Gretel and the Dark
A Novel
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
A captivating and atmospheric historical novel about a young girl in Nazi Germany, a psychoanalyst in fin-de-siècle Vienna, and the powerful mystery that links them together.
Gretel and the Dark explores good and evil, hope and despair, showing how the primal thrills and horrors of the stories we learn as children can illuminate the darkest moments in history, in two rich, intertwining narratives that come together to form one exhilarating, page-turning read. In 1899 Vienna, celebrated psychoanalyst Josef Breuer is about to encounter his strangest case yet: a mysterious, beautiful woman who claims to have no name, no feelings—to be, in fact, a machine. Intrigued, he tries to fathom the roots of her disturbance.
Years later, in Nazi-controlled Germany, Krysta plays alone while her papa works in the menacingly strange infirmary next door. Young, innocent, and fiercely stubborn, she retreats into a world of fairy tales, unable to see the danger closing in around her. When everything changes and the real world becomes as frightening as any of her stories, Krysta finds that her imagination holds powers beyond what she could ever have guessed.
Rich, compelling, and propulsively building to a dizzying final twist, Gretel and the Dark is a testament to the lifesaving power of the imagination and a mesmerizingly original story of redemption.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Granville's debut is a back-and-forth tale of secrets and imagination, deftly intermingling two distinct and seemingly unrelated stories of loss and redemption. A fairy tale prologue opens onto 19th century Vienna, where Herr Doktor Josef Breuer, a respected psychoanalyst, is stumped by a strange new case. A nameless and stunning young woman Lilie, he calls her claims not to be a girl at all, but a machine who yields no clues about her origin. Simultaneously, the story of Krysta, a pale and lonely girl some years later in Nazi-controlled Germany, unfolds. She spends her days home alone telling herself old stories while her physician father visits the mysterious zoo next door. When Krysta's reality becomes more frightening than the darkest of her fairy tales, Krysta retreats further into her imagination and begins to invent her own stories. Chapters alternate from Krysta to Lilie, and as truths shift beneath their feet, readers may feel the whiplash. Nonetheless, Granville weaves her two tales together through lush prose; her novel is both a thoroughly engaging journey into the darkest corners of humanity, as well as an illumination of the redemptive power of the imagination. And if Lilie's and Krysta's stories are any indication, it's the victors, indeed, who write history.