Henri, a young orphaned Frenchman raised in Boston, heads to his former home in Normandy, France in search of his family lost to the Nazis in WWII. After losing his parents in a devastating fire during a bombing attack in Normandy, he returns to 1955 postwar Germany and learns many secrets to his past. Then follow shocks that make him realize the true horrors of forced labour camps.
This story is the culmination of a trilogy of historical novels set in 20th century America. (1) "At the Fringes of Society": When an out-of-control husband threatens the life of his wife, Annie, to steal her father's fortune, this gilded age dilettante and her family flee from Boston to Canada, starting out new lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia among working classes to hide from him. (2) "White Jazz/Black Ops": Annie's son Alex and daughter Nicole and their risky pursuits take them into dangerous territory when they get involved with Mobs in the Capone era, and struggle with life and death challenges at the onset of World War II.
Autorentext
Evelyn Cohoon Dreiling has recently retired from the Public Service where she worked at National Defence for 10 years. She has pursued a two-year program of Commercial Art at Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec and Nursing at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Montreal. She has taught watercolour courses and enjoys doing watercolor images for her book covers and other sketches. She spent many years travelling and living in parts of Canada and the United States. She now makes her home in North Vancouver, BC, where she lives near her two adult children and her daughter-in-law. She always had a great love of books, and is particularly interested in Canadian history, which she attempts to portray through the lives of ordinary people and their stories; she is an avid researcher and will no doubt will be working on another historical fiction novel soon.