In her first memoirImmortelles: Memoir of a Will-o’-the-WispMireille Marokvia described her life growing up in a small village near Chartres, France, in the first decades of the 20th Century. We learned in that beautiful book that the people in her life so long past still live like ghosts in her memory.
This extraordinarily sensitive and assured writer brings that same dear voice and sharp vision to bear in her new book. But Sins of the Innocent covers the most difficult years of her life.
From Paris in 1939, a young Mireille follows her artist husband, Abel, when he returns to Germany to care for his mother. Once Hitler begins his invasions across Europe the displaced couple must find a way to survive the war in a country they both consider foreign. Abel finally takes work, but it requires extensive travel through the war zones, and so Mireille is left essentially alone. With France lost to her, and horribly misfit in wartime Germany, suspected by her neighbors of spying for the Allies, Mireille has to define a life for herself, a life that is as quiet as possible in a dangerous world.
Sins of the Innocent is a lyrical portrait of those harsh years, infused with doubt, anger, and the author’s love of life. These were the years in which Mireille learned the difference between quiet persistence and courageduring WWII in Europe, a time when so many had to find their own small places in history. It was the era that determined who Mireille Marokvia wasand who she still is.
Read Mireille Marokvia’s account of the making of the manuscript in History of a Story.”
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Mireille, left alone and watched as a possible French spy in Germany, drew on a well of strength to live a quiet, determined life and survive the war. Passionate, straightforward, and enthralling, this new memoir offers a glimpse of the seldom-seen life of a French citizen in Germany during World War II
. Highly recommended
”Library Journal
What do you think you’ll be doing when you’re 97? Mireille Marokvia
has used that year of her life to publish a beautiful, surprising book about her years as a young French woman, mostly alone, in Germany throughout World War II.
One of the joys of this memoir is that while the danger mounts, Marokvia writes about domestic life, adding details that we would never learn from war movies or the memoirs of generals
. The author provides a picture of what it was like to be trapped in a war that [we] would never have imagined. I hope teachers of history and literature will find this book and teach it, besides enjoying it themselves.” The Durango Herald
In the midst of World War II, Mireille Marokvia was a young French bride, trapped with her artist husband in Nazi Germany. While her parents and other relatives and friends fought with the French resistance, Mireille found her own ways to cope and her own artistic ways to rebel. In a German weaving school, she quietly wove a garment inspired by the French flag. After she was expelled from the group, a sympathetic friend found her an isolated post in northern Germany, where she befriended a young Jewish woman who was hiding her identity. Marokvia has reconstructed the tales of those dangerous days in an engrossing memoir
When her anti-Nazi husband went to visit his widowed mother in Germany, the two were not allowed to leave the county. Even when she had a Gestapo officer’s family as housemates, she managed to continue her quietly subversive activities until the final days of World War II, when she was arrested and interrogated by German authorities.”Las Cruces Sun-News
These childhood memories of rural France in the early decades of this century insidiously take over the reader’s imagination, making palpable the presence of a vanished world
. The book dexterously blends public and private, recalling how the First World War affected the daily life of a small girl in a small town.”The New Yorker
Reading Immortelles is like finding an old trunk of your grandmother’s filled with old pictures, letters, and journals depicting bright scraps of lives seen only as grainy black-and-whites in a dusty attic on a rain-blurred afternoon
. a magical story of childhood
. World War I is honestly touched on
the war is noticed purely as part of the fabric of village lifeand for its impact on Marokvia
Incredulous at first to be inside the expertly portrayed life of one who actually lived during this period, the reader is soon caught up in a world
real and full
”The Bloomsbury Review
An elegant evocation of the poetry and pain of childhood
. the rhythm of rural life, the pleasures of a village parade, the excitement of a train trip, and more seriously, the ravages of a bloody war on this life. An unusual book that rewards the reader with its lyric prose and quiet grace.”Kirkus Reviews