Victoria's War

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Pub Date 2 Jun 2020 | Archive Date 15 Aug 2020

Description

In Victoria’s War, Hamilton gives voice to the courageous Polish women who were kidnapped into the real-life Nazi slave labor operation during WWII. Inspired by true stories, this lost chapter of history won’t soon be forgotten. 

 

POLAND, 1939: Nineteen-year-old Victoria Darski is eager to move away to college: her bags are packed and her train ticket is in hand. But instead of boarding a train to the University of Warsaw, she finds her world turned upside down when World War II breaks out. Victoria’s father is sent to a raging battlefront, and the Darski women must face the cruelty of the invaders alone. When Victoria decides to go to a resistance meeting with her best friend, Sylvia, they are captured by human traffickers targeting Polish teenagers. Sylvia is sent to work in a brothel, and Victoria is transported by cattle car to Berlin, where she is auctioned off as a slave. 


GERMANY, 1941: Twenty-year-old Etta Tod is at Mercy Hospital about to undergo involuntary sterilization because of the Fuhrer’s mandate to eliminate hereditary deafness. Etta, an artist, silently critiques the propaganda poster on the waiting room wall while her mother tries to convince her she should be glad to get rid of her monthlies. Etta is the daughter of the German shopkeepers who buy Victoria at auction in Berlin.


The stories of Victoria and Etta intertwine in the bakery’s attic where Victoria is held—the same place where Etta has hidden her anti-Nazi paintings. The two women form a quick and enduring bond. But when they’re caught stealing bread from the bakery and smuggling it to a nearby work camp, everything changes. 


In Victoria’s War, Hamilton gives voice to the courageous Polish women who were kidnapped into the real-life Nazi slave labor operation during WWII. Inspired by true stories, this lost chapter of...


Advance Praise

“Victoria’s War is a compelling story of a young Polish woman caught in the vise of the German invasion of Poland at the opening salvo of World War II. Written in an engaging literary style that captures the textures of Polish life, Catherine Hamilton’s gripping novel is a must read!” 

— Dr. Richard C. Lukas, author of Did the Children Cry? and The Forgotten Holocaust 


“Some stories that need to be told are never told. They languish in a limbo of forgotten stories that should never have been forgotten. Catherine Hamilton’s novel Victoria’s War resurrects one of these stories. In language intimate and natural and yet touched by the poetry of truth, Hamilton tells the story of a young girl who is the victim of war. Too often, we think only of the men who go to war, do heroic things. We forget the other victims and heroes of war, the women like Victoria in this brilliant novel.” 

— John Guzlowski, author of the award-winning Echoes of Tattered Tongues 

“Victoria’s War is a compelling story of a young Polish woman caught in the vise of the German invasion of Poland at the opening salvo of World War II. Written in an engaging literary style that...


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Featured Reviews

Many thanks to Mindbuck Media for getting in touch with me to read and review “Victoria’s War”, I’m so very glad to have had the opportunity.

Telling the story of just some of the situations women faced in occupied Poland and Germany during the second World War, this hard hitting and at times out right harrowing book really doesn’t hold back. The language used is somewhat simplistic, and while in some situations that would be a criticism, in this case it actually works in the book’s favour; it gives more power and responsibility to the actions discussed rather than the words.

Victoria is getting ready to start university on the day that war is declared in Poland. Life changes in an instant, as it does for the other women we meet throughout the course of the novel. There are some situations that can be read about as pure facts without absorption, but when applied to characters you feel a connection to, the impact of what you know changes.

What is particularly clever as a writing technique about this novel is the use of German as a tactic to get across just how overwhelming the language barrier would be. To not only be treated in the way these women are, but to be shouted at in another tongue, where you know only the bare minimum.

Catherine A. Hamilton touchingly includes the family inspiration for this novel at the beginning, and this stayed with me as I read the book; people I’ve never met, but real people, undergoing the situations and treatment I was reading about.

This book manages to tread the delicate line of high impact and easy reading, which is a difficult balance to achieve. I read this book in a day, because I simply couldn’t put it down, and needed to know what happened to everyone involved. As always with stories of war and terror, it isn’t a pleasant read as such, yet manages to be enjoyable whilst breaking your heart.

I would highly recommend this to anyone looking for a war fiction novel, or a story of how women have been mistreated. We so often feel the brute force of war without being on the front line, and this is just one story of how. It was intriguing, painful, and beautiful.

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This story is written in parallel to each of the two of the main female characters but from different scenarios and events colliding together at a point and then separating only for one to understand her destination of death with the other to grow in bravery beyond her own imagination.

To the disbelief of Victoria Darski with just two hours to go before she is due to catch her train to start university, bags packed, an announcement is made over the radio that the Nazis have invaded their country, Poland. A full scale invasion of armed soldiers and tanks. At the same time there is a further announcement that the university has been closed. Believing that the Allies will come to Poland's aid, Victoria holds onto the hope that she will still start university. However, German orders are that no one is to leave their homes until their identifications are issued. This puts a strain on the family with Victoria and her sister Elizabeth quarrelling and their mother trying to make the best of things. Elizabeth is fourteen and it seems left to do many of the household chores while Victoria a little recalcitrant still fantasises about her university dream. It's not until the first visit by the Nazis that the realisation of what fate is about to deal to them becomes clear. Elizabeth is killed by the soldiers in their home. It's this event that haunts Victoria as the story unfolds.

Etta is a deaf German girl whose parents run a Bakery. They are true Nazi believers with their son Wolfgang an SS officer. Etta's mother has one thorn in her side that in her delusional mind she has an imperfect daughter, so, not in tune with the Fuhrer's idealism for his superior race. Etta suffers torment from her mother with the constant threat of being sent to an institution. This unkind behaviour is not shared by Etta's father or brother who show her love, sign to her in conversation and for Etta along with her love of art helps her to endure her mother's scourge. Her studio is in an attic room where she can escape to and wonders, if she will ever, at some time be able attend art school.

After initially being sent as a machinist in a clothing factory through being at the wrong place at the wrong time Victoria finds herself a prisoner from a round up by German soldiers of those in the Resistance. Sharing her fate is her childhood foreign language teacher who embarks on dragging from Victoria's memory the German taught to her at that time. Mrs Koser is the force by which Victoria's bravery begins to grow within her. She is assigned as a worker for the bakery and even though she is badly treated by Etta's parents for the first time in Etta's life she finds Victoria an agreeable companion, a pretend sister, someone to share her dreams with. Eventually through developing circumstances they form a team whereby they are able to help those in the prison camps until Etta finds herself sent away to the place she has always feared. Victoria is deeply affected by Etta's forced removal which makes her more determined to continue with the routine that they had started and she embarks on adding more life saving deliveries for the prisoners until she is discovered.

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‘Victoria’s War’ is a fantastic debut novel by Catherine Hamilton that follows two very different young women throughout World War Two. We start in 1939 with Victoria, a Catholic Pole, learning that Poland has been invaded by the Germans just two hours before she’s supposed to go to the University of Warsaw. Immediately, her father is sent off to war and then her 14 year old sister Elizabeth is brutally shot dead in their home by SS officers. We then jump to 1941 where Victoria and her mother are working in a sewing factory making German uniforms. Victoria is talked into attending a resistance meeting at a church by her friend Sylvia where they’re captured and sent to Berlin to be Polish slaves. On their way, Victoria is reunited with her old schoolteacher Mrs Kosa and the pair begin their journey.
Our second character is Etta, living in Germany in 1941. She is 20 and spends most of her time in the attic painting and hoping to study fine arts. Unfortunately for Etta, she is deaf. When we first meet her she is being forcibly sterilised because she is considered ‘inferior’, confused and angry she resents her family’s dedication to the Nazi regime. When her father decides to go to war they look for a Polish slave to help keep their bakery running and so Victoria ends up living in their attic.

The writing in this book had no frills, it was blunt and simple but that made the story so much more realistic and believable. The variety of characters in this novel allowed us to see the many ways in which people cope with the war, Victoria is confused by Mrs Kosa’s calm and tough approach to their situation but the older woman is teaching her a strength that will help Victoria through many impossible challenges. Etta is overlooked and underestimated by those around her because she’s deaf but she’s clever and daring with a fierce sense of what is right. The main message I took from this novel was that we are braver than we know. Regardless of their race, religion or political beliefs each of the characters were tested and it was up to them whether they dug deep or gave in. I couldn’t put this down, I became so attached to these characters and had to keep reading to find out what was going to happen.
Typically, WW2 historical fiction I read is from a Jewish perspective so it was a new experience to read a story about Polish women and a German girl living under the regime being classed as ‘inferior’. The last 10% of the book was resolved so quickly, mainly because it was the climax of the action but I felt I needed more time to process what was happening. Regardless, this was a heart wrenching story that I thought offered an alternative perspective compared to the many other WW2 novels published in the last few years. An incredible debut novel, I can’t wait to see what this author bring out in the future!

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This book is set during WWii in Poland. It about Victoria, a young woman about to go to college, and her family and friends. It's a fictional depiction of actual events. It's a very emotional read. I would suggest this for anyone interested in human history.

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Victoria's War tells the story of Victoria, a Polish young woman forced into a Nazi slave labor camp during WWII. Catherine Hamilton painted Victoria's story with heartbreakingly rich events and detail. I appreciated the anecdotes at the end of the book that included stories and photos, and what Hamilton's inspiration in writing this book was. I liked how it highlighted a group not often addressed in relation to WWII, and I think it's important to tell those stories. However, while I liked the book, I wouldn't go so far as to say I loved it. I found some of the character relationships forced or a little surface level, such as Victoria's relationship with Tomas. If I were to recommend WWII historical fiction titles to a friend, I have a few other suggestions that I'd pass along before this one. However, it did address an important group of people whose imprisonment needs to be highlighted!

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"The oral history that brought Victoria Darski to life was given to me by someone close, my cousin was kidnapped from her village in Poland and survive slavery in Germany. Her only request was that I one day write it down." - Afterwords from Victoria's War.
This is my second historical fiction novels that I've read taken place in Poland during WW2. It was educating, touching and needed to be read. Poland was the first country in Europe to be overpowered by German military and as a results those people endured the longest most treacherous 6 years of their lives. Crafting a realistic and emotionally vivid story, Catherine gives a voice to the millions of Polish women forced and degraded to slave labour. She captures commonly hushed events and actions conducted by Nazis, which to this day many may not know about. Also, expressing the power of friendship, the rewards of courage and faith while proving love bears all things. Victoria's War is a novel that must be read to give an ear to those who weren't deserved to be silenced.

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First sentence: The radio changed Victoria Darski's world. It brought swing jazz and blues into her living room. And on the first of September, when she sat on the high-backed sofa and reached for the brass knob on the cabinet radio, it brought news of war.

Premise/plot: Victoria's War is a fictionalized account based on the author's researching real women's experiences in Poland during the Second World War. The novel might be called Victoria's War, but it isn't just Victoria's war--it is everyone's war. And readers get multiple perspectives on the war from a woman's point of view. The first few chapters give readers a taste of what to expect: war brings cruelty, brutality, horrors, hardships, pain, shame, regret, guilt. If these first few chapters are too much, too intense, too painful...the rest of the novel will definitely prove overwhelming.

My thoughts: I love, love, love, love, love reading war stories. Not because I love war--I don't. But because I believe that every voice is worth hearing, every story worth telling. Especially when stories are researched, realistic, true to life. (I do read both fiction and nonfiction.) Just because it's painful and uncomfortable to witness doesn't mean I should turn away and dismiss. That being said, I am an adult. I would not by any means suggest handing intense, not-quite-age-appropriate war books to young readers and forcing them to bear witness to atrocities of the past. One's own mental health and mental state will also play a role in what you yourself seek to read. But I don't shy away from the darkness, the sorrow, the pain. I see you. I hear you.

Victoria's War has its darkness. I won't lie. But it's got a resilient, compassionate, empathetic, heroine who has gumption, courage, and strength.

I loved, loved, loved, loved, LOVED, LOVED, LOVED the ending. It was WORTH IT.

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WOW what a wonderful book. I received this book from NetGalley and was hesitant because I traditionally read reviews first.. If there are numerous 5 star ratings, I will usually read the book and ignore the 1 stars. I had no idea what this book would be rated as there were no reviews, so I was on my own!!!!! From the very first, I knew this was going to be one of those books that I would remember. I didn't want it to end and so took my time at first. When I got to 60%, I knew I could and would want to finish it to see what happerns.
I do not want to give anything away about the story, except it takes place during the German invasion of Poland to the end of the World War II, and in particular what happens to Victoria, this nice Catholic Polish girl (late teens 20+) whose life is turned upside down when the Germans take her and her mother away.. They are sent to a "sewing camp" when eventually Victoria is captured by the Germans and sent with a friend to another camp.. In Chapter 20, there is even a mention of Sister Faustina. Sure didn't see that one coming!!!!!
When put on another train for transportation to different camp, Victoria sees her mother who hands her a sack. It will be the only thing Victoria has left of her prior life and her mother.
I really did not know anything about the slave-labor operation and other camps except the usual historical concentration camps the Jewish people were held and their horrific conditions. I certainly learned about what the remaining Polish people endured and it was just as horrific. The maternity camps were new to me, as the other books I have read imply that the pregnant women were packed in with the others and their babies were born. They were either taken immediately or if they were able to be hidden, they eventually died.
The writing of Mrs. Hamilton is so vivid and real.. I could smell the various odors she was describing, I could perfectly see the places she was describing and I could feel the pain of Victoria, Etta and Mrs. Kosa both physical and mental. Poor Etta she was such a smart girl, I really liked her and she certainly wasn't treated like a human being... She gave life back to Victoria. We watched Victoria grow into a strong, self-reliant, woman and the transformation happens without our really knowing it. I admire Victoria's faith, Mrs. Kosa's compassionate help in befriending Victoria, and of course Etta who only wanted to be Victoria's sister. All of the characters were so explored and I knew all of them well, except the General who befriended Victoria in the brothel,
I had no idea so much research went into writing this book, but the bibliography at the end gave me another list of books to read.. I also wonded what others will think of this book and` am anxious to see other reviews.
Thank you NetGalley for letting me read this book, Mrs. Hamilton is a terrific writer, The only con would be the cover of the book. Victoria does not look like the Victoria I pictured. She needs a little softness.

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Victoria’s War was a very intriguing debut novel. This historical fiction was set during WWII and highlighted two very different women: Victoria, a Polish Catholic who was all set to start at a university when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, and Etta, a 20 year old German deaf artist. They met when Victoria, kidnapped and forced into the Nazi slave labor operation, was bought by Etta’s father to work in their bakery. Etta tried to protect Victoria as much as possible, but the brutality of Hitler’s war left no one unscathed.

This historical fiction was inspired by real people and events- the kidnapping of 1.5 million Polish Catholics. The author’s extensive research resulted in a very emotional read and gave voice to all those that survived and died during this horrific time period.

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Victoria's War is a fantastic debut from author Catherine A. Hamilton. A historical fiction written about 2 characters that experience WWII and in a way become 'sisters'.

Victoria is just 2 hours away from leaving for college when Hitler invades Poland in 1939. She is soon sent to Berlin as Slave Labor. There she meets Etta, who is deaf and an artist. They become friends and try to help the slave labor camps. Each will take different paths, one betrayed and the other barely surviving the war.

The Todt Organization was the largest and most secretive wartime slave operation in modern history. This operation would be considered human trafficking today. The Nazis captured 1.5 million Polish Catholics, more than half a million women, to work as slaves.

This book is a tribute to those Polish Women who died under the Nazi Slave Labor program and to those who suffered through the humiliation of slavery, but survived to tell their story.

If you like historical fiction, don't pass this book up. It will be published on June 2, 2020. I highly recommend.

Thanks to Netgalley, Hamilton and the publisher for the Kindle version of this book, for my honest review.

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A Polish Catholic teenager struggles to survive, keep her faith, and help others during World War II. Captured by Nazis, Victoria was sold as a slave to work in a German bakery, where the deaf daughter of the proprietors has already faced abuse due to the Nazi eugenics policy and regularly finds ways to assist pregnant women in labor camps and women captured as sex slaves. An intense novel filled with strong female characters. (Netgalley review)

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First I want to thank Net Galley and Plain View Press for allowing me to read this book and give an honest opinion of my thoughts on the book. This subject interested me because I never knew about Polish women slaves during World War 2. This book starts off prior to Germany invading Poland and as 19 year old girl is getting ready to start college. Victoria, the aforementioned 19 year old, whole life changed when war broke out and her father is drafted to the front. Victoria's little sister is killed by SS and she and her mom are forced into slave labor at a factory, sewing shirts for the SS. Victoria joins her best friend Sylvia at a resistance meeting and is picked up and placed into slave labor. She spends days on trains and ends up at a place where they split the girls up into different categories (Victoria for slave labor sale and Sylvia off to be a forced prostitute for SS soldiers. Victoria is bought by a Captain whose parents own a bakery. The baker and his wife are true believes of the Reich and have a deaf and mute daughter Etta who befriends Victoria. The book spans years and each character evolves. I enjoyed this book, though at times it did drag and seem repetitive. If you want to learn more (I truly enjoyed the afterward which talks more about the Polish slaves) I highly recommend this book.

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I have always been fascinated with World War II literature. There are numerous counts of unspeakable atrocities and indomitable human spirit at its peak. Hundreds of authors have written thousands of books recounting so many tales, some true stories and some imagined. This book revolves around Victoria who undergo several spells of torture and cruelty only to rise stronger everytime by winning over her fears and helping others even when she was the weakest. This story tells us that that unlikeliest friendships can be formed in adversities, that death of someone can totally change even the most cruel person and that if you keep fighting and not lose hope than maybe someday you live to see the future you always imagined for yourself and your loved ones.

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The historical fiction, Victoria's War, by Catherine A Hamilton, gives us faces and names for just a few of the 1.7 million Poles that were forced into slave labor by Nazi, Germany. This number excluded POWs and half of this number were women. The character of Victoria, represents just one of these women and her story is horrid despite the fact that she has things better than other slaves, during some of her time. Victoria is bought at auction, for the price of three loaves of bread, to be the slave of a German baker and his wife. Her cruel owners have no worries for the time she might be worked or starved to death because there are always more slaves available. Victoria works 14 hours a day for her one very meager "meal" and is beaten regularly by the couple who owns her. She lives in a closed attic, that freezes in the winter and swelters in the summer, but she knows that her plight is so much better than the women living in the work camps, where women die daily, due to starvation and disease. 

But Victoria has a ally in the couple's artistic, deaf/mute daughter, Etta, who loves Victoria as a sister and who protects Victoria and other Nazi victims, behind the backs of her parents, SS brother, and other Nazis. Etta's mother hates her and has always threatened Etta that she will send her to an institution for the insane. Victoria and Etta work together to help prisoners, slaves, victims of the Nazis, risking their own lives to do what they can to keep others alive long enough to hopefully see the end of the war. The story is heartbreaking but inspiring, as we meet so many people who are willing to die in order to provide one more piece of bread, one more blanket, to the thousands of prisoners of the Nazis. 

Behind the story of Victoria, Etta, and the others that they work with, in order to save lives, the author does a fantastic job of allowing us to be very aware of the multitudes of people suffering under the Nazi regime. Even Etta, as a girl born to a loyal German family, suffers because she is not perfect, which means she is worthless in the eyes of the Nazis. The afterword of the book details information that shows how widespread the Nazi net was thrown, to enslave, imprison, and kill, so many people that did not meet the Nazi standards. If possible, obtain the print version of this book because there are photos and captions included in the book, that enhance this story. Even with the digital version of the book, I could see these pictures and they add to the reality of what happened during the Holocaust. 

Thank you to Plain View Press and NetGalley for this ARC.

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Bravery, Strength, courage, and valor ........things that often seem to be missing in the world we now live in.

Every time I think I know all of the heinous facets of the Nazis during the war, another one comes along. In the story, Victoria's War, we meet a group of women, brave women and some men who try their best to fight against the tyranny , the crimes against humanity, and the horrid acts of death and perversion that the Nazis carried out.

This story dealt with the treatment of the Catholic Polish people, many of which were sent to camps and annihilated while some were sold as slaves to Germans, who treated them like chattel, subjected them to inhuman treatment, and thought of them as human filth.

Victoria, the main protagonist in this book, is subjected to harsh treatment after she was sold into slavery to a German couple who owned a bakery. Their treasured son was a SS officer, their pride and joy, while his sister, Etta, a deaf mute, was treated abhorrently by her mother who followed the Nazi code that a human who was handicapped even if they were German, was a defective being.

Victoria and Etta form a friendship over time, a secret one that was ultimately dedicated to helping those trapped in the world of hellish proportions. Some were sent to prison camps, some were worked until they perished without adequate food and clothing, and some were placed into houses where they were forced to become prostitutes. It is the latter, that Victoria, after Etta is taken away to an institution, desires to help, thus placing her life on the line.

This was a sad story and one that opened my eyes once again to the dangers of a totalitarian state, one that manipulates its people to get what they desire, total control of all. It also made me realize that people are often sheep like, they fall into line and it is the brave ones who step out of that line and come forward to protect what is right and just.

This was an interesting story and a first effort by a new author who did a nice job relating incidents that actually occurred. I do recommend it as a glimpse at some of the shocking and hideous acts that were performed by the Nazis under Hitler's leadership. I think, as we lament where we are today, reading a book such as this makes one realize that what we are going through now is not even close to the destruction that meet so many during the war.

Thank you to Catherine A. Hamilton, Plain View Press, and NetGalley for a copy of this book due to be published on June 2, 2020.

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War hurts. It hurts the fighting soldiers, and it hurts those left behind. It splits apart families, some of which are never reunited. It hurts emotionally, and it hurts physically. No one escapes. War gobbles up its victims one by one.

Victoria Darski is a Polish woman, living in Lagodny during the Nazi takeover in 1939. She lives with her mother, and her sister Elizabeth. One day, without warning, the front door is kicked in and Nazi soldiers enter their home. Elizabeth is shot and killed because she was crying. Victoria and her mother are rounded up with more than twenty-five other women and taken to a sewing factory to make uniforms for the German army. She and her friend Sylvia attend a secret resistance meeting, which is subsequently raided and Victoria becomes a slave laborer, Zwangsarbeiter [what today would be called human trafficking].

In the Tod family, there is Jarman, the father, Krimhilda, the mother, and their two children: Wolfgang in the SS and Etta, who is deaf. The family owns a bakery. The mother is vicious! Constantly berating Etta, calling her names, ["stupid child"] treating her like a freak of nature. Totally against her will, Etta is subjected to a sterilizing operation. Sweet, considerate Etta is also an artist of some talent, and this, too, the mother quashes.

Victoria is sent to live with this family, as help in the kitchen of the bakery. The mother adds Victoria to the list of people who are "less" than human and whom she can hit and scream at without notice. Frau Tod calls her "dummer hund" [dumb dog]. "She was the dumb dog locked in the baker's attic, the dog standing at a very small window that overlooked the sidewalk in front of the bakery, the dog who smelled fresh-baked bread through the drafty floor, coming from the bakery ovens."

I invite you to walk in Victoria's shoes and experience another kind of war, another face of terror.

I read this EARC courtesy of Plainview Press and NetGalley. pub date 06/02/20

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Victoria’s War is a novel about slave labour that 1.5 Million Polish people were forced into during World War II.

In Victoria Darski, you have a protagonist who bears loss after loss, of her sister, her guardian angel, Etta Tod, and her mentor, Mrs. Kosa. She lives through survivor’s guilt to find peace at the end.

Hamilton’s book is well researched and the narrative feels authentic. She sensitively excavates several incidents of history whether it is in the history of the potato farming slaves in the Magdeburg area or the death by guillotine of German and Polish protestors, neither of which I was familiar with. These narratives diversify the master narrative of the Holocaust and WWII.

It’s a good read, sensitive and easy, complimentary to Cilka’s Journey by Heather Morris. Read it if you like historical fiction.

My only regret about the book is the cover design. It feels dated but hopefully readers will look beyond it.

Thanks to NetGalley for sharing the ARC in exchange of a fair review.

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This well written novel grabbed me by the collar and pushed me into the turbulent life of Victoria as she experienced the horrendous life of WWII Poland. This book is well written, well organized and filled with details of Polish women being forced into Nazi slave labor experiencing brutality like one could never imagine.
Highly recommended for those who enjoy both nonfiction and historical fiction.

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I received this book as an ARC from NetGalley.

This is a heartbreaking story told from the points of view of two women. It shows their strengths and fortitude as they fought the atrocities of the invading Nazis. Even though they are in impossible situations, they do what they can to help others.

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VICTORIA’S WAR by Catherine A. Hamilton is a historical fiction novel that depicts the horrific lives of Polish women kidnapped by the Nazi’s for slavery in Germany during the Second World War. Ms. Hamilton’s writing paints a picture that is emotionally disturbing and heartrending with an unforgettable protagonist.

Victoria Darski is packed and ready to leave for college as the Nazis come sweeping into Poland and her whole world is changed. Her father leaves to fight with the Polish army, her younger sister is shot to death right in front of her and she must now work at the sewing factory with her mother. After two years of occupation, one night she is persuaded by her best friend, Sylvia to attend a resistance meeting and they are captured. They are sent to Germany and Sylvia is selected to work as a prostitute in a brothel while Victoria is auctioned off as slave to a German baker in Berlin.

Simultaneously, Etta Tod a deaf/mute, amateur artist is taken to the hospital by her mother for involuntary sterilization. Etta’s family are Nazi party members and believers in the cause. Her father and brother love her, but her mother only sees her deafness as a defect and hates her for it. When her brother brings the swangsarbeit (Polish slave) home to work at the bakery, Etta believes she has found a friend to confide in.
Victoria and Etta form an ever-increasing bond. They conspire with friends in the White Rose resistance to smuggle extra bread to the nearby work camp and brothel. When their conspiracy is discovered, everything changes.

I was completely engrossed in Victoria’s story the minute I started reading. Sometimes we are so focused on the Jewish Holocaust, that we forget that the German Aryans believed they were superior to and hated everyone who was not of their race. This story portrays the atrocities perpetrated against Polish women and German’s with disabilities in a fictional history novel that brought the places and time to life and left me distressed, thoughtful and emotionally drained. All the characters were realistically written and I felt completely engaged in their life and death struggles over the six year time period of the book.

I highly recommend Victoria’s War. It is a beautiful story that is a tribute to all the women the characters represent.

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Victoria and Etta are two women whose lives will be greatly impacted by World War II and they will completely impact each other. Victoria becomes a prisoner due to her heritage, she is Polish and that is seen as an "other" in Hitler's eyes. Etta is a prisoner to her family due to her being born deaf and that being seen as a complete defect. When these women come together they end up doing some real good for the community.

Both Victoria and Etta's stories had moments that were so so hard to read. From abuse to rape, the things these women went through just trying to live were beyond anything I could imagine enduring. These women visit Polish prison camps and even a maternity ward and are able to sneak in extra supplies, but they are looked at as the lucky ones which I couldn't wrap my head around!

With all of the World War II books that are out there to read, this one was really hard for me to read. I understand that the parts that were hard to read were based in truth, but they were just to graphic which made the book unenjoyable for me. If you are a reader who has read a majority of the books that take place during World War II and are unafraid of reading about graphic scenes then this book would be right up your alley.

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Slave Labor Nazi style

I had never heard of this part of WWII until I read this book. I did not know that the Nazi's rounded up thousands of Polish people when they invaded Poland and forced them into slave labor. They used them for free work in their factories, in camps, in brothels and sold them in the marketplace for business's to buy to use as servants. If they resisted they were murdered by the Nazi's. Those women under Nazi occupation with any type of disability, deaf, blind, or other disability were sterilized against their will. Residents of the Hadamar mental institute and other medical facilities in Nazi Germany were euthanized under the Nazi T4 operation .

This is a fiction story that is written about real historical events. It was hard to read because of the horrible treatment the characters were forced to endure under the rule of the Nazi's. I did love the characters and the story was well written.

This story is about deaf German girl Etta whose parents were Nazi's and owned a bakery. She is sterilized against her will when her mother orders it done. Her brother Wolfgang is a member of the SS. He tries to protect his sister but will not go against his mother. She makes friends with the new slave girl Victoria until she is sent to Hadamar by her mother.

The story is also about a catholic Polish girl Victoria that is forced to work in a factory with her mother after the Nazi's kill her sister and force them to go to work in the factory. She attends a resistance meeting with her friend Sylvia and the Nazi's arrest them. Sylvia is sent to a brothel and Victoria is put up for bid at the market and purchased by Etta's brother Wolfgang to work in the family bakery. She is treated very bad by the mother but Etta and her become friends in secret.

Etta and Victoria deliver bread to the work camps until Etta is sent to Hadamar for stealing bread from the bakery for the people in the camps and the girls in the brothel. Then Victoria delivers the bread. When Tomas and Victoria decide to help the brothel girls escape they are caught and sent to prison.

It is not an easy book to read but it is a good book and it is a part of history that need to be told. I am glad a read it . It is a page turner, it has action right from the beginning and holds your interest until the last page is done.

After the book there is explanations of the history and facts leading to this story. I would definitely recommend this book.

Thanks to Catherine A. Hamilton, Plain View Press and NetGalley for allowing me to read an advance copy of the book for an honest review.

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Victoria's War is yet another book from the currently very popular genre of Historical Fiction that centers on detailing some of the atrocities committed at the hands of the Nazi regime. Our protagonist, Victoria Darski, is apprehended in her family home during a Nazi raid because they were Polish Catholics. That was a double whammy right there - Polish and Catholic. During this terrifying encounter, she witnesses the violent murder of her sister which serves as an inspiration for Victoria's personal war against the Nazis in ways that are revealed as the book unfolds.

Victoria and the remaining family members are then taken off by the Nazis and then sold and resettled as slaves to various trusted German businesses and party members where they slave away in extremely inhumane conditions. The bakery that purchases Victoria is owned by a family who are fully brainwashed by the party to believe horrendous ideas regarding both the Polish and Catholics. That is, except for the young daughter, Etta, who is a deaf mute and despised by her psychotically cruel mother because of her frailties. Not only is Etta mute, but her biggest wish is to attend Art school which her mother regards as yet another weakness on Etta's part. Frau Tod is almost as vicious to her own daughter as she is to Victoria, the family slave. This only ends up creating a strong bond between Victoria and Etta who eventually become to think of each other as sisters.

There is one cruelty after another throughout the entire book which can make for disturbing reading. As with many from this genre, the story is Fiction but there are pieces of truth extracted from real life telling us about a part of History that we need to know. Not pleasant but important so we have an understanding hoping to never allow such atrocities to happen again. There is much more to this story than I've touched on which only serve to reach into other sorts of ways these prisoners and slaves had been continuously defiled and abused. Of course, as we know, many didn't make it out alive. This is the story of only a very few and a sampling of what they went through.

A particular aspect of this story that I really appreciated was that the author focused on several of the demographics who were hated and victimized by the Nazis other than the Jewish communities. With all of the emphasis on the anti-Semitic culture of the Nazis, so many of the others who were also targeted for elimination so often have been pushed aside and almost forgotten. Hamilton puts the spotlight on a few of those such as those of Polish decent, homosexuals, Modern artists, and the handicapped. The reach of hate was broad towards anyone who did not suit their ideal of the Super Mensch. Here we get a glimpse of how such individuals fell to harm at the hands of a very evil and psychotic mentality that had overtaken that part of Europe at the time. To take it a step further, Hamilton also portrays how the same sickness even destroyed so many of the German party members just by buying into that mindset promulgated by Adolph Hitler and his book Mein Kampf which one could say was the Bible of the Nazi party. Horrifying as it may be, the book, Victoria's War, is well worth reading, almost as an antidote to such tyranny. Just be prepared to be disturbed.

Thanks to NetGalley for a copy of the eBook for a fair and honest review.

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Very good insight to the problems two women Etta and Victoria had during the occupation of Poland and Germany. Etta is a German girl who was deaf and didn't agree with her family during the war.
Victoria is a Polish girl who was a slave laborer at Etta family bakery who became friends and tried to help the people in the prison camps.
great history about the time and how the people thought.
Good intense read.
Voluntarily reviewed.

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I really enjoyed this book, at least as much as you can enjoy a book about the Holocaust. This book is about Victoria, who is a Polish Catholic who is sold to a German family to work in their family bakery. The Tod Family have a son Wolfgang and Daughter Etta. Etta is deaf and has been forced to be sterilized by Nazi Germany.
Victoria works in the bakery washing pans and cleaning and then Etta and Victoria become friends, which is an element that I can’t say I have read in other Holocaust writings. Which was a pleasant surprise. I was rooting for them!
Wonderful book!

On Instagram: @need_more.books_more.jesus

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Another Historical Fiction story? YES!
Author @Catherinedvxhgcb
Takes the reader into the heart of a die-hard nazi family; where the family bible is MEIN KAMPF...and we witness a mother's unabashed hatred for her daughter.
"Etta Tod", born deaf, is a disgrace to her Arian family. Yet despite her Mother's abhorrence, Etta dreams of an artistic life...where her paintings can be heard. But for now, she paints secretly in the Attic, hiding her anti Nazi paintings.
🎨
"Victoria Darski", a young Polish girl, is"collected" by the Nazis...then sold as a slave for the Tod household.
📚
This is their story.
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This is also the little known story of Nazi Slavery, and dark family desire for Arian perfection as mandated by the Fuhrer.
Heartwrenching, intimately harrowing and based on true events, this book needs to be on your absolute must read list.
5⭐
Thank you to NetGalley, Plain View Publishing and the author, Ms. Catherine A. Hamilton, for the opportunity to read this Advanced Readers Copy of "Victoria's War". The opinions expressed in this review are mine alone.

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3.25 stars

I read a lot of historical fiction set during ww2 but this was the first time I have read one from the perspective of a Polish slave. I previously hadn’t realised that general Polish people had been used as slaves in Germany, even if they were not Jewish or other Nazi “undesirables”.

The pace is fine & the characters are well developed but the plot seemed to be busier at the end and seemed a little unrealistic that they could be caught resisting in a minor way and not face punishment there and then. Perhaps it was realistic for Polish slaves rather than their Jewish counterparts.

Overall, not bad but didn’t wow with me.

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