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* Ebook The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff

Ebook The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff

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The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff

The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff



The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff

Ebook The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff

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The Diplomat's Wife, by Pam Jenoff



How have I been lucky enough to come here, to be alive, when so many others are not? I should have died.… But I am here.

1945. Surviving the brutality of a Nazi prison camp, Marta Nederman is lucky to have escaped with her life. Recovering from the horror, she meets Paul, an American soldier who gives her hope of a happier future. But their plans to meet in London are dashed when Paul's plane crashes.

Devastated and pregnant, Marta marries Simon, a caring British diplomat, and glimpses the joy that home and family can bring. But her happiness is threatened when she learns of a Communist spy in British intelligence, and that the one person who can expose the traitor is connected to her past.

  • Sales Rank: #332127 in Books
  • Brand: Jenoff, Pam
  • Published on: 2008-04-22
  • Released on: 2008-04-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 1.00" w x 5.13" l, .53 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 360 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Jenoff's stirring sequel to her debut, The Kommandant's Girl, chronicles the perilous post-WWII adventures of Marta Nederman, a member of the Polish resistance and best friend of the earlier book's heroine. When the Allies liberate Dachau, where Marta has been imprisoned and tortured by the Gestapo, Paul Mattison, a handsome American soldier, tenderly gives the weakened Marta a drink of water. Later, at a refugee camp outside Salzburg, Austria, Marta befriends Rose, another recovering survivor. After Rose's sudden death, Marta is able to use Rose's visa to travel to London. When en route Marta runs into Paul in Paris, the passion between the pair ignites. They promise to meet in two weeks, but tragedy ensues when Paul's plane crashes in the English Channel. Pregnant with Paul's baby, Marta marries Simon Gold, a British diplomat. Two years later, Marta goes on a dangerous mission to Poland, where a Communist takeover is imminent and where the seesaw plot takes more than one surprise twist. Historical romance fans will be well rewarded. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
After working in the Jewish resistance in Kraków, Poland, Marta Nedermann is rescued from a Nazi prison by American soldiers. A simple gesture of human comfort by a soldier named Paul is etched in her mind, and when she sees him again in a camp for displaced persons in Salzburg, Marta is overjoyed. They meet again in Paris and become engaged, only to have Paul die in a plane crash. Marta is now scared, pregnant, and alone in a strange city. Simon Gold, an English diplomat, needs her language skills, and he wants her as well. They marry, and two years later, the English government taps Marta for help in finding a traitor in the British intelligence corps, sending her on an undercover mission that entails revisiting her past. Jenoff gives readers a thrilling and intense look at the beginning of the cold war as well as a heartrending love story about two very brave people as she continues the story of the heroic resistance members from The Kommandant’s Girl (2007). --Patty Engelmann

Review
[A] moving first novel… Jenoff succeeds in humanizing the unfathomable as well as the heroic. --Booklist on The Kommandant s Girl

Most helpful customer reviews

34 of 35 people found the following review helpful.
A page turner turned eye roller
By jenpnc
The two stars I gave this book are all for the beginning. We meet Marta, an undeniably strong young Jewish woman, who has fought with an anti-Nazi insurgency and then captured, imprisoned and beaten for months by Nazis. But she refuses to give up any information. Just when she can't go on any longer, the Nazis are defeated, the prison is liberated and she meets Paul, a handsome American soldier who finds her in her cell. So far, so good. I like this Marta, and can understand her attraction to her savior.
But then the coincidences start to fall thick and fast, one right after the other, and eventually you are pretty much convinced that WWII must have killed off absolutely everyone except about six people, because these same people run into one another just about everywhere: castles in Austria, cafes in Paris, gardens in London, the streets of Munich, and best of all, deep in the woods somewhere near a train track, close to a border!
I found it impossible to truly connect with any of the characters because they were all so clichéd and the coincidences were so unbelievable. Worst of all was Marta, who transforms from a tough fighter into a mousy shadow of herself, supposedly due to the shock of Paul's death - I found myself disbelieving that a woman who held strong against the Nazis, who had faced the loss of her entire family with courage, who had fought with conviction, would lose that strength so readily and take to her bed weeping while the kindly English matron in the conveniently large house brought her trays of nourishing food.
Maybe some would argue that Marta found strength again through her unusual assignment...but I would say nope. She just found Michael, one of the six survivors of WWII. Together they take on the world- luckily there are only a few others left. What happened to Paul? Oh, I'll leave that for you to find out.

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
What a TERRIBLE sequel!
By W. Mercer
I'm going to try and do justice to what a massive disappointment this book was, but it may be difficult. I read this novel's predecessor: The Kommandant's Girl last week and finished it in 1 day. I struggled to finish this over a 3 day period not because it was longer, but because I just didn't want to finish it for any other reason than I hate to get halfway through a book and give up. Ergo, I pressed forward.

SPOILERS:
Marta was a well-developed character from the first novel and this one takes over where it left off. The timing is completely inconsistent. The last novel ends in 1942 but Marta is supposedly only imprisoned 6 months or so before American liberation of the camps which anyone with even a cursory knowledge of WWII remembers ended in 1945. Is this an episode of Doctor Who? Is there some magical Timey Wimey stuff occuring? I digress. She feels an instant connection with Paul, the guy who pulls her bedraggled body out of the cell and then leaves her in the care of the medical staff (you know, like a soldier would, because that's his job). This PTSD-suffering woman spends her time recovering in the house that was the basis for the Sound of Music, where MIRACULOUSLY Paul shows up just as she's recovered (she also develops a friendship with Rose -- their first meeting giving the earliest indicator of the claptrap cheesy dialogue we're going to suffer through for the majority of the novel. Of course, there's sexual tension, Paul's casual alcoholism which he just willfully abandons because of some comments she makes by the time they coincidentally meet in Paris. Rose dies, she had a visa to Britain which their nurse convinces Marta to take and impersonate her with, but naturally there's a 1-2 day window for her to make it from Salzburg to London like some kind of post-war Cinderella deadline. Of course she makes it to Paris late because of bad train tracks and then everyone in the British Embassy is a dismissive a-hole who refuses to give her a one day extension. Paul comes to the rescue when they just happen to meet again through a crazy twist of fate (read: convenient plot twist) gets her visa extended, proposes within a few hours (keep in mind they've spent less than 24 hours total in each other's presence at this point) then they go back to his hotel, bump uglies and the next morning she boards a ship for London, with him promising to meet her there in 2 weeks so they can get married and go to his 'ranch' in NC (I've grown up in VA and been to NC multiple times, we do not have 'ranches' there, it's called a farm. Duh.) When she gets on the ship she meets Simon, who I imagine to look like Claire Fraser's English husband from the Outlander TV series. Of course he's nice and attentive, but secretly he's a dark and sinuous creature because nice, boring guys can't ever be just that.
Long story short, she gets to London, tells Rose's aunt she's dead, then stays there until Paul is supposed to come in. His plane never makes it, crashing into the English Channel and what feels like a million chapters later you find out is was *gasp* sabotage! The same British bloke from the ship finds her wandering around London aimlessly a few weeks later (pregnant, of course, because that's apparently a theme for Jenoff) convinces her to work for him under the guise of helping to protect her homeland Poland from Communism *wink*wink* he's secretly a Commie himself. Through an escalating unrealistic series of events she meets with Emma from the first novel and we find out that the happy ending we hoped for at the end of the Kommandant's Girl most definitely did not happen (what I cannot forgive is the way Jenoff let it go). I could keep going but my biggest issue was the way Marta kept moping around feeling sorry for herself and I get it, she's been through hell, but the way her character behaves in this novel is infuriating for someone who enjoyed her in the first book. Also, she's incredibly naive/stupid. Her husband is constantly up in his office, ignoring her and the daughter she believes that he believes is his for the most part and being a general cold fish. I mean, halfway through I knew he was a Commie and this dumb girl didn't see it until the last 10 pages, only because he tried to poison her and kidnap the baby. Oh, I forgot to mention that of course Paul is actually alive because helloooooo you can't stop true love *barf* they meet on a secret mission to Prague, save some important person, do the nasty on a grimy mattress in the basement of a Berlin restaurant and yada yada yada I'm already done and ready to move on from this book. Unfortunately I already ordered the prequel to the Kommandant's Girl which chronicles his first marriage, so hopefully my $4 on Amazon will be rewarded with something closer to Jenoff's original work instead of this drivel. I've read reviews where it was speculated that she was pressured to dish out another novel quickly after the KG, so I can only hope that is the case, or I will not be chancing my time on any of her other stuff.

17 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
Definitely a Page Turner!!
By Dream Reader
I thought this book was excellent. It grabbed me from the first page and I practically read the entire book in one sitting. I simply couldn't put it down. I thought the characters were well developed and the story line twists were always exciting. The setting of the story, post WW II Europe, was also very interesting. There aren't alot of contemporary novels (that I'm aware of) that showcase what happened after the war ended and communism began to take over in the east. The author did a great job of balancing between historical elements and fictionalization. The story was also very romantic. Loved it!

See all 144 customer reviews...

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