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Hilda van Stockum

    Hilda van Stockum was a prolific author and illustrator whose works often drew from her own life experiences and family models. Her writing, known for its warm, vivid, and realistic depictions of family life in the face of danger and difficulties, frequently centered on families and was set in the locations where she lived. Inspired by letters from relatives during the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II, Van Stockum penned her most popular work, praised for conveying an accurate sense of life under Nazi occupation. Her extensive career as a book illustrator spanned 71 years.

    The Borrowed House
    • The Borrowed House

      • 208 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      During World War II a young German girl, who has been indoctrinated into the Hitler Youth, travels to occupied Amsterdam to rejoin her parents then comes to realize the truth about the war. New introduction by the author's son, John Tepper Marlin. "So, you're falsifying papers?" said Janna. "You belong to the Dutch Resistance." She looked at him curiously. The boy shrugged his shoulders. "You could call it that. I'm just helping the van Arkels rescue innocent people from certain death. They need these identification papers and food cards to keep alive. If you betray me, all these people will either starve or be forced to give themselves up to be sent to the gas chambers of a concentration camp." "Gas chambers?" Janna looked at the boy with horror. "You mean ... they are killed?" The book looked sternly at her. "Do you think," he said, "that Germany is sending Jews to a nice vacation spa, or to pretty villages with geraniums in the windows? That's what they told us at first, though in Holland we never believed it." This book is based on a true story, and even though it deals with some hard issues brought about by the German occupation of Amsterdam, it provides an opportunity to discuss World War II from a unique perspective.

      The Borrowed House