Our Narrow Hiding Places
A Novel
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
An elderly woman recounts her Dutch family’s survival during the final years of Nazi occupation, shedding new light on old secrets that rippled through subsequent generations.
Eighty-year-old Mieke Geborn’s life is one of quiet routine. Widowed for many years, she enjoys the view from her home on the New Jersey shore, visits with friends, and tai chi at the local retirement community. But when her beloved grandson, Will, and his wife, Teru, show up for a visit, things are soon upended. Their marriage is threatening to unravel, and Will has questions for his grandmother—questions about family secrets that have been lost for decades and are now finally rising to the surface.
But telling Will the truth involves returning to the past, and to Mieke’s childhood in coastal Holland. There, in the last years of World War II, she survived the Hunger Winter, a brutal season when food and heat were cut off and thousands of Dutch citizens starved. Her memories weave together childhood magic and the madness of history, and carry readers from the windy beaches of the Hague to the dark cells of a concentration camp, through the bends of eel-filled rivers, and, finally, to the story of Will’s father, absent since Will’s childhood.
Our Narrow Hiding Places is a sweeping story of survival and of the terrible cost of war—and a reminder that sometimes the traumas we inherit come along with a resilience we never imagined.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jansma (Why We Came to the City) seamlessly interweaves past and present in this immersive dual narrative of a girl in German-occupied Holland during WWII and her American grandson. Mieke Geborn is eight when the Nazis invade her hometown in 1940. After the Jews are deported, and as the German war effort lags, the Nazis enlist local men to work for them. With Mieke's help, her father conceals himself along with several others in the attic of their apartment building. Conditions worsen for Mieke and the cloistered men during the so-called Hunger Winter of 1944–1945, when harsh restrictions leave the townspeople desperate for food. In a parallel story line set in 2014, Mieke is an 80-year-old widow in New Jersey, where she's lived for the past 50 years. After a fall in her house, her grandson Will takes leave from his internist job and his troubled marriage to care for her. Jansma rewards readers' patience as Mieke discloses the extent of the Hunger Winter's impact on their family and Will comes clean about his marital problems. It's a satisfying blend of wartime and family drama.