![]() Though the framing device of the decades-long separation can be cloying, this is a genuinely moving portrait. Richman's incremental descent into the horrors of the Holocaust lends enormous power to Lenka's experience and makes her reunion with Josef all the more poignant. Richman (The Last Van Gogh) once again finds inspiration in art, adding evocative details to a swiftly moving and emotionally charged plot. And then she's sent to, and survives, Auschwitz. Books by Alyson Richman (Author of The Lost Wife) Books by Alyson Richman Alyson Richman Average rating 4. She's sent to a work camp, where her artistic talents connect her to "an underground network of painters illustrating the atrocities" of the Jewish ghettos. ![]() ![]() For 61 years, each believes the other dead until they meet by chance at the wedding of their grandchildren, leading them to reflect on the past and the separate lives they've led: Josef ended up in New York, becoming a successful obstetrician because he was "tired of being haunted by death." Lenka wasn't so lucky. Lenka remains in Europe, and Josef flees to America. ![]() Three years later, with Nazis crossing the border, they rush to marry, but circumstances then force them apart. Josef and Lenka meet as students in Prague in 1936 and fall instantly in love. ![]() a welcome new display of her masterful approach to the undercurrent of violence that she believes runs beneath all human behavior. TIME, Here Are the 14 New Books You Should Read in April Moore graces us with another novel this spring. Star-crossed lovers are separated during WWII in Richman's heart-wrenching fourth novel. The Lost Wife illustrates the devastating outcomes of oppression. ![]()
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