A missing piece of family history is memorialized in Suchman’s historical novel, a tribute to the lives lost during the Holocaust.
The book opens with a nonfiction prologue: In 2018, the author and her husband, Bruce, missed their connecting flight through Frankfurt to Washington, D.C. With 12 hours to kill, they explored the city. Bruce’s father, Curtis, fled the region at 17 to escape the Nazis; the couple found a plaque (a stolpersteine, known in English as a stumbling stone) dedicated to Emma and Selma Heppenheimer, Bruce’s great-grandmother and great-aunt. But missing from the stone was the name of another great aunt: Alice. It is here that Suchman moves into the novel proper, using her extensive research into Alice’s life to fictionalize her story. Beginning in 1920 and ending during World War II, Suchman’s narrative covers more than two decades as she imagines how this Jewish woman endured her experiences as Nazi ideology and politics took hold of Germany and controlled and suppressed so many aspects of her life. Readers first meet Alice in Nuremberg on the eve of her wedding to Ludwig Adler. A graduate of the Nuremberg Arts and Crafts School with dreams of opening her own fashion studio, Alice begins an apprenticeship in a handbag factory, and it is here that her first true experiences with antisemitism begin. Suchman writes of Alice’s experiences in a powerful way; readers see a young woman come of age and find her place in the world, unable to find firm footing because of the events taking place around her. Short, emphatic statements, such as Alice’s reaction to discovering the identity of a co-worker leaving derogatory notes for her (“surely, he couldn’t hate her if he actually knew her”), emphasize the horrific dehumanization of ordinary people just for being Jewish. Extremely readable with close attention paid to both wider historical and intimate family details, Suchman’s tale serves as a monument in words.
A somber and important novel highlighting the experiences of German Jewish women during the Holocaust.