MARSEILLE 1940
by France’s collapse, most Americans opposed helping refugees. Running for reelection in November, Franklin D. Roosevelt knew that supporting immigration was a sure loser at the polls. Some readers will recognize Wittstock’s hero, Varian Fry, a young New York journalist: He is at the heart of Julie Orringer’s 2019 novel The Flight Portfolio, which inspired the Netflix series Transatlantic. Together with a few activists, Fry raised money and founded the Emergency Rescue Committee. Carrying a list of names, including 200 German\u002Dlanguage authors provided by Thomas Mann, he traveled to Marseille in August 1940, assigned to spend a few weeks organizing an office to aid refugees. He remained for more than a year. On arriving, Fry realized that thousands needed help to survive as well as navigate absurd procedures for obtaining paperwork to live, travel, and leave France. Fiercely idealistic, he did what had to be done, much of which was illegal and expensive\u003B this offended the ERC, which demanded his return, and the State Department, which refused to renew his passport and denounced him to the Vichy government. Fry finally returned in the fall of 1941\u003B declared persona non grata, he received little thanks. Wittstock detours regularly for accounts of refugees. Readers may recognize names like Max Ernst, Hannah Arendt, Marc Chagall, and Heinrich Mann, but most will be as unfamiliar as they were to Fry, who rescued more than 1,000 people, a lifesaving feat because, of course, death in concentration camps awaited many who were left behind."

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Set in the port city of Marseille as Nazi forces occupy France, this historical novel follows a young protagonist whose ordinary life is dismantled almost overnight, replaced by a daily calculation o...
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Set in the port city of Marseille as Nazi forces occupy France, this historical novel follows a young protagonist whose ordinary life is dismantled almost overnight, replaced by a daily calculation of who can be trusted and what risks are survivable. Rather than sorting its cast into clean heroes and villains, the book sits in the grey space where collaboration and resistance blur, and where staying alive sometimes requires choices that don't look brave in the moment. The port setting is rendered with enough sensory detail, the sounds and crowds of a city under occupation, that the history doesn't feel like backdrop; it's the pressure the plot runs on. The book runs 240 paperback pages and covers a lot of ground without ever feeling rushed.
The internal cost of secrecy gets as much attention as the external danger, which is what makes this land with teen readers past the history-class version of WWII: the protagonist's private struggles and the unlikely alliances formed under pressure carry the emotional weight. It doesn't soften the era to make it palatable, which is why it's shelved for readers 12 to 18 rather than younger, and that's precisely what makes it useful for a parent or teacher looking to open a real conversation about ethics under extreme circumstances rather than a sanitized one. Goodreads readers have it at 4.47 across 595 ratings.
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