known he had a daughter on the way, he would still be here with us,
 Mom insisted every September for as long as I could remember. 
The day Dad never returned, Mom was going to prepare a dinner for the two of them in our spacious dining room, by the window from where you can see the trees in Morningside Park lit by bronze streetlamps. She was going to tell him the news. She still set the table that evening because she refused to admit the possibility that he was gone. She never got to open the bottle of red wine. The plates stayed on the white tablecloth for days. The food ended up in the garbage. That night, she went to bed without eating, without crying, without closing her eyes.
She lowered her gaze as she told me this. If it were up to her, the plates and the bottle would have still been on the table—and, who knows, probably also the rotting, dried-out food.
He’ll be back,
 she always insisted. 
They had talked about having children. They saw it as a distant possibility, a long-term project, a dream they hadn’t given up on. What both of them were sure of was that if they did have any children one day, the boy had to be called Max and the girl, Anna. That was the only thing Dad demanded of her.
It’s a debt I owe my family,
 he would tell her. 
They had been together for five years, but she never managed to get him to talk about his years in Cuba or his family.
They’re all dead
 was the only thing he’d say. 
Even after so many years, that still bothered Mom.
Your father is an enigma. But he’s the enigma I loved most in my entire life.
 
Trying to resolve that enigma was a way to unburden herself. Finding the answer was her punishment.
I kept his small silver digital camera. At first, I spent hours going through the images he left on its memory card. There wasn’t a single one of Mom. Why bother, when she was always by his side? The photographs were all taken from the same spot on the narrow living room balcony. Photographs of the sun rising. Rainy days, clear days, dark or misty ones, orange days, violet-blue days. White days, with the snow covering everything. Always the sun. Dawn with a horizon line hidden by a patchwork of buildings in a silent Harlem, chimneys spewing out white smoke, the East River between two islands. Again and again, the sun—golden, grand, sometimes seeming warm, other times cold—viewed from our double glass door.
Mom told me that life is a jigsaw puzzle. She wakes up, attempting to find the correct piece, trying all the different combinations to create those distant landscapes of hers. I live to undo them so that I can discover where I came from. I am creating my own jigsaw puzzles out of photos I printed at home from the images I found on Dad’s camera.
From the day I discovered what had really happened to Dad, and Mom understood I could fend for myself, she shut herself in her bedroom and I became her caretaker. She converted her bedroom into her refuge, keeping the window overlooking the interior courtyard always closed. In dreams, I would see her falling fast asleep from the pills she took before going to bed, engulfed by her gray sheets and pillows. She said the pills helped ease the pain and knock her out. Sometimes I would say a prayer—so silent that even I could not hear or remember it—that she would stay asleep, and her pain would go away forever. I couldn’t bear to see her suffer.
Every day before I leave for school, I take her a cup of black coffee, with no sugar. In the evening, she sits at supper with me like a ghost while I make up stories about my classes. She listens, raises a spoon to her mouth, and smiles at me to show how grateful she is that I am still there with her, and for making her soup that she swallows out of duty.
I know she could disappear at any moment. Where would I go then?
When my school bus drops me off outside our apartment building each afternoon, the first thing I do is pick up the mail. After that, I prepare dinner for the two of us, finish my homework, and check if there are any bills to pay, which I pass on to Mom.
Today we received a large envelope with yellow, white, and red stripes and its warning in big red capital letters: DO NOT BEND. The sender is in Canada, and it is addressed to Mom. I leave it on the dining table and lie down on my bed to begin reading the book I was given at school. A few hours later, I remember that I haven’t opened the envelope.
I start knocking on Mom’s bedroom door. At this time of night? she must be thinking. She’s pretending to be asleep. Silence. I keep knocking.
Nights are sacred for her: she tries to fall asleep, reliving things she can no longer do, and thinking about what her life might have been like if she could have avoided fate or simply wiped it away.
A package came today. I think we should open it together,
 I say, but there’s no answer. 
I stay at the door and then open it gently so as not to disturb her. The lights are off. She’s dozing, her body seems almost weightless, lost in the middle of the mattress. I check that she’s still breathing, still exists.
Can’t it wait until tomorrow?
 she murmurs, but I don’t budge. 
She closes her eyes and then opens them again, turning to see me standing in the doorway, the hall light behind me—which blinds her at first, because she’s used to the dark.
Who sent it?
 she asks, but I don’t know. 
I insist she come with me; that it’ll do her good to get up.
I finally manage to convince her. She stands up unsteadily, smoothing down her straight black hair, which hasn’t been cut for months. She leans on my arm for support, and we shuffle to the dining table to discover what we have been sent. Perhaps it’s a birthday present for me. Someone has remembered I’m going to be twelve, that I’ve grown up, that I exist.
She sits down slowly, with an expression on her face that seems to say, Why did you make me get out of bed and upset my routine?
When she sees the sender’s name, she picks up the envelope and clutches it to her chest. Her eyes open wide, and she says to me solemnly:
It’s from your father’s family.
 
What? But Dad didn’t have a family! He came into this world alone and left it the same way, with no one else around. I remember that his parents died in an airplane accident when he was nine. Predestined for tragedy, as Mom once said.
After their deaths, he had been brought up by Hannah, an elderly aunt we assumed was dead by now. We had no idea if they had kept in touch by telephone, letters, or email. His only family. I was called Anna in her honor.
The package was mailed from Canada but it’s really from Havana, the capital of the Caribbean island where Dad was born. When we open it, we see it contains a second envelope. For Anna, from Hannah
 is written on the outside in big, shaky handwriting. This isn’t a present, I think. It must contain documents or who knows what. It probably has nothing to do with my birthday. Or maybe it’s from the last person to see Dad alive, who has finally decided to send us his things. Twelve years later. 
I’m so nervous, I can’t stop moving around, getting up and sitting down again. I walk to the corner of the room and back. I start playing with a lock of my hair, twisting and twisting it until it’s tangled. It feels like Dad is with us again. Mom opens the second envelope. All we find inside are old photograph contact sheets, and lots of negatives, together with a magazine—in German?—from March 1939. On the cover is the image of a smiling blond girl in profile.
"The German Girl, says Mom, translating the title of the magazine. 
She looks like you," she tells me mysteriously. 
These photos make me think I can begin a fresh puzzle now. I’m going to enjoy myself with all these images that have reached us from the island where Dad was born. I’m so excited at the discovery, but I was hoping to find Dad’s watch, an heirloom from his grandfather Max, which still worked, or his white gold wedding band, or his rimless spectacles. These are the details I remember about Dad from the photo I always keep with me, and which sleeps beside me every night under a pillow that used to be his.
The package has nothing to do with Dad. Not with his death, anyway.
We don’t recognize any of the people. It’s hard to make out such small, blurred images printed on sheets that seem to have survived a shipwreck. Dad could have been one of them. No, that’s impossible.
These photos are seventy years old or more,
 Mom explains. I don’t think even your grandfather was born then.
 
We have to get them printed tomorrow,
 I say, controlling my excitement to avoid upsetting her. She goes on studying the mysterious images; those faces from the past she is trying to decipher. 
Anna, they’re from before the war,
 she says, so seriously it startles me. Now I’m even more confused. What war is she talking about? 
We go through the negatives and come across a faded old postcard. She picks it up with great care, as though she’s afraid it might fall to pieces.
On one side, a ship. On the other, a dedication.
My heart starts racing. This must be a clue, but the date on the card is May 23, 1939, so I don’t think it has anything to do with Dad’s disappearance. Mom is handling this postcard like some kind of archaeologist, like she needs to put on a pair of silk gloves so that it won’t be harmed. For the first time in ages, she seems alive.
It’s time to find out who Dad is,
 I say, using the present tense just as Mom does whenever she mentions him. I stare at the face of the German girl. 
I am sure my father isn’t coming back, that I lost him forever one sunny day in September. But I want to know more about him. I don’t have anyone else, apart from my mother, who lives shut away in a dark room overwhelmed by gloomy thoughts she won’t share with anyone. I know sometimes there are no answers, and we have to accept it, but I can’t understand why, when they got married, she didn’t find out more about him; try to get to know him better. By now, it’s way too late. But that’s how Mom is.
Now we have a project. At least, I do. I think we’re about to discover an important clue. Mom goes back to her room, but I’m ready now to snap her out of her passiveness. I hold on to this object sent by a distant relative who I am now desperate to get to know. I prop the small card against my bedside lamp and turn down the brightness. Then I get into bed, pull up the covers, and stare at the picture until I fall asleep.
The postcard shows an ocean liner bearing the name St. Louis, Hamburg-Amerika Linie. The message is written in German: "Alles Gute zum Geburtstag Hannah. Signed: 
Der Kapitän." 
Hannah
Berlin, 1939
Yanking open the huge, dark wooden door from the inside, I banged the bronze knocker without meaning to. The noise reverberated through the silent building where I no longer felt protected. I prepared myself for the blaring noise of Französische Strasse, which was full of red-white-and-black flags. People were walking along, stumbling into one another without any apologizing. Everyone seemed to be fleeing.
I reached the Hackesche Höfe. Five years ago, it belonged to Herr Michael, a friend of Papa’s. The Ogres took it from him, and he had to leave the city. As with every midday, Leo was waiting for me in the doorway of Frau Falkenhorst’s café, in the interior courtyard of the building. And there he was, with that mischievous expression of his, ready to complain about me being so late.
I got out my camera and started snapping pictures of him. He struck poses and laughed. The café door opened, and a man with a blotchy red face came out, bringing with him a gust of warm air and the smell of beer and tobacco. When I got closer to Leo, I was hit by the fragrance of hot chocolate on his breath.
We have to get out of here,
 he said. I smiled and nodded. 
No, Hannah. We have to get out of all this,
 he repeated, meaning the whole city. 
This time I understood him: neither of us wanted to go on living surrounded by all these flags, these soldiers, all the pushing and shoving. I’ll go with you wherever you wish, I thought to myself as we set off at a run.
We were running against the wind, the flags, the cars. I tried to keep up with Leo as he raced along, adept at slipping through this throng of people who considered themselves pure and
