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Sarah's Key
Sarah's Key
Author: Tatiana De Rosnay
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ISBN: 364818
Publication Date: 2007
Pages: 293
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

spiritedbabe59 avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 106 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 34
I loved this book from the first chapter. I got it in the mail, opened it to just get a "feel" for it and I was a goner! Read it in a day. The story is a haunting one about a Jewish family rounded up during the July 16, 1942 raids in Paris and Julia Jarmond, an American living in Paris in present day. It's a piece of the Holocaust I had never heard about, and definitely an event I plan to learn more about. The lingering pain of all the families affected by this tragedy is hear between the covers of Sarah's Key; it's intense and raw. You will remember and never forget.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 29
I just finished this book and I must say it's the most riveting book I've read in a long time. I could not stop reading until I found out what happened. I had not heard of the French rounding up the Jews so this was a surprise to me. I had always heard the French were mainly involved in the underground, but it appears it was not so. I may have to read this book again because I cannot get it out of my mind. It haunts me. A really great read. The whole world failed those poor European Jews. I give this book my highest rating mainly because I literally could not quit reading it until the last page. It's been a long time since a book affected me that strongly.
bellasgranny avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 468 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 18
I'd never heard of the round ups in Paris in July 1942 before reading this book. The novel is a fictionalized account of that event and is told in alternating voices, sixty years apart. I loved this book. It is well written, engrossing and deeply moving. I cried through much of the book. I am putting Ms. de Rosnay on my list of authors to watch for and am looking forward to reading more on this subject.
joan9904 avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on
Helpful Score: 9
It took me a while to get into this book. I wasn't really sure what it was about and only managed to read about 40 pages in a week. I picked it up again today and could not put it down. This was an amazing and educational book. I highly recommend it to everyone and if you don't get into it right away, just keep reading because you will!
arichlen avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 7
This book sat on my nightstand for months. When I finally began reading it, I couldn't put it down. I was sobbing within the first 10 pages. I love a great book that can evoke so much emotion in its readers. This is definitely a novel that will be with me for a long, long time.
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reviewed Sarah's Key on + 1436 more book reviews
There are two parts to this novel and the author moves from one to the other weaving the two into one fascinating story.  In 1942, little Sarah and her family are taken from Paris home by the French police at the direction of the Nazis.  Ten-year-old Sarah hides her younger brother in a secret area, hoping to keep him safe.  She believes the trip with the police will be short and promises to be back to let him out.   With the key in her pocket, she and her parents join others sent to the Vel' d'Hiv for processing to eastern "labor camps".   Most die in concentration camps.

Sarah tells the story of the Jewish people, the conditions in the Vel' d'Hiv, and how children were separated from parents, some torn from the arms of their mothers or fathers.  Later packed into cattle cars they are deported to "labor campsâ.   Always the frightened Sarah thinks always of her brother locked away waiting for her return.

Years later, Julia Jarmond, an American journalist, is researching to write about the 60th anniversary of Val' d'Hiv.  Like Julia, I was unaware of the horror of this period during the Nazi occupation.  Julia  uncovers Sarah's story and what happens to her parents and her brother, hidden away only to die of starvation.  Finding a link to her husband's family she becomes deeply involved and determined to learn more. 

The Vel' d'Hiv gathering of Jewish people by French collaborators is a tragic event  most French prefer to forget.   This tragic part of French involvement in exterminating their Jewish population was concealed.  The French prefer to forget and focus on the future.  The author reminds us to be alert and to never forget how little human life can mean to some groups.   In our own country with violent groups bent on creating chaos and upsetting our government, we must be alert to what could happen.  It's so important.  NEVER FORGET
miss-info avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 386 more book reviews
I saw the movie (on Netflix) before I read the book. 99% of the time the book is way, way better than the movie, so if possible I always see the movie first, so I can enjoy it for what it is, and then read the book to enjoy it more. This time I would say the book and movie are about equal. The book has more detail, more background, more insight into Julia's marriage. When there are discrepancies between book and movie, the movie actually tightens the plot, cuts down the rambling end, removes the swearing (there's not much of that to begin with), and keeps it down to a PG13. I highly recommend both book and movie.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 628 more book reviews
I thought I had read all of the holocaust books I'd ever read, but had read nothing about the Jews who were rounded up in July 1942 in France by the French police, under orders from the Nazis ocupying France. It is definitely worth reading combining Sarah's story, the mystery of her missing brother, and 60 years later the connection to an American journalist and her family living in France.
It was definitely a page turner, rich in intrigue and suspense. Yes, you will weep, but you will also rejoice.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 3 more book reviews
It took a while for me to read this - so glad I did.
Truly amazing and chilling story about an event that I was not aware happened historically.
Well written page turner!!
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 40 more book reviews
although, this was one of the most heartbreaking, sad, tearful book I have ever read, it is one of the best stories I have ever read.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 6 more book reviews
The Story line was interesting. I found it hard to relate to the characters. The history woven in was the most compelling.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 412 more book reviews
Present and past collide in this novel, which very cleverly deals with the unraveling of a marriage and the story of Sarah, a child who survived the round-up and extermination of French Jews in 1942. Very moving (and more than a little emotional for me, as my father also survived Vichy France).
author-wwiinovel avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 21 more book reviews
An unflinching look at the horrors of war and the Holocaust as perpetrated by the French Vichy government and the Parisian police force. The anti-Semitism and betrayal of the French Jewish population was a crime against humanity and an indictment of French society for its collaboration with the Nazis and its indifference to its own citizens. Could have been a 5-star read but for a slow beginning and some unevenness--predictable in places but throat-gripping in others. Probably will keep my copy and read it again.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 2 more book reviews
Great book! The cover pictured on website is not accurate. The cover is a more updated & colorful. This was also made into a movie, but the movie did not come close to being as good as the book.
precycle avatar reviewed Sarah's Key on + 87 more book reviews
Very interesting and well written. I would highly recommend it
Opal Hernandez
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 42 more book reviews
really liked this book. would recommend this highly.
reviewed Sarah's Key on + 6 more book reviews
This is a gripping story that I had to read in one day. This author takes you back
in time to WW11 and then to the present and when you follow the main character you feel her trauma. A good club read.

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