WHAT REMAINED
A Novel of London and Munich, 1938–1945
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
London, 1938. Munich, 1938. Two families. One war. And the ordinary choices that become unforgivable.
Arthur Ashworth is an air raid warden pulling bodies from the rubble of the Blitz. Karl Bauer is a housing administrator processing the paperwork that makes Jewish families disappear. Neither man thinks of himself as a villain. Both are about to discover what they're willing to sacrifice — and who they're willing to sacrifice — to keep their families safe.
As the war tightens its grip, the Ashworths fracture: Tom flies night-fighter missions and stops sleeping. Elsie, evacuated to a Welsh farm, becomes a Quaker pacifist and is disowned by her mother. Evelyn runs a WVS canteen and makes a decision on a burning street that will haunt her for years.
In Munich, the Bauers face a different reckoning. Anneliese stops playing piano the day she carries stolen furniture out of a Jewish neighbor's apartment. Greta joins a resistance cell and barely survives interrogation. And Lukas — eleven years old, bright, obedient — begins repeating things at the dinner table that terrify his parents.
Seven hundred eighty-six names in Karl's handwriting. Three bodies on a street in Bethnal Green. A flat key on a piano that will never sound right again. The Broken Key asks the question most World War II novels avoid: not what would you risk to resist evil, but what would you quietly accept to keep your life intact?
For readers of All the Light We Cannot See, The Nightingale, and HHhH. A dual-timeline literary novel of complicity, conscience, and the distance between who we believe ourselves to be and what we actually do.