The Forest of Vanishing Stars: A Novel
The Forest of Vanishing Stars: A Novel book cover

The Forest of Vanishing Stars: A Novel

Hardcover – July 6, 2021

Price
$10.00
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
Gallery Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1982158934
Dimensions
6 x 1.9 x 9 inches
Weight
1.19 pounds

Description

"Fascinating, meticulously researched, and utterly unique."xa0 -- Kelly Rimmer, New York Times bestselling author of THE WARSAW ORPHAN"A powerful and compelling masterpiece, a significant story for our present time." -- Patti Callahan, New York Times bestselling author of Surviving Savannah and Becoming Mrs. Lewis"With breathtaking natural descriptions, vivid historical details, and a brave heroine worth cheering for who must fulfill a destiny prophesied since birth, this novel is not to be missed!” -- Heather Webb, USA Today bestselling author of The Next Ship Home"What a triumph! Not since Alice Hoffman's The Dovekeepers , have I read such a spellbinding and immersive tale of a people's will to survive." -- Stephanie Dray, NYT Bestselling author of The Women of Chateau Lafayette"In this always compelling, sometimes harrowing tale, THE FOREST OF VANISHING STARS draws readers into a singular story of survival and bravery.xa0Set against the backdrop of Eastern Europe during World War II, the resourceful Yona, forced to become expert in the ways of the forest when a sage, prescient elderly woman takes Yona from her German family, must decide whether she'll rise up to claim the destiny foretold about her when faced with a band of Jewish refugees hiding in her beloved woods. Inspiring and gripping . " -- New York Times bestselling author Marie Benedict"Unforgettable characters, nail-biting drama and deep emotion that endures long after the final words are forgotten.... The Forest of Vanishing Stars is a story that will touch, educate, transform and uplift." -- Santa Montefiore Kristin Harmel is the New York Times bestselling author of more than a dozen novels including The Forest of Vanishing Stars , The Book of Lost Names , The Room on Rue Amélie , and The Sweetness of Forgetting . Shexa0is published in more than thirtyxa0languagesxa0and is the cofounder and cohost of the popular web series, Friends & Fiction . She lives in Orlando, Florida. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One CHAPTER ONE 1922 The old woman watched from the shadows outside Behaimstrasse 72, waiting for the lights inside to blink out. The apartment’s balcony dripped with crimson roses, and ivy climbed the iron rails, but the young couple who lived there—the power-hungry Siegfried Jüttner and his aloof wife, Alwine—weren’t the ones who tended the plants. That was left to their maid, for the nurturing of life was something only those with some goodness could do. The old woman had been watching the Jüttners for nearly two years now, and she knew things about them, things that were important to the task she was about to undertake. She knew, for example, that Herr Jüttner had been one of the first men in Berlin to join the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, a new political movement that was slowly gaining a foothold in the war-shattered country. She knew he’d been inspired to do so while on holiday in Munich nearly three years earlier, after seeing an angry young man named Adolf Hitler give a rousing speech in the Hofbräukeller. She knew that after hearing that speech, Herr Jüttner had walked twenty minutes back to the elegant Hotel Vier Jahreszeiten, had awoken his sleeping young wife, and had lain with her, though at first she had objected, for she had been dreaming of a young man she had once loved, a man who had died in the Great War. The old woman knew, too, that the baby conceived on that autumn-scented Bavarian night, a girl the Jüttners had named Inge, had a birthmark in the shape of a dove on the inside of her left wrist. She also knew that the girl’s second birthday was the following day, the sixth of July, 1922. And she knew, as surely as she knew that the bell-shaped buds of lily of the valley and the twilight petals of aconite could kill a man, that the girl must not be allowed to remain with the Jüttners. That was why she had come. The old woman, who was called Jerusza, had always known things other people didn’t. For example, she had known it the moment Frédéric Chopin had died in 1849, for she had awoken from a deep slumber, the notes of his “Revolutionary Étude” marching through her head in an aggrieved parade. She had felt the earth tremble upon the births of Marie Curie in 1867 and Albert Einstein in 1879. And on a sweltering late June day in 1914, two months after she had turned seventy-four, she had felt it deep in her jugular vein, weeks before the news reached her, that the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne had been felled by an assassin’s bullet, cracking the fragile balance of the world. She had known then that war was brewing, just as she knew it now. She could see it in the dark clouds that hulked on the horizon. Jerusza’s mother, who had killed herself with a brew of poisons in 1860, used to tell her that the knowing of impossible things was a gift from God, passed down through maternal blood of only the most fortunate Jewish women. Jerusza, the last of a bloodline that had stretched for centuries, was certain at times that it was a curse instead, but whatever it was, it had been her burden all her life to follow the voices that echoed through the forests. The leaves whispered in the trees; the flowers told tales as old as time; the rivers rushed with news of places far away. If one listened closely enough, nature always spilled her secrets, which were, of course, the secrets of God. And now, it was God who had brought Jerusza here, to a fog-cloaked Berlin street corner, where she would be responsible for changing the fate of a child, and perhaps a piece of the world, too. Jerusza had been alive for eighty-two years, nearly twice as long as the typical German lived. When people looked at her—if they bothered to look at all—they were visibly startled by her wizened features, her hands gnarled by decades of hard living. Most of the time, though, strangers simply ignored her, just as Siegfried and Alwine Jüttner had done each of the hundreds of times they had passed her on the street. Her age made her particularly invisible to those who cared most about appearance and power; they assumed she was useless to them, a waste of time, a waste of space. After all, surely a woman as old as she would be dead soon. But Jerusza, who had spent her whole life sustained by the plants and herbs in the darkest spots of the deepest forests, knew that she would live nearly twenty years more, to the age of 102, and that she would die on a spring Tuesday just after the last thaw of 1942. The Jüttners’ maid, the timid daughter of a dead sailor, had gone home two hours before, and it was a few minutes past ten o’clock when the Jüttners finally turned off their lights. Jerusza exhaled. Darkness was her shield; it always had been. She squinted at the closed windows and could just make out the shape of the little girl’s infant bed in the room to the right, beyond pale custard curtains. She knew exactly where it was, had been into the room many times when the family wasn’t there. She had run her fingers along the pine rails, had felt the power splintering from the curves. Wood had memory, of course, and the first time Jerusza had touched the bed where the baby slept, she had been nearly overcome by a warm, white wash of light. It was the same light that had brought her here from the forest two years earlier. She had first seen it in June 1920, shining above the treetops like a personal aurora borealis, beckoning her north. She hated the city, abhorred being in a place built by man rather than God, but she knew she had no choice. Her feet had carried her straight to Behaimstrasse 72, to bear witness as the raven-haired Frau Jüttner nursed the baby for the first time. Jerusza had seen the baby glowing, even then, a light in the darkness no one knew was coming. She didn’t want a child; she never had. Perhaps that was why it had taken her so long to act. But nature makes no mistakes, and now, as the sky filled with a cloud of silent blackbirds over the twinkling city, she knew the time had come. It was easy to climb up the ladder of the modern building’s fire escape, easier still to push open the Jüttners’ unlatched window and slip quietly inside. The child was awake, silently watching, her extraordinary eyes—one twilight blue and one forest green—glimmering in the darkness. Her hair was black as night, her lips the startling red of corn poppies. “ Ikh bin gekimen dir tzu nemen ,” Jerusza whispered in Yiddish, a language the girl would not yet know. I have come for you . She was startled to realize that her heart was racing. She didn’t expect a reply, but the child’s lips parted, and she reached out her left hand, palm upturned, the dove-shaped birthmark shimmering in the darkness. She said something soft, something that a lesser person would have dismissed as the meaningless babble of a little girl, but to Jerusza, it was unmistakable. “ Dus zent ir ,” said the girl in Yiddish. It is you. “ Yo, dus bin ikh ,” Jerusza agreed. And with that, she picked up the baby, who didn’t cry out, and, tucking her close against the brittle curves of her body, climbed out the window and shimmied down the iron rail, her feet hitting the sidewalk without a sound. From the folds of Jerusza’s cloak, the baby watched soundlessly, her mismatched ocean eyes round, as Berlin vanished behind them and the forest to the north swallowed them whole. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Parade
  • “Best Books of Summer” pick *
  • Real Simple
  • summer reading pick *
  • SheReads
  • “Best WWII Fiction of Summer 2021” pick
  • The
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of the “heart-stopping tale of survival and heroism” (
  • P
  • eople
  • )
  • The Book of Lost Names
  • returns with an evocative coming-of-age World War II story about a young woman who uses her knowledge of the wilderness to help Jewish refugees escape the Nazis—until a secret from her past threatens everything.
  • After being stolen from her wealthy German parents and raised in the unforgiving wilderness of eastern Europe, a young woman finds herself alone in 1941 after her kidnapper dies. Her solitary existence is interrupted, however, when she happens upon a group of Jews fleeing the Nazi terror. Stunned to learn what’s happening in the outside world, she vows to teach the group all she can about surviving in the forest—and in turn, they teach her some surprising lessons about opening her heart after years of isolation. But when she is betrayed and escapes into a German-occupied village, her past and present come together in a shocking collision that could change everything. Inspired by incredible true stories of survival against staggering odds, and suffused with the journey-from-the-wilderness elements that made
  • Where the Crawdads Sing
  • a worldwide phenomenon,
  • The Forest of Vanishing Stars
  • is a heart-wrenching and suspenseful novel from the #1 internationally bestselling author whose writing has been hailed as “sweeping and magnificent” (Fiona Davis,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author), “immersive and evocative” (
  • Publishers Weekly
  • ), and “gripping” (
  • Tampa Bay Times
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(5.5K)
★★★★
25%
(2.3K)
★★★
15%
(1.4K)
★★
7%
(647)
-7%
(-647)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A Must Read!

Kristen Harmel’s Forest of Vanishing Stars was an awesome read and foray into historical fiction. I finished it within a week and couldn’t keep it down. I can’t recommend this book enough because it not only presents its readers with a strong female character through the protagonist, Yona, but the author refers to significant historical events that led many persecuted to seek refuge in the forest. I have been on a serious novel binge! I started this after A Burning and loved both of them! 🙂

Usually, being a connoisseur of memoirs and non-fiction, I love historical fiction because it allows readers to engage with the blurred lines between fiction and historical events. I appreciated Harmel’s notes at the end of the novel when she specifically explained all the events that had inspired parts of her novel. This is an amazing novel for students to learn about survival during the Holocaust. I can’t recommend this novel enough!

Thank you NetGalley for the advanced reading copy of this novel so I could provide a honest review in return!
49 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Hope

The Forest of Vanishing Stars is a masterpiece. The research that went into this book is amazing! People who do amazing things during dark times are exactly what I want to read about. And a book where the forest is actually one of the characters?! YES!! Kristin Harmel is the most extraordinary gift to historical fiction! Wow! I am reading it for the second time already because I was so blown away the first time. I read it so fast that I feel like I need to read it again in case I missed something…or I might just not be ready for it to be over yet ;)
37 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Interesting But Not Convincing Historical Novel

During WW2, a substantial number of Polish Jews escaped the Nazis by hiding and surviving (and fighting when necessary) in an extensive forest and swamp area. This remarkable and heroic story was depicted in the movie "Defiance" starring Daniel Craig. The author uses this event as the framework for her novel about a young woman, kidnapped as a child, who is raised in this forest, and taught survival skills. When the Germans invade, she helps fleeing Jews to learn how to survive. Although well written, I found the plot unconvincing and contrived. I did not think the main character was believable.
37 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A truly captivating story

The Forest of Vanishing Stars is a mesmerizing tale told with a unique voice that draws you in from the first pages. Set during World War Two, the sense of fear and horror that the Jewish people feel is real. The invading Germans send many fleeing to the forest of Poland for refuge. Having been raised in the forests, Yona, who has lived a sheltered and isolated life shares her knowledge and learns what it means to belong.
This book is fIlled with beautiful imagery allowing the reader to feel the magic of Yona's forrest. This was my first Kristin Harmel book. I was drawn to this one by the stunning cover and the intriguing description and I was not disappointed. Kristin Harmel is a new favorite.
24 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Beautifully Written !

Beautifully written historical fiction of the fight to survive the German occupation of Poland during the Holocaust in the country’s vast forests . Details of surviving in the forests — from food gathering and hunting, fishing, to sheltering in the harsh winters, to group and family dynamics — are such an integral part of the story. It’s obvious I am not a reviewer, but an avid reader. If you read one book this year, read this! The storytelling is incredible. The characters are unforgettable. Having read all of Harmel’s books, this is my favorite by far. She never disappoints!
20 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Would Make a Good Movie

This is a good story that is sometimes hard to read. It would make a better movie than a book, because there are lots of exciting parts that would be better seen. The beginning is sort of creepy, and I guess I would say if you are tempted to stop reading, stick with it, because it gets better. There are some unforeseen twists.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Sounded like a good concept but.......disappointing

Rating: 2.5
The novel starts with the kidnapping of Yona, a 2 year old girl from a wealthy German household by an old woman to keep her “safe”. Jerusza lives in the woods and has been “hearing voices” that tell her that Yona is meant for a higher purpose. She will be known by the birthmark shaped like a dove on her wrist. She raises her in the forest, teaching her how to live off the land: food, medicinal herbs, making shelter, etc. She is also taught many languages about Judaism. She has no contact with others until the old woman dies.
Wandering, she meets a group of Jews escaping the Germans. She befriends them and teaches them all that she knows to survive. Yona meets a young man and falls in love. The scenes were written like bodice ripping cheap romances and I considered putting the book aside. Yet, I was interested in what happened next so kept reading.
Yona rescues a badly injured little girl, being cared for by a nun, who Yona questions in understanding her faith. “How can God let these things happen”. The nun replies “throughout history, God has tested us. Job, for example was tested by Satan and lost everything but he still believed in the Almighty. God ultimately restored everything.” Yona replied, “but that is not happening here. Innocent people are dying at the hands of evil.” The nun tells her “we can only pray to be His servants and do what we can to ease suffering. Do your part and be a light in the darkness. Whoever saves a life has saved an entire world.”
The group comes upon a priest and the Germans planning to kill 8 nuns who offered their lives instead of 100 citizens who attached German soldiers. Yona recognizes a Nazi officer as her father (completely unbelievable since she was 2 years old when kidnapped). He recognizes her, the birthmark in the shape of a dove. She begs him to save the nuns, which he does only if she will come ‘home’ with him. He lives in a mansion whose Jewish owners were killed. He promises her that he will take the 8 nuns into the woods, fire 8 shots and free them but he insists on Yona showing him the Jewish refugees she has been with in the forest. The next day, she returns to the church only to find the nuns all shot. She escapes into the woods and finds the original group of Jews and joins them again. They flee deeper into the forest, cross a swamp and make camp on an island. There the sky is clear and full of stars “It’s been months since we’ve fully seen the stars,” someone says. “You can hardly make them out above the trees. They disappear deep in the forest like us. The forest knows no difference of people and race, religion and gender. It provides protection by the grace of God, may we all be vanishing stars.” THE TITLE REVEALED.
Yona and the group become resistance fighters and ambush German trucks to get food and guns and ammo. Yona falls in love with Zus, a refuge but then her father (magically!!!!) shows up (how could he find her deep in the woods, through the swamp and on this island????) He means to shoot Zus but Yona is shot instead. She somehow slashes her father’s wrists and radial artery, killing him, to save Zus.
The book ends abruptly; Yona survives and marries Zus. They have children and “live happily ever after.”
I’ve read many Holocaust stories and have always been moved but there was no depth and the magic scattered throughout the book was distracting as well as disrespectful to those innocent victims and survivors alike. I am clearly in the minority. Most readers rated the book highly; but, have we been reduced to people who need to suspend intelligence? I prefer to approach historical novels seriously and hope to learn something new.
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Slow, slower, slowest

I wanted to like this book. I tried. Even the cover missrepresesnts the book. Considering the lead character is in tatters the whole book why is she depicted nicely dressed on the cover? Strange!
Starts out slow and stays that way for more than half the book. And I do not believe any young woman could function in that forest for 20 years eating the things described. No I don't. Totally impossible that of all the German officers in Europe she literally runs into her father in some bizarre location. Ending? Seriously?: The ending changes from one page to the other. Warning here: if you are a fan of historical fiction......as I am.....you want to skip this one.
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Book

The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel is an excellent WWII-era historical fiction novel that truly capitivated me from beginning to end. Just stunning.

I have read several books from Ms. Harmel ( The Book of Lost Names, The Winemaker's Wife, When We Meet Again, and The Room on Rue Amelie) that I have really enjoyed, so I knew when I found out she had written a new book, that I had to read it. Boy, I am sure glad I did! What an excellent addition to an already impressive portfolio.

This is such a unique and wonderful novel. Reading the story of a woman that was kidnapped from her German family as a young child, raised, educated, and secluded in the wilderness by the woman that was her captor was fascinating. The author's descriptions, research, and knowledge on all of the survival skills and life-sustaining chores and support to keep one alive in the forests was so informative and interesting.

Yona is then thrust into the middle of the war when as she is living in the forests of Poland alone after the woman whom raised her passes away, she happens upon Jewish citizens that have entered the area in hopes of escaping and hiding from the Nazis. Yona then raises to the challenges and helps many individuals learn survival skills and helps hide/help them to safety. She selflessly puts herself in harm's way to helps others. In turn, being around others, being a part of something bigger then herself, Yona receives so much more in return.

The atrocities, the rawness, the fear, loss, and complex emotions that the characters exchange and feel themselves really affected me. As always, it was hard to read so much hurt, fear, and damage. This book gives a harrowing account that has some historical fact/basis, and it was just so remarkable and stunning, that I will remember this book for a long time to come. I won't divulge any more of the plot as I do not want to spoil anything for future readers, but I will just say I dare any reader not be affected by this novel by the time that it is finished. It is just that amazing.

5/5 stars
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not Kristen Harmel's best work

I have read most of Kristen Harmel's books but I have to say this is my least favorite. As always, Harmel's research is impressive and extensive. She does a great job carefully weaving historical facts into her story. The story is well written but at the center is a heroine I really couldn't identify with. Her back story of being kidnapped from a wealthy German couple and raised in the wilderness by an old woman was wildly implausible. Inga (renamed Yona) has only had the grumpy old woman named Jerusza to interact with. And yet as a young woman she meets a group of Jewish refugees and after a very little bit of hesitancy starts communicating and interacting with them just fine. As the story unfolded I really couldn't imagine what would be a good outcome for Yona. I found the last two chapters completely confusing and unstaisfying. They seem to present two different outcomes for Yona. Harmel tries to illuminate a different perhaps little known aspect of WWII in each book. This one just didn't resonate with me.
6 people found this helpful