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Riddle me this

Book birthdays are as special as human birthdays, especially for book lovers who adore the authors that have put the book out into the world. Therefore, happy book birthday to The Bletchley Riddle, coauthored by Ruta Sepetys and Steve Sheinkin whose individual works are as impactful as their first collaboration and must be celebrated.

The Bletchley Riddle is a middle grade historical fiction set in 1940 at Bletchley Park, home to the infamous codebreakers during World War II. In addition to incorporating ciphers into the text and providing an entrancing overall mystery amidst war, the book’s best feature are the vivid brother and sister duo. Who doesn’t love an alternating point of view? Intricately layered with historical facts because both are powerhouse researchers, Sheinkin wrote Jakob’s character and Sepetys wrote Lizzie’s character. How did it all blend together? Some of their secrets were revealed at an event at Northshire Bookstore in Saratoga Springs, NY last night as the last event for the Saratoga Book Festival; plus the hometown indie bookstore for Sheinkin. To have both authors, since Sepetys lives in Tennessee, was a real treat. Then to have the book in hand (if it was preordered, a spy pen was a bonus gift) and signed after an enchanting evening of their conversation and answering audience questions, made for a memorable book launch.

I’ve only teased a few elements of the book because it’s better to clear your calendar and spend a weekend with a cup of tea and Jakob and Lizzie. And if you want to put a goulash casserole in the oven for later, even better. I did this a few days after I read the advanced reader copy.

Collaborations are hard work, as they attest to, but readers will read the book and find it an effortless meshing of two talented authors who find history that we all need to remember more than we do; finding palatable ways to learn, question, and feel. I wonder… is another collaboration on the horizon?

 

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Sepetys’ Magic

06.09.2011. WARSZAWA. AMERYKANSKA PISARKA LITEWSKIEGO POCHODZENIA RUTA SEPETYS, AUTORKA KSIAZKI "SZARE SNIEGI SYBERII".  FOT. MAGDA STAROWIEYSKA/FOTORZEPA *** ZDJECIE POCHODZI Z ZASOBOW AGENCJI FOTOGRAFICZNEJ "FOTORZEPA". PROSIMY O DOPISANIE ZRODLA "FOTORZEPA" OBOK NAZWISKA AUTORA OPUBLIKOWANEGO ZDJECIA. ***

Precious.

Ruta Sepetys’ words are what amazes and captures the readers just as vividly as her characters, situations, and history in her soon-to-be-published, Salt to the Sea.

It’s 1945, the world is warring and there are many who are fleeing their homelands in the hope of a rebirth elsewhere. Joana is a nurse with a desire to escape her self-imposed brand as a murderer, Florian is a Prussian who holds secrets that can potentially kill him, Emilia is a Polish girl who’s devastating circumstances have left her needing a savior, whom she finds in Florian, and Alfred is a self-involved but insecure German soldier looking for glory. The four of their narrations brings the book together to share their and others’ fates. Just because others in the story including the cobbler poet, the runaway boy, and the giantess woman are not telling their story, doesn’t mean they are any less a part of the devastating survival tale that is fraught with lies, ambition, sentimentality and longing for the past or their homeland.

There is a painful arc to the story as the characters escape imminent death in one way and find themselves on a collision course for it a second time when they end up on the ship, the Wilhelm Gustloff, as it’s torpedoed by the Russians and thousands perish.

The bond readers develop with the characters as they suffer their fates both death and life are shocking, tragic, and uplifting. The last chapter made me cry. Sepetys is a gifted storyteller weaving the tales of the true experiences and while I appreciate the publisher’s comparisons in the summary, the only one I can agree with is Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See in it’s depth. There is an accessibility that only Sepetys can do so well targeting both young adults and adults with a tale rich in detail. Images like the pink hat and the amber swan coupled with dead families in their rooms and children being tossed helplessly onto a ship too high to be reached will stay with any reader for a lifetime.

It begs to be re-read.

 
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Posted by on June 5, 2015 in Miscellaneous

 

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