
First, I’d like to comment on the structure of the book. Elsie and Reba become friends during the course of this book, but Elsie doesn’t tell Reba the story of her youth during World War II. This feels right to me: it was a pretty horrific time for her and her family, and she’d like to move on. I think that Elsie and Reba connect because they are both non-native Texans who had rough childhoods, and in that sense, their stories echo each other.
My favorite sections of the book are the Elsie sections: she’s a feisty heroine, despite all the conflicts she faces. She might strike some readers as too perfect, as in wise beyond her years. I don’t want to give away the details of her story because I think it’s best to enter the novel with a blank slate. The plot wasn’t necessarily the strongest point in this book because the woes that befall Elsie during and immediately after the war are quite extreme, but somehow, not necessarily unbelievable.
The other aspect of the book that I enjoyed were the various relationships among the women: Reba and Elsie’s daughter Jane, Reba and her sister DeeDee, Elsie and her mother, and Elsie and her sister. Those sections felt spot-on psychologically. This is abook about relationships among family members, friends, and with beloveds. Also, the last section of the book made mevery weepy. If you’re looking for a book with good relationships, a gripping story about World War II told from the perspective of a German teenage girl, and a good, sad, ending, check out this book.
THE BAKER’S DAUGHTER by Sarah McCoy
Crown Publishing
Publication date: January 24, 2012
Source: Publisher via NetGalley