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Maps and Shadows: A Novel
 
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Maps and Shadows: A Novel [Paperback]

Krysia Jopek
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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This stunning new novel is drawn from a little known chapter of World War II history - the brutal Soviet deportations of 1.5 million Polish civilians to forced labor camps in Siberia shortly after the Soviets occupied eastern Poland at the beginning of the war. Beautifully written, lyrical and poetic, Maps and Shadows explores the impacts of this shattering experience on a family from four points of view.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A Polish family's odyssey, Aug 6 2010
By 
DarcyO (St. Paul, MN) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Maps and Shadows: A Novel (Paperback)
"Maps and Shadows," a novel by Krysia Jopek, informs readers about an aspect of World War II that has rarely seen the light of day ' the Soviet deportation of almost 1.5 million Polish civilians to forced labor camps in Siberia. Jopek's family was among those deported.

Each chapter in Jopek's novel is narrated by one of four family members: Andrzej (father), Zofia (mother), Henryk (brother), and Helcia (sister).

The story begins with the family living a good life farming land the Polish government gave to Andrzej as a reward for his service in the Polish army during World War I. Then, in September 1939, Germany attacks Poland, easily overpowering its military and slaughtering civilians. While Germany invades from the west, Russia invades from the east.

At gunpoint, Russian soldiers force Jopek's family to be herded with other Poles onto trains to Siberia where Andrzej and Henryk are part of a work crew charged with felling trees to aid in Russia's war effort. The family is at the work camp for 18 months, enduring seasons of bitter cold and a paucity of food. They are freed only because Russia needs the Poles to help fight the Germans.

The family is then torn apart. Andrzej leaves the camp to enlist in the Polish army while the rest of the family flees to Uzbekistan, where Henryk joins the Young Soldiers Battalions. Zofia, Helcia and Jozef, the family's youngest son, continue on to Persia. Henryk's battalion is then assigned duty in Palestine, where fate brings him together with Andrzej for a few precious minutes.

Family members endure more displacement until the end of the war. Surviving against all odds, they reunite in England and finally make their home in Connecticut.

I had not heard of the Polish deportation prior to reading "Maps and Shadows" and find it amazing that this family and other families endured such a long journey of displacement and cruel and inhumane conditions. It all makes my current troubles seem so very insignificant. I appreciate the story being told from four different viewpoints, each shedding light on the family's inner turmoil and struggles. Author Kysia Jopek is also a poet and she intersperses poetry throughout the novel. The cover art is beautiful, adding more historical snippets to the story. I recommend this book to everyone, but especially to those of Polish descent and to readers of historical fiction.

My review is based on an advance copy from the publisher, Aquila Polonica Publishing. The publication date is November 2010.
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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Maps and Shadows, Mar 5 2011
By Rose City Reader - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Maps and Shadows: A Novel (Hardcover)
Maps and Shadows is Krysia Jopek's gripping novel based on the true-life travails of the author's father and his family during World War II. When the Russian army invaded Poland in 1939, it deported the family - and thousands of other Poles - to Siberia, where the father Andrzej and oldest son Hynryk logged the frozen forests while the mother Zofia, daughter Helcia, and toddler Jozef tried to keep the family from starving or freezing to death.

That was just the beginning. Shifting war-time allegiances resulted in release from Siberian slave labor, but separation and years of danger for the family. Forced to disperse, the family found itself swept from Siberia to Iran, Palestine, Italy, Uzbekistan, Africa, and England before finally settling in America.

This is an incredibly story about a seldom-considered aspect of WWII. It is quite short and reads more like non-fiction than a novel, but is still a compelling look at how war affects ordinary people.

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Lovely with entirely new info on relocation, Feb 10 2011
By Amy Henry - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Maps and Shadows: A Novel (Hardcover)
"I will urge Helcia to carve out the bloodspill with her pen"

This is the thought that Henryk carries in his mind as his family is being transported to Siberia from their rural home in Poland. Despite his youth, he can sense the turmoil that is uprooting them and the violence that will come, and can only hope that Helcia and her poetry will help make sense of it all. In Maps and Shadows, the novel released this month by Krysia Jopek, we see how this small family of five is transported on a journey far more distant than Siberia. The story is tightly based on the actual events in Poland and Russia, and beyond, from 1939 to 1955.

Unique in many ways, Jopek's novel combines a fast-paced narrative with poetry created by the character of Helcia. Her poems are placed throughout the chapters that explore the events through the separate viewpoints of the four oldest family members: Andrzej and Zofia (the parents), and Helcia and Henryk (the two oldest children). While each experiences their deportation differently, they are united in the hope that "some of us, at least, would survive."

While much of the events of the Polish being sent to Siberia were familiar, the aftermath was not. Stalin had "freed" the Poles to fight alongside Russia against Germany, in a move that pleased the US and Britain. However, this left thousands of Polish families stranded in Siberia with no means of return while the Polish men went off to fight. Thus, a displacement of these Poles, mostly women and small children to parts of Africa and the Middle East (22 convalescent camps with 19,000 Poles in Africa alone) was completely new to me. In some cases, the British helped the Poles to reunite with their families and also provided camps and education in the interim. Yet, when WWII ended, despite their the many Polish soldiers who supported the Allied efforts, "the Polish military were asked not to march in the celebratory Victory Parade in London...those in power in England and the United States did not want to alienate Stalin."

It was painful yet fascinating to read about the resilience of the people whose lives were uprooted so viciously and repeatedly. Only their family ties remained valuable to them as material items were so transient. They had to endure the frigid cold of Siberia and then relatively quickly try to acclimatize to the heat of Africa, and their health was forever compromised by the years of malnourishment and mental anguish. Kopek's tactic of letting each character explain their own interpretation is revealing as it shows the more personal suffering of each: a father tormented by his inability to protect his family, a mother desperate to see that her toddler have milk, and the two older children trying to put on a brave face to alleviate the worry of their parents as they themselves are forced to grow up far too soon.

Helcia's means of coping was her poetry. Words and phrases that reveal a mature realization of the larger implications of their suffering, in "Ice Garden":

This scrim of the inner room
The door of some other now, the book
Of will unknown. The book of how
And why drowned, encrusted under:

Sisyphus longed for a beginning, middle
And end to make it all bearable or seem
To have a context. The shortest distance

Between two points can be viole[n]t
Those wounds in the armpits
Wary at the lookout, ready to bow

And disregard history's narrative.

Notice the word play she creates with viole[n]t. The use of the brackets gives color to the meaning of violence: the violet of the inevitable bruising. In another poem she similarly writes [D]anger, to contrast the emotions felt "to live in a place not one's own." In fact, she refers to this homelessness and ties in the book's title with the reality of changing maps of the world:

Villains can change out of costume,
Spectators, easily cajoled
The cartographer obsequiously pleasant
To be paid on time.

In all, the novel was fascinating in style and content, as were the new aspects (to me) of post-Siberia rehabilitation. It's evident that Kopek did tremendous research (the bibliography is extensive) on the historical events, and the history itself is never dull. However, a few times I wished there might have been more narrative regarding the personal emotions of each of the four characters-did anyone ever really lose their temper? Break down in hysterics? Fight over petty things? Do the wrong thing? They seemed remarkably focused and devoted despite all that happened, almost a bit idealized. This isn't to say they weren't believable, I just think that the novel could have expanded to include more intimate and informal subjective details.

7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Maps and Shadows, Feb 16 2011
By Mary E. Young "JanaRose1" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Maps and Shadows: A Novel (Hardcover)
Maps and Shadows by Krysia Jopek

Maps and Shadows is the story of a Polish family deported to Siberia shortly after the beginning of World War II. Told in the point of view of four of the five family members, we journey with them as they lose their home, are separated and finally reunited.

Utilizing poetry, the author prefaces every chapter with beautifully written, yet haunting details. My heart broke for the family as they endured untold hardships and I rejoiced with them at their reunion. There is no doubt the individuals involved were courageous as they fought for their lives. The only criticism that I can offer is that I wanted to know more. More about their daily life, more about the harrowing journey they undertook. Overall, I highly recommend this book.

My review is based on an advance copy from the publisher, Aquila Polonica Publishing. The publication date is January, 2011
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 9 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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