Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 7th January 2020
Paperback, (AIR/EXP)
Published: 1st April 2019
Hardback
Published: 1st April 2019
The Hidden
By (Author) Mary Chamberlain
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
1st April 2019
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Second World War fiction
823.92
Hardback
336
Width 146mm, Height 225mm
Dora Simon is comfortable in her retirement, indulging her interests in gardening and music. Joe OCleary is content on the Jersey farm he helped rebuild with its owner, Geoffrey Laurent, with time to pursue his life-long hobby of birdwatching. But their worlds are shattered by the arrival of Barbara Hummel, a young German anxious to track down the identity of a mysterious woman whose photograph she found among her mothers possessions. Forced to resurrect long-buried secrets, and confront a past they never thought they would revisit, Dora and Joes lives unravel and entwine - in shocking and surprising ways. Trapped in the Channel Islands under the German occupation in the Second World War, Dora, a Jewish refugee, conceals her identity; Joe, a Catholic priest, conceals a secret. The consequences of the lies both are forced to live are as unexpected as they are devastating. This is a heart rending and provocative story of love and betrayal, shame and survival, casting light into the forgotten or unknown shadows of war.
A powerful and raw, elegantly written, character piece dealing with inhumanity and endurance, firmly grounded in real events.
* The Herald *Recent novels such asThe Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Pie Societyhave taken the occupation as their subject, but none so potently as Mary Chamberlains The Hidden As Chamberlains narrative moves between past and presentthe realities of life under a ruthless occupying power are slowly, skilfully revealed.
* Sunday Times *A heart-breaking yet hope-filled tale.
* Woman's Own magazine *'A powerful story, well told.'
* Choice magazine *'Set against the backdrop of the Nazi occupation of the Channel Islands, The Hidden is a powerful, heart-wrenching story of deception and guilt, love and loss; I was completely engrossed, seduced by its strong characters and atmosphere, and intrigued by the mystery at the heart of the novel.'
* Saskia Sarginson, author of The Twins *'Beautiful, shocking and utterly absorbing, The Hidden casts light on an episode in our wartime history which is so rarely told... Mary Chamberlain writes beautifully about war, love and survival, brilliantly portraying the struggles of individuals, especially women, forced into desperateacts in order to endure.'
* Sarah Day, author of Mussolini's Island *'This compelling and heart-rending novel is a potent reminder that the horrors of war arent limited to the battlefields. Nor do they cease when the guns fall silent. There are those who will carry the scars emotional, physical and psychological for the rest of their lives. There is scant justice. But in The Hidden, Chamberlain gives them credence and a voice.'
* Herald Scotland *'A riveting World War saga taking place in the unusual setting of Jersey. A tale about the lives that persist in the shadow of an occupation: the devastating things that happen to people; the soul-destroying things they are made to do; the miraculous things they make happen; and the secrets and ramifications they are left to live with for the rest of their lives.'
* Cecilia Ekbck, author of Wolf Winter *'Shines a piercing light on the shrouded history of human trafficking and labour camps in the Channel Isles during WW2. A fascinating and powerful story of love, endurance, betrayal and guilt.'
* Anna Mazzola, author of The Unseeing *'Hauntingly atmospheric, historian and author Mary Chamberlain takes the reader to the dark days of the Channel Islands under German Occupation, and tells a hugely moving tale of love, survival, and betrayal.'
* The Bookbag *'It's a superbly told tale which will keep you guessing all the way to the end.'
* Country Style Australia *'Historian Chamberlain does a terrific job of moving beyond dry records, underlining the fact that although women have a different wartime story to men, it is no less wrenching. She researched the topic in great detail and spares no one for, as a protagonist points out, war makes monsters of everyone.'
* SA Weekend, (Adelaide Advertiser) *Mary Chamberlain is a novelist and historian. Her debut novel, The Dressmaker of Dachau, was published in 18 countries. She is the author of non-fiction books on womens history and Caribbean history including Fenwomen, the first book published by Virago Press. She lives in London with her husband, the political theorist Stein Ringen.