Cantor's creation of an American Margot is similar in its attempt to connect the Anne Frank story with American-Jewish life to Ellen Feldman's novel, 'The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank', in which Peter van Pels also survives the Holocaust and emigrates to the United States, where he too takes on a new name and non-Jewish identity, and both have the same failing of their protagonist not ringing true, A /5(). · “Cantor brilliantly channels Anne Frank’s sister Margot, who survives the Holocaust horrors to hide yet again, in America, trying to forget the terrible secret that brought her here. A haunting meditation on who we really are versus who we wish we had been, regret, loss and how we Brand: Penguin Publishing Group. The novel Margot takes place in as Margot struggles with how to live her life by hiding out in plain site. She has told no one who she really is but as the movie version of Anne Frank is premiering and everyone is talking about it, she finds it more difficult to hide who she /5.
Margie Franklin is really Margot Frank, older sister of Anne, who did not die in Bergen-Belsen as reported, but who instead escaped the Nazis for America. But now, as her sister becomes a global icon, Margie's carefully constructed American life begins to fall apart. A new relationship threatens to overtake the young love that sustained her. Read "Margot: A Novel" by Jillian Cantor available from Rakuten Kobo. **"Inventive Cantor's 'what-if' story combines historical fiction with mounting suspense and romance, but above al. "Inventive Cantor's 'what-if' story combines historical fiction with mounting suspense and romance, but above all, it is an ode to the adoration and competition between sisters." -- O, the Oprah Magazine A story of sisters that imagines Anne Frank ' s sister Margot survived World War II and was living in America, from the author of The.
Margot by Jillian Cantor. Publication Date: September 3, ; Genres: Fiction; Paperback: pages; Publisher: Riverhead Trade; ISBN ; ISBN Cantor's creation of an American Margot is similar in its attempt to connect the Anne Frank story with American-Jewish life to Ellen Feldman's novel, 'The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank', in which Peter van Pels also survives the Holocaust and emigrates to the United States, where he too takes on a new name and non-Jewish identity, and both have the same failing of their protagonist not ringing true, A far more successful examination of America's cultural engagement with Anne Frank is Philip. “Cantor brilliantly channels Anne Frank’s sister Margot, who survives the Holocaust horrors to hide yet again, in America, trying to forget the terrible secret that brought her here. A haunting meditation on who we really are versus who we wish we had been, regret, loss and how we love in the face of sorrow.
0コメント