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Review: Fugitive Pieces

June 4, 2009 13:43

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

In Poland, in 1942, a Jewish boy called Jakob witnesses his mother and father murdered and his sister hauled off by Nazi soldiers.

Traumatised, he runs and hides in the forest where he is found by Athos, a Greek archaeologist who, remarkably, is working on a dig nearby.

Athos takes pity on Jakob, brings him home to his Mediterranean island, where they survive the Nazi occupation, and then emigrate to Canada when Athos is offered an academic post there. Jakob grows up, marries, divorces, becomes an acclaimed writer, but remains haunted by images of his dead parents and the mystery of his beloved sister’s unknown but certainly horrific fate. But then he meets Michaela, who offers the chance of release from the ghosts of his past.

Adaptated from Anne Michaels’s bestselling novel, Fugitive Pieces examines how love and compassion can repair the damage done by tragedy and guilt.

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