Fing's war / Benny Lindelauf ; translated from the Dutch by John Nieuwenhuizen.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Original language: Dutch Publisher: Brooklyn, NY : Enchanted Lion Books, [2019]Edition: First English language editionDescription: 411 pages ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781592702695
- 1592702694
- Hemel van Heivisj. English
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children's Book | Main Library | Children's Fiction | Lindelau Benny | 2 | Available | 33111009294873 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The Boon family and their indefatigable gallows humor are back in Benny Lindelauf's follow-up to Nine Open Arms.
Poised to win a scholarship to the nearby teachers college, Fing has high hopes. It's 1938 and her poor family of nine--one father, four brothers, three sisters, and a grandmother--has finally managed to eke out a living in the tiny cigar factory abutting their dilapidated home. But smelling success, her dreamer of a father is determined to expand and Fing's dreams fall apart when she instead has to go to work for the Cigar Emperor, taking care of his new, German wife's eccentric niece. The novel's gripping language, enriched by Yiddish, German, and Dutch dialect, plunges the reader into the world of a large, colorful, motherless family as they navigate the changes World War II visits upon their little town on the border of the Netherlands and Germany. This stand-alone follow-up to Nine Open Arms , a 2015 Batchelder Honor book translated from Dutch, is a fantasy, a historical novel, and literary fiction all wrapped into one.
"First published in 2010 in Dutch in the Netherlands by Em. Querido's Kinderboeken Uitgeverij as De hemel van Heivisj"--Copyright page.
Sequel to: Nine Open Arms.
Follows teenaged Fing Boon and her large, impoverished, eccentric family as they navigate the changes World War II visits upon their little town on the border of the Netherlands and Germany.