The Kommandant's Girl
The Kommandant's Girl book cover

The Kommandant's Girl

Kindle Edition

Price
$12.99
Publisher
MIRA
Publication Date

Description

"A tribute to the human spirit that soars in the midst of epic despair." -- "NPR, praise for the author" "An intriguing mystery and a captivating heroine...A read to savor!" -- "Kate Quinn, author of The Alice Network, praise for the author" "With luminous simplicity, Jenoff's breathtaking debut chronicles the life of a young Jewish bride during the Nazi occupation of Krakow, Poland, in WWII...This is historical romance at its finest." -- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)" --This text refers to the mp3_cd edition. Pam Jenoff is the author of several novels, including the international bestseller The Kommandant's Girl , which also earned her a Quill Award nomination. In addition to writing, she teaches law school at Rutgers University. --This text refers to the mp3_cd edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. As we cut across the wide span of the market square, past the pigeons gathered around fetid puddles, I eye the sky warily and tighten my grip on Lukasz's hand, willing him to walk faster. But the child licks his ice-cream cone, oblivious to the darkening sky, a drop hanging from his blond curls. Thank God for his blond curls. A sharp March wind gusts across the square, and I fight the urge to let go of his hand and draw my threadbare coat closer around me. We pass through the high center arch of the Sukennice, the massive yellow mercantile hall that bisects the square. It is still several blocks to Nowy Kleparz, the outdoor market on the far northern edge of Kraków's city center, and already I can feel Lukasz's gait slowing, his tiny, thin-soled shoes scuffing harder against the cobblestones with every step. I consider car-rying him, but he is three years old and growing heavier by the day. Well fed, I might have managed it, but now I know that I would make it a few meters at most. If only he would go faster. "Szybko, kochana," I plead with him under my breath. "Chocz!" His steps seem to lighten as we wind our way through the flower vendors peddling their wares in the shadow of the Mariacki Cathedral spires. Moments later, we reach the far side of the square and I feel a familiar rumble under my feet. I pause. I have not been on a trolley in almost a year. I imagine lifting Lukasz onto the streetcar and sinking into a seat, watching the buildings and people walking below as we pass. We could be at the market in minutes. Then I stop, shake my head inwardly. The ink on our new papers is barely dry, and the wonder on Lukasz's face at his first trolley ride would surely arouse suspicion. I cannot trade our safety for convenience. We press onward. Though I try to remind myself to keep my head low and avoid eye contact with the shoppers who line the streets this midweek morning, I cannot help but drink it all in. It has been more than a year since I was last in the city center. I inhale deeply. The air, damp from the last bits of melting snow, is perfumed with the smell of roasting chestnuts from the cor-ner kiosk. Then the trumpeter in the cathedral tower begins to play the hejnal, the brief melody he sends across the square every hour on the hour to commemorate the Tartar invasion of Kraków centuries earlier. I resist the urge to turn back to-ward the sound, which greets me like an old friend. As we approach the end of Florianska Street, Lukasz sud-denly freezes, tightening his grip on my hand. I look down. He has dropped the last bit of his precious ice-cream cone on the pavement but does not seem to notice. His face, already pale from months of hiding indoors, has turned gray. "What is it?" I whisper, crouching beside him, but he does not re-spond. I follow his gaze to where it is riveted. Ten meters ahead, by the arched entrance to the medieval Florian Gate, stand two Nazis carrying machine guns. Lukasz shudders. "There, there, kochana. It's okay." I put my arms around his shoulders, but there is nothing I can do to soothe him. His eyes dart back and forth, and his mouth moves without sound. "Come." I lift him up and he buries his head in my neck. I look around for a side street to take, but there is none and turn-ing around might attract attention. With a furtive glance to make sure no one is watching, I push the remnants of the ice-cream cone toward the gutter with my foot and proceed past the Nazis, who do not seem to notice us. A few minutes later, when I feel the child breathing calmly again, I set him down. Soon we approach the Nowy Kleparz market. It is hard to contain my excitement at being out again, walking and shop-ping like a normal person. As we navigate the narrow walk-ways between the stalls, I hear people complaining. The cabbage is pale and wilted, the bread hard and dry; the meat, what there is of it, is from an unidentifiable source and already giving off a curious odor. To the townspeople and villagers, still accustomed to the prewar bounty of the Polish country-side, the food is an abomination. To me, it is paradise. My stomach tightens. "Two loaves," I say to the baker, keeping my head low as I pass him my ration cards. A curious look crosses his face. It is your imagination, I tell myself. Stay calm. To a stranger, I know, I look like any other Pole. My coloring is fair, my ac-cent flawless, my dress purposefully nondescript. Krysia chose this market in a working-class neighborhood on the northern edge of town deliberately, knowing that none of my former acquain-tances from the city would shop here. It is critical that no one recognize me. I pass from stall to stall, reciting the groceries we need in my head: flour, some eggs, a chicken, if there is one to be had. I have never made lists, a fact that serves me well now that paper is so dear. The shopkeepers are kind, but businesslike. Six months into the war, food is in short supply; there is no generous cut of cheese for a smile, no sweet biscuit for the child with the large blue eyes. Soon I have used all of our ration cards, yet the bas-ket remains half empty. We begin the long walk home. Still feeling the chill from the wind on the market square, I lead Lukasz through side streets on our way back across town. A few minutes later, we turn onto Grodzka Street, a wide thoroughfare lined with elegant shops and houses. I hesitate. I had not meant to come here. My chest tightens, making it hard to breathe. Easy, I tell myself, you can do this. It is just another street. I walk a few meters farther, then stop. I am standing before a pale yellow house with a white door and wooden flower boxes in the windows. My eyes travel upward to the second floor. A lump forms in my throat, making it dif-ficult to swallow. Don't, I think, but it is too late. This was Ja-cob's house. Our house. I met Jacob eighteen months ago while I was working as a clerk in the university library. It was a Friday afternoon, I re-member, because I was rushing to update the book catalog and get home in time for Shabbes. "Excuse me," a deep voice said. I looked up from my work, annoyed at the interruption. The speaker was of medium height and wore a small yarmulke and closely trimmed beard and mustache. His hair was brown with flecks of red. "Can you recommend a good book?" "A good book?" I was caught off guard as much by the swim-ming darkness of his eyes as by the generic nature of his request. "Yes, I would like something light to read over the week-end to take my mind off my studies. Perhaps the Iliad, ?" I could not help laughing. "You consider Homer light read-ing?" "Relative to physics texts, yes." The corners of his eyes crin-kled. I led him to the literature section, where he settled upon a volume of Shakespeare's comedies. Our knuckles brushed as I handed him the book, sending a chill down my spine. I checked out the book to him, but still he lingered. I learned that his name was Jacob and that he was twenty, two years my senior. After that, he came to visit me daily. I quickly learned that even though he was a science major, his real passion was poli-tics and that he was involved with many activist groups. He wrote pieces, published in student and local newspapers, that were critical not only of the Polish government, but of what he called "Germany's unfettered dominance" over its neighbors. I worried that it was dangerous to be so outspoken. While the Jews of my neighborhood argued heatedly on their front stoops, outside the synagogues and in the stores about current affairs and everything else, I was raised to believe that it was safer to keep one's voice low when dealing with the outside world. But Jacob, the son of prominent sociologist Maximillian Bau, had no such concerns, and as I listened to him speak, watched his eyes burn and his hands fly, I forgot to be afraid. I was amazed that a student from a wealthy, secular family would be interested in me, the daughter of a poor Orthodox baker, but if he noticed the difference in our backgrounds, it did not seem to matter. We began spending our Sunday af-ternoons together, talking and strolling along the Wisla River. "I should be getting home," I remarked one Sunday afternoon in April as the sky grew dusky. Jacob and I had been walking along the river path where it wound around the base of Wawel Castle, talking so intensely I had lost track of time. "My par-ents will be wondering where I am." "Yes, I should meet them soon," he replied matter-of-factly. I stopped in my tracks. "That's what one does, isn't it, when one wants to ask permission to court?" I was too sur-prised to answer. Though Jacob and I had spent much time together these recent months and I knew he enjoyed my com-pany, I somehow never thought that he would seek permis-sion to see me formally. He reached down and took my chin in his gloved fingers. Softly, he pressed his lips down on mine for the first time. Our mouths lingered together, lips slightly parted. The ground seemed to slide sideways, and I felt so dizzy I was afraid that I might faint. Thinking now of Jacob's kiss, I feel my legs grow warm. Stop it, I tell myself, but it is no use. It has been nearly six months since I have seen my husband, been touched by him. A sharp clicking noise jars me from my thoughts. My vi-sion clears and I find myself still standing in front of the yel-low house, staring upward. The front door opens and an older, well-dressed woman steps out. Noticing me and Lukasz, she hesitates. I can tell she is wondering who we are, why we have stopped in front of her house. Then she turns from us dismis-sively, locks the door and proceeds down the steps. This is her home now. Enough, I tell myself sharply. I cannot afford to do anything that will draw attention. I shake my head, trying to clear the image of Jacob from my mind. "Come, Lukasz," I say aloud, tugging gently on the child's hand. We continue walking and soon cross the Planty, the broad swath of parkland that rings the city center. The trees are revealing the most premature of buds, which will surely be cut down by a late frost. Lukasz tightens his grip on my hand, staring wide-eyed at the few squirrels that play among the bushes as though it is already spring. As we push onward, I feel the city skyline receding behind us. Five minutes later we reach the Aleje, the wide boulevard that, if taken to the left, leads south across the river. I stop and look toward the bridge. Just on the other side, a half kilometer south, lies the ghetto. I start to turn in that direction, thinking of my parents. Per-haps if I go to the wall, I can see them, find a way to slip them some of the food I have just purchased. Krysia would not mind. Then I stopx97I cannot risk it, not in broad daylight, not with the child. I feel shame at my stomach, which no longer twists with hunger, and at my freedom, at crossing the street as though the occupation and the war do not exist. Half an hour later, Lukasz and I reach Chelmska, the rural neighborhood we have come to call home. My feet are sore from walking along the uneven dirt road and my arms ache from carrying the groceries, as well as the child, for the last several meters. As we round the corner where the main road divides in two, I inhale deeply; the air has grown colder now, its pureness broken only by an acrid hint of smoke from a farmer burning piles of dead winter brush. I can see the fires smoldering across the sloping farmland to my right, their thick smoke fanning out over the fields that roll like a gentle green lake into the horizon. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. From Booklist Emma had lived in the closed orthodox Jewish community of Krakow, Poland, until she began working at the university library and met Jacob. He sweeps her off her feet, and they marry on the eve of the Nazi invasion. Jacob immediately leaves to join the Jewish underground, and Emma returns to her family, now locked in the Jewish ghetto. Jacob provides false papers, enabling Emma to become Anna Lipowski and move in with his Catholic aunt Krysia, posing as her niece. Krysia works for the underground while maintaining her status as a leader in the arts community. During a dinner party, Emma/Anna is introduced to Nazi Kommadant Richwalder. Smitten, he asks her to come work for him. She agrees, knowing such access will aid the underground, and even becomes intimate with the enemy to gather information. In her moving first novel, Jenoff offers an insightful portrait of people forced into an untenable situation and succeeds in humanizing the unfathomable as well as the heroic. Patty Engelmann Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. With luminous simplicity, Jenoff's breathtaking debut chronicles the life of a young Jewish bride during the Nazi occupation of Kraków, Poland, in WWII. Emma Bau, a shy librarian, escapes the city's Jewish ghetto with the aid of the underground resistance movement that Jacob, her activist husband, has already joined. Emma assumes a new gentile identity as Anna Lipowski and goes to live with Jacob's elderly aunt, a wealthy Catholic widow who has also taken in Lukasz Izakowicz, the only surviving child of a famous rabbi and his murdered wife. As Anna, Emma catches the eye of Kommandant Georg Richwalder, second in charge of the General Government, at a dinner party. The handsome Nazi is so impressed by her German language skills (and her beauty) that he asks her to become his personal assistant. Emma accepts, hoping to secure valuable information for the resistance, but the chemistry between them presents challenges that test her loyalties to Jacob and her heart. This is historical romance at its finest. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. "A tribute to the human spirit that soars in the midst of epic despair." -- "NPR, praise for the author" "An intriguing mystery and a captivating heroine...A read to savor!" -- "Kate Quinn, author of The Alice Network, praise for the author" "With luminous simplicity, Jenoff's breathtaking debut chronicles the life of a young Jewish bride during the Nazi occupation of Krakow, Poland, in WWII...This is historical romance at its finest." -- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)" --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In her luminous and groundbreaking debut,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Pam Jenoff shows the unimaginable sacrifices one woman must make in a time of war
  • Nineteen-year-old Emma Bau has been married only three weeks when Nazi tanks thunder into Poland. Within days Emma’s husband is forced to disappear underground, leaving her alone in the Jewish ghetto. In the dead of night, the resistance smuggles her out and brings her to Krakow, where she takes on a new identity as Anna Lipowski, a gentile.Emma’s already precarious situation is complicated by her introduction to Kommandant Richwalder, a high-ranking Nazi official who hires her to work as his assistant. As the atrocities of war intensify, Emma must make unthinkable choices that will force her to risk not only her double life, but also the lives of those she loves.
  • Don’t miss Pam Jenoff’s new novel,
  • Code Name Sapphire
  • , a riveting tale of bravery and resistance during World War II.
  • Read these other sweeping epics from
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Pam Jenoff:
  • The Woman with the Blue Star
  • The Lost Girls of Paris
  • The Orphan’s Tale
  • The Ambassador’s Daughter
  • The Diplomat’s Wife
  • The Last Summer at Chelsea Beach
  • The Winter Guest

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(804)
★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Riveting

I love Pam Jenoff’s books - all of them. “The Kommandant’s Girl” is the latest that I have read. Ms. Jenoff’s portrayal of the Jewish situation in World War II is fantastic. She makes their plight known and their struggles to stay alive during this harrowing time so palpable that reading the story not-stop to the end is a necessity to the avid reader.

I this novel, Emma Bau has been married to a young Jewish man for only a few months when the Nazis invade Poland. Jacob is very political and decides that he must be a part of the resistance movement, which means leaving Emma alone. She finds her way to her parents in the Jewish ghetto in Krakow and stays with them for a time. Friends of Jacob find her, get her out of the ghetto, give her false papers and take her to Jacob’s aunt, a Gentile. She is there with a little Jewish toddler whose mother has been killed and whose father has been taken away by the Gestapo. Hopefully, they will be safe there during the occupation.

Krysia, Jacob’s aunt, is also a part of the resistance, but also a known socialite in Krakow. She had many links to the resistance along with seemingly accepting the Nazi regime. At a party where she is presenting her “niece and her little brother” to the Gentile community, Emma (now known as Anna) is noticed by the Kommandant. He asks her to work for him as his personal assistant. She has to say yes. The resistance leaders can now use her to ferret information from the Kommandant’s office and relay this to the resistance. In becoming closer to the Georg, she must make a personal decision whether or not to compromise her marriage vows for the greater good of the movement.

Ms. Jenoff’s writing is addicting. I was unable to put this book down and after I finished it I could not stop thinking about the story. I was unable to help myself, but I found that I was sympathetic to the Kommandant and to Anna in her dilemma. I wonder how I would have handled the situation were I in their shoes. I felt that the horrors of war and the circumstances surrounding the occupiers and those fighting against them were almost understandable. The Kommandant had to follow orders and Anna was bound to honor her husband and parents in finding out information that would save her people. I read this book with mixed emotions which have really made me think about those times and the people who lived them.

I highly recommend this book, especially if you are interested in stories about World War II. I purchased a Kindle copy of this book from Amazon.com and was under no obligation to post a review.
63 people found this helpful
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Decent WW II historical fiction / romance, last chapters harder to fathom

Once we've had Hogan's Heroes, nothing written or scripted about WW II can be in bad taste. After a slow start, the book has a plausible storyline: Emma Bau, a young, attractive Jewish woman of the Polish ghetto sees her brand new husband go off with the resistance. She is taken in by the Catholic side of hubby's family and emerges as a young, attractive shiksa, Anna Lipowski, who - this is where it gets a little unbelievable, but it keeps the story flowing - is seated next to the Nazi commandant of the ghetto at a dinner party. She is repulsed but her heart goes pitter-patter just a little, he is so good-looking, next thing you know she's his admin, they wind up in bed (I think that's the order) - he's a Nazi, but a nice (Aryan) specimen - and this lets the Kommandant's Girl keep an eye on his paperwork for the resistance. And then, as if by magic, she is with child, and it's within the time-frame of both the last night with her husband and the first times with the Kommandant.
The story goes on, she comes close to getting caught, eventually she has to run, and people die, but not our heroine.
The latter parts of the book depend on even more fantastical twists of plot, of couplings and uncouplings, betrayals.
I got this as a Kindle whatchamacallit, the monthly subscription - ah, Kindle Unlimited - so I wasn't out a lot of money if it turned out to be just-okay, which it was. Between this and the follow The Diplomat's Wife (which involves a supporting heroine from Kommandant), one comes to understand that with a Pam Jenoff novel:
* Nobody's dead until they're dead. People have a habit of coming back. Including from a plane crash where no one survived.
* The leading lady often winds up with child, sometimes after a single evening, and almost always where it's possible two men may have had the leading role at slightly different times. Both Kommandant and Diplomat have this plot line.
* Good guys become bad guys in the latter pages of the book. More so guys than girls do this, but not exclusively.
So ... after reading Kommandant's Girl and Diplomat's Wife (two different women), I came to thinking, "This book almost reads like a Harlequin romance, except with 'Deutschland Uber Alles' as the background music," and then I looked at the other books in the series and came to realize that's exactly what this is.
56 people found this helpful
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Great story!

The earlier reviews said 5+ hours to read, but I couldn't stop! I work for a Jewish Federation - even though I am LUTHERAN and have been totally engrossed with these stories (although they are fiction). This was a truly engaging story and I couldn't stop until I finished - took me a little over 4 hours (but my kitchen floor still needs cleaning!). Great read!
34 people found this helpful
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Depressing and without conclusion

Basically, it wasn't a very fun read. I actually appreciated the drama - but the character was quite immoral (and far too easily for a "good Jewish girl" ... I'm not saying I expect characters to behave perfectly, but she was very quick to abandon all she must have been taught since childhood!), and the author really did a huge disservice to the Jewish race. The main character was supposedly Orthodox but rarely thought about her customs, when she did it was shallow at best ("Oh no I have to pretend to be a Catholic! I'll be disgusted once and then forget about it!"), and all the thousands of little details are just ... absent. She was pretending not to be a Jew throughout much of the story, but shouldn't that have only highlighted her heritage? This kind of novel does no service to our memory of the horrors of the Holocaust. Perhaps I was just missing something, but it seems to me like a large part of Judaism was just missed out on. The main character felt quite secular to me. The culture aspect was missing.

Add to that the poor writing (it badly needed an editor both to cut out unnecessary details, fix the random time jumps and awkward scenes, and just make the prose more readable! It felt very amateur) and the unlikable main character, and you've got yourself a pretty bad book!

It's a secular novel, so a quick note for my conservative followers: contains one or two cuss words, plenty of violence and disturbing stuff (as per WWII), and the main character has an ongoing affair. Her intimacy with her husband and then her lover (she's getting info from him as a spy) is often referenced - sometimes, the descriptions bordered on explicit (though by secular standards I think it was pretty tasteful!).

But ... well, I can't really recommend it from a secular viewpoint either. Still, it was entertaining at times, as long as you skim read.
10 people found this helpful
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Ok but

This book was fantastic! It drew me in from the first sentance. The only problem I had with it is that you spend all this time getting wrapped up in the plot of the story, and just when it gets suspenseful, it wraps it up, without answering some major questions. After putting in all the time into the story to have it just abruptly end was a little upsetting because you get so attached to the characters and their story. But overall, it was a great read, for two dollars you cannot complain. Well worth the two dollars.
8 people found this helpful
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Very rushed and disappointing ending.

This was a 5 star book up until the last chapter. It was as if someone told the author, "Okay, let's wrap it up!" and she hurriedly wrote down the first idea that popped into her mind to bring the story to a close. We are left wondering about the fate of the protagonist, after two others are swiftly disposed of. An extremely dissatisfying ending to what had otherwise been an excellent story!
6 people found this helpful
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Can't Put It Down

One of the best WWII Holocaust books that I have ever read! Very entertaining but in a shuttle way , very upsetting ! One could NOT figure out the ending. It is a WONDERFUL read, if you like thrillers !
4 people found this helpful
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This was a pretty good read

This was a pretty good read. Some parts are too far fetched to be believable, but over all I enjoyed reading the book
3 people found this helpful
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Gripping tale!

This booked sucked me in right away and held me until the final page. I’ve read all of Pam Jenoff’s books and she is an artist! I love historical fiction and this one didn’t let me down!
2 people found this helpful
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Good book

First time reading a Jenoff novel and enjoyed it. Having an apartment on Tomasza, in Krakow, I related to the accuracy of her descriptions of the various streets and locations. Her editors, however, should have caught the grammatical error when she calls Lukasz, "kochana", which is feminine, instead of kochany" the masculine.
2 people found this helpful