The Imposter Bride: A Novel
The Imposter Bride: A Novel book cover

The Imposter Bride: A Novel

Kindle Edition

Price
$9.99
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date

Description

Nancy Richler is the author of the novels Throwaway Angels and Your Mouth Is Lovely, which won the 2003 Canadian Jewish Book Award for fiction and Italy's 2004 Adei Wizo Award. Her short fiction has been published in various American and Canadian literary journals, including The Fiddlehead, Room of One's Own, and The New Quarterly. Nancy lives in Montreal. Tavia Gilbert is an acclaimed narrator of more than four hundred full-cast and multivoice audiobooks for virtually every publisher in the industry. Named the 2018 Voice of Choice by Booklist magazine, she is also winner of the prestigious Audie Award for best narration. She has earned numerous Earphones Awards, a Voice Arts Award, and a Listen-Up Award. Audible.com has named her a Genre-Defining Narrator: Master of Memoir. In addition to voice acting, she is an accomplished producer, singer, and theater actor. She is also a producer, singer, photographer, and a writer, as well as the cofounder of a feminist publishing company, Animal Mineral. --This text refers to the audioCD edition. Richler infuses her work with iconic images from the era she covers, painting a rich image of the Canadian Jewish community, their customs and family relationships, in a past century. . . . A beautiful tale.-- "Kirkus" --This text refers to the audioCD edition. The most painful secrets create the deepest of lies A young, enigmatic woman—Lily Azerov—arrives in postwar Montreal expecting to meet her betrothed, Sol Kramer. When Sol sees Lily at the train station, however, he turns her down. His brother, Nathan, sees Lily and instantly decides to marry her instead. But Lily is not the person she claims to be, and her attempt to live a quiet existence as Nathan Kramer’s wife shatters when she disappears, leaving her baby daughter with only a diary, an uncut diamond and a need to discover the truth. Who is Lily, and what happened to the young woman whose identity she stole? Why has she left and where did she go? Is it up to the daughter Lily abandoned to find the answers to these questions as she searches for the mother she may never find or truly know? --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Imposter Bride, TheCHAPTER 1xa0xa0In a small room off a banquet hall in Montreal, Lily Kramer sat in silence with her new husband. It was summer and the room was hot. There were no windows and no door, only a curtain beyond which the guests--almost none of whom she knew--washed down sponge cake and herring with shots of schnapps and vodka. Lily and her husband sat on either end of the couch on which she assumed they were meant to consummate their marriage.In front of the couch was a table laid with fruit and hard-boiled eggs. Her husband picked up a plum and rolled it in the palm of his hand. His name was Nathan and she had known him for a week. It was his brother, Sol, she had been meant to marry, a man she had corresponded with but hadn't met, who had caught one glimpse of her as she disembarked at the station and decided he wouldn't have her. Lily watched Nathan roll the plum in his hand and wondered what his brother had seen in her that made him turn away.Nathan picked up a knife and began scoring the skin of the plum into sections. They had not yet touched, not even a brush of hand or lip upon becoming husband and wife. She could still count the number of glances they had exchanged, the first when she'd sat on the couch at the house where she was staying, so ashamed by the rejection at the station that she'd had to struggle to meet his gaze while he apologized on behalf of his brother and entire family."Your brother cannot even apologize on his own behalf?" she asked. She was surprised by her shame. Disappointed. She had no time to waste--no strength--on a man who fled at the mere sight of a woman. Or so she would have thought."Not even that," Nathan replied."No great loss, then," she said, forcing a lightness she didn't feel into her voice. She had crossed two oceans to marry this Sol. She had nothing and no one to return to."The loss is his," Nathan said quietly.She had thought he would leave then, beat a hasty retreat from his brother's misdemeanour, but he didn't. He remained standing before her, shifting his weight from foot to foot."Would you like to sit down?" she asked finally.His eyes were warm and brown; there was no pity in them. And he seemed to like what he saw. Already there was heat in his gaze.He returned the next day to formalize their engagement. Why the rush? Lily wondered when he reappeared at the door. It was not as if she were fielding other offers, would be taken by another if he didn't quickly stake his claim. But then she knew, thought she knew. It was the rush of colour to her face when he had first entered the room, the lowered gaze that she'd had to force upwards, her chin raised in defiance of whatshe felt. He had returned to banish her shame. He brought witnesses and brandy--and the same heat in his gaze. He was a lucky man, Lily thought at that moment. His desire inclined him to acts of goodness."Do you speak English?" he asked her that day. They'd been speaking Yiddish until then."Ticket," she answered. "Bread. Cousin. Suitcase."Her English was good, near fluent, in fact. It was her anger at that moment that made her conceal it, sudden anger at his assumption that it was she who was the more ignorant of the two--she who spoke five languages and could get by in several others, who had smuggled lives across borders he wouldn't be able to find on a map. Rage, in fact, that it should have come down to this: if Nathan Kramer would have her, she would have him and be grateful. She, who had held all of life and death between her two hands before dying and washing up into this pale afterlife of her own existence."Freedom," she continued. "Buttons. Train.""Buttons?" he asked, smiling."Eisenbergs," she said, naming the family that was hosting her, Sol's employer, whose business was buttons."Yes, yes, I understand," Nathan said, still smiling.He knew she spoke English, had known from the expressions on her face as she'd followed his earlier conversation with the Eisenbergs--all in English. He had met greenhorns before, knew their nodding at wrong moments, their delayed smiles, awkward laughter, baffled eyes. There was none of that in her. She was tired, yes, after the long journey she had made, and certainly confused and distressed by his brother's behaviour at the station, but she was not a woman who didn't understand what was being said all around her. Sheunderstood perfectly. And yet pretended she didn't. That intrigued him.He had wanted her at once, had decided the moment he'd first stepped into the room. It was not her beauty that drew him. Not merely her beauty. He saw it, of course--how could one not? The fine bones of her face, the smoky blue eyes ... But it was the tension in her, a feral tension, part hunger, part fear. It was that which had quickened his blood, that--not her shame--which had made him return the next day with his witnesses and brandy. He had not expected to find such tension in the living room of Sam Eisenberg, the Button King of Montreal. He had met many girls already in the living rooms of Jewish Montreal. Nice girls and not-so-nice, intelligent girls, beautiful girls, wily, witty, hopeful girls, but this ... no, not this."Please," he said now, holding out a segment of the plum, the first exchange of their married life.He watched her--his new bride--as she took a bite of the fruit. Her eyes filled with tears."What?" he asked."Nothing." She shook her head, closed her eyes briefly. "It's a good plum, not too sweet."They had both fasted that day, in accordance with tradition. Should they have broken that fast on something else, Nathan wondered now, begun their marriage with a bite of egg, perhaps, symbolic of new life? A slice of melon, wholly sweet, without the tart edge of a plum?"It's many years since I tasted a plum like that," Lily said in her near-perfect English. She handed the remainder of the segment back to him, took a long drink of water, then held the glass against her cheek to cool her skin."It's warm," he said, and she agreed.She moved the glass to her other cheek, though it was no longer cool on her skin. Nathan handed her a napkin and she smiled her thanks as she wiped the sweat from her brow and upper lip. He had not seen her smile until then.xa0xa0LILY AZEROV KRAMER. She was not who she said she was.No one really is, I suppose, but Lily's deception was more literal than most. Her name before ... she'd left it there, in that beaten village where the first Lily had died, freeing, among other things, an identity card to replace the one she'd discarded, an identity that could propel a future if someone would just step into it.Someone would, of course. The village was in Poland, 1944. Nothing went unused.And here are some of the things that that someone acquired when she stole the identity of a girl she hadn't known at all in life: the name, first of all, Lily Azerov; the identity card; a pair of woollen socks; a notebook filled with dreams and other scribblings; a single frosted stone.She pulled the socks over the threadbare ones she was already wearing. The identity card and notebook she stuffed inside the waistband of her trousers, but not before memorizing the only item of practical worth in the notebook's pages: Sonya Nemetz, Rehov Hayarkon 7, Tel Aviv. The stone, which she knew to be a diamond, she slipped inside her body.It was only then that she hesitated, only as she was ready to leave that something as strong as her will to survive overtook her. She knew she should flee. Every instinct prodded her to leave that village at once and make her way back to theforest, where she could wait until it was safe to start moving again. And then to move, to join the mass of refugees flooding west in the wake of the liberating army, to fold herself into that mass and begin the life that might, in time, become her own. Move, she told herself, as she had so many times over the past three years, her instincts always keeping her a few inches beyond death's grasp. But something other than instinct rose in her that day. She hesitated. Her eye lingered. Was it the angle of the dead girl's body, limbs slightly askew as her younger sister's had once been in sleep? A fragment of the girl's dreams that had floated up and entered her as she quickly leafed through the notebook? The shadow of the rat skittering, the smell of its next meal luring it closer?She stayed. She placed her open hand on the smooth, cold brow, passed it over sightless eyes--greyish blue like her own--and brought down the lids. The eyes would be covered. That was the least and most she felt she could do. She could bring down the lids of the eyes and hold them for a moment. This she did for the girl whose future she was stealing. And then she fled.xa0xa0SOL KRAMER was among the guests at the wedding. The wedding that should have been his. Throughout the evening he could be seen toasting the bride and groom and lifting his brother high above his head in dancing more frenzied than joyous. His voice boomed louder than that of any other guest, his face shone with sweat." L'chaim, " he shouted, downing shot after shot of whisky. He already regretted his decision.That was the sort of man Sol Kramer was. If he ate brown bread for breakfast, he later wished he'd eaten white. Didn't merely wish, spent good time wondering how his day would have gone, how much better he would have felt--his gut, his entire being--had he only eaten white bread instead of brown.The bride looked good to him now. There was a boldness in her expression that he hadn't noticed before, that hadn't been there, he could swear, when she first stepped off the train. She'd looked bewildered then, glancing... --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The Imposter Bride
  • by Nancy Richler is an unforgettable novel about a mysterious mail-order bride in the wake of WWII, whose sudden decision ripples through time to deeply impact the daughter she never knew
  • In the wake of World War II, a young, enigmatic woman named Lily arrives in Montreal on her own, expecting to be married to a man she's never met. But, upon seeing her at the train station, Sol Kramer turns her down. Out of pity, his brother Nathan decides to marry her instead, and pity turns into a deep—and doomed—love. It is immediately clear that Lily is not who she claims to be. Her attempt to live out her life as Lily Azerov shatters when she disappears, leaving a new husband and a baby daughter with only a diary, a large uncut diamond – and a need to find the truth Who is Lily and what happened to the young woman whose identity she stole? Why has she left and where did she go? It's up to the daughter Lily abandoned to find the answers to these questions, as she searches for the mother she may never find or truly know.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(184)
★★★★
20%
(123)
★★★
15%
(92)
★★
7%
(43)
28%
(171)

Most Helpful Reviews

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"Our need to know where we come from.."

Ironically, Lily may be the only one in this book who does know exactly from where she came. But that place is a world of death so entire and so evil as to wipe her clean of her present. Lily is not her name. Lily is the name of a dead girl whose identity she took in the closing days of Nazi Germany as the Russians advance. So feral is this act, she can barely understand her own actions.

In the new world of Canada, her husband's family and friends are beset by the mysteries of death, flight, and silence. Will the children come to understand? "No one needs a peaceful heart, her mother answered. It's enough to have one that beats." In this closely shorn Jewish world, the Holocaust is another person never named. It looms at every breath in those who were intended to. Be exterminated. The woman from whom Lily had taken her name had come to be "vermin, dirt, and nothing" where once she had been a girl.

The daily struggle to remain in this "safe world" informs the actions of each character. In the loss of a world, how does one fit the loss of a parent? Can one build on shifting sands of terror or grief? This book takes these questions head on without ever resorting to the lurid nightmares of the age. The job is masterful and haunting in its success.
9 people found this helpful
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Love and Deceit

A young woman under duress of wartime, in a desperate bid to survive, makes a momentous, life changing decision, to steal another woman’s identity, which will forever affect her life and impact, those who love her. Though told primarily through two individuals, a cast of lively, dimensional characters reveals the story of love, deceit, and betrayal, as the figures disclose personal experiences and advance the plot that moves back and forth from Poland, Tel Aviv and Montreal. Set in the period of 1944 and ranging to 2005, the author maintains a sense of mystery throughout the intricately woven novel and employs both realistic dialogue and pictorial imagery.
3 people found this helpful
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A Good Read but Confusing at times.

The overall story was excellent. I did, however, think the first fifty pages or so really told us everything and it may have been better to have spread some of the details over the life of the book. I was looking for a surprise or revelation which never really happened. Character development was good but more could have been revealed toward the end about Lily leaving her baby. Confusion occurred with the change of voice in alternating chapters. It was difficult to discern who was speaking and in which time period. Still, it was a good effort and invoked much discussion at the Book Club to which I belong.
2 people found this helpful
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Not worth spending the money on

I chose only one star because the book dragged on and on. I didn't even want to finish reading it. It seemed like the author was looking for things to write about. No real back ground on any of the characters except Lily, and even then it took the whole book to finally understand why she did what she did. I would not bother reading this book again and I am not the type of reader to give a book only one shot at really grasping my attention. This book was so dull, I won't bother to read it again like I usually do with all the books I own. Will be deleting as soon as I learn how to.
2 people found this helpful
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A mysterious woman haunts this novel

As World War II was ending, Europe was full of refugees all trying to get somewhere, and everyone was looking for their missing family members. If you found a dead person with a good ID, you could take it and become that person and hope it would get you out of there - particularly to the Americas or Palestine. The mysterious woman who takes another’s ID and ends up in Canada is at the heart of the novel, though she disappears early leaving her new family wondering what happened to her, in particular her newborn daughter who longs to know her. It is beautifully written even though it sometimes slows down when the narration focuses on the young daughter growing up and trying to understand her family. But the characters are well developed, and some of them haunting, and that makes you push to resolve the tension. It gives a good insight into the Jewish refugees during years from 1945 up until 1970s. I think I read it in a day and a half because I wanted to know what happened. It is a quiet, easy to read little book, intriguing and worth the effort.
2 people found this helpful
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I so wanted to like it.

I'm not even going to finish this book, which saddens me. I so wanted to like it. I just can't.

It's hard to keep track of. I don't mind a book going back and forth in time, but this jumped right into the daughter and I had to almost write out the characters on paper to try and keep track.

I found the plot interesting on the book jacket. But once I started reading it... blah.
1 people found this helpful
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Left me hanging

this novel started out very promisingly, great potential, but left so many unanswered questions and confusing maybes! I would have likes to have the main plot line of the book addressed more...
So disappointing!
1 people found this helpful
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unfulfilling ending

Hated the ending..no real conclusion. In all a very sad novel. I felt bad for the protagonist all through the story.
1 people found this helpful
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Wouldn't recomend

I thought is was really confusing to read going back and forth from one character to another in each different chapter. Going forwards and backwards in time with each different chapter.
1 people found this helpful
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Great book

Love it! Couldn't stop reading it!
Loved the characters...wished it could go on and on!
You have to understand the immigrant way of life...and you will be right there with this book.
1 people found this helpful