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Review: Our Darkest Night

The author's meticulous research makes for heart-wrenched reading, writes Madeleine Kingsley

May 13, 2021 17:17
Bolzano in Italy GettyImages-1204229239
Cityscape image of historical city of Bolzano, Trentino, Italy during twilight blue hour.
2 min read

Our Darkest Night
By Jennifer Robson
Headline Review, £9.99
Reviewed by Madeleine Kingsley

Years ago, our young family camped out on a wooded hillside outside Bolzano in northern Italy — fresh air, pizza, sweet holiday expectations. It felt like a blow to read in Jennifer Robson’s latest novel, Our Darkest Night, that wartime Bolzano held a detention camp for Italian Jews (including her heroine) en route to Birkenau. Friezes now commemorate its perimeter, just as Stolpersteine mark the last known homes of Venetian Jews deported and murdered.

The horrors of occupied middle Europe are familiar from fiction, but less so perhaps the plight of Jews from La Serinissima — Venice — and the hill villages where they were hidden by righteous gentiles such as Robson’s own grandparents-in-law, Giovanni and Emma Guarda.

Family history, uncovered only in 2018 via her son’s Holocaust school project, was the deeply personal inspiration behind Robson’s bittersweet burgeoning love story between a young Jewish woman, Nina, and Nico, former priest and now secret partisan.