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Occupied Garden

by Kristen den Hartog, Tracy Kasaboski
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Product Details

  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books
  • Publishing date: 28/04/2009
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 9780312561574
  • ISBN: 0312561571

Synopsis

The Occupied Garden is the powerful true story of a market gardener and his fiercely devout wife who were living a simple life in Holland when the Nazis invaded in 1940. During the subsequent occupation, Gerrit and Cor den Hartog struggled to keep their young family from starving and from being broken up in an era of intimidation, disappearances, and bombings -- until one devastating day when they found they were unable to protect their children from the war.

It wasn’t until long after Gerrit and Cor’s deaths that their granddaughters began to piece their story together; combing through Dutch archives, family lore, and a neighbor’s wartime diary, den Hartog and Kasaboski have lovingly and seamlessly recreated their grandparents’ wartime years. The result is an extraordinary tale of strife and hardship that contains moments of breathtaking courage -- a young mother’s bicycle journey of two hundred miles to find food for her children, a brother and sister’s desperate escape into unoccupied France, a pastor forced into hiding for encouraging acts of resistance -- with a cast of characters that includes the exiled Dutch royal family, Adolf Hitler, Franklin Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill. But it is Gerrit and Cor who take center stage in what is ultimately a deeply moving love story of a man and woman who drew strength from each other throughout those difficult years.

Poignant and unforgettable, The Occupied Garden is a testament to the resiliency of ordinary people living in an extraordinary time, written by two sisters determined to keep their family history alive.

Kristen den Hartog is the author of Water Wings, The Perpetual Ending, and Origin of Haloes. The Occupied Garden, her first work of nonfiction, was written with her older sister, Tracy Kasaboski, who was born in Rotterdam and first inspired den Hartog years ago with her own dramatic childhood stories.

The Occupied Garden is the powerful true story of a market gardener and his fiercely devout wife who were living a simple life in Holland when the Nazis invaded in 1940. During the subsequent occupation, Gerrit and Cor den Hartog struggled to keep their young family from starving and from being broken up in an era of intimidation, disappearances, and bombings?until one devastating day when they found they were unable to protect their children from the war.

It wasn’t until long after Gerrit and Cor’s deaths that their granddaughters began to piece their story together; combing through Dutch archives, family lore, and a neighbor’s wartime diary, den Hartog and Kasaboski have lovingly and seamlessly recreated their grandparents’ wartime years. The result is an extraordinary tale of strife and hardship that contains moments of breathtaking courage?a young mother’s bicycle journey of two hundred miles to find food for her children, a brother and sister’s desperate escape into unoccupied France, a pastor forced into hiding for encouraging acts of resistance?with a cast of characters that includes the exiled Dutch royal family, Adolf Hitler, Franklin Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill. But it is Gerrit and Cor who take center stage in what is ultimately a deeply moving love story of a man and woman who drew strength from each other throughout those difficult years. The Occupied Garden is a testament to the resiliency of ordinary people living in an extraordinary time, written by two sisters determined to keep their family history alive.

?A ?must-read’ for students of modern history and anyone who grew up in Europe during the Second World War.”?The Record

?The Occupied Garden, written by two sisters, offers a window to anyone who is interested in history, in this case the history of Holland during World War II. It covers Hitler’s rise to power, the invasion of Holland, the five-year Occupation that followed, the fate of the Jews and how the Dutch citizenry as a whole coped, especially the authors’ devoutly Christian grandparents. They would have been proud of this beautifully crafted, meticulously researched book.”?Johanna Reiss, Newbery Honor Book Award-winning author of The Upstairs Room and A Hidden Life: A Memoir of August 1969

?In this heroic gesture of recovery of family history, the authors not only recreate their grandparents’ world, but the horror of life in Nazi-occupied Holland. History is retold in relentless detail through the tragedies lived by people who become as real to us as our own family. The Occupied Garden is a triumphant refusal to accept the silence that erases the past.”?Rosemary Sullivan, author of Villa Air-Bel: World War II, Escape, and a House in Marseille

?A dramatic and moving account of the World War II occupation of the Netherlands and its subsequent liberation.”?Mark Zuehlke, author of Terrible Victory

?Truly gripping . . . This is intimate history: the writers recover not only the facts, but the tastes, smells, and lived experiences of events that today almost defy belief.”?Quill & Quire

?Personal, unsentimental, intensely compelling . . . these reconstructed lives just hum with authenticity.”?The Globe & Mail

?Moving and lyrical . . . If this book were less carefully crafted and not as well written, it would be mere family history. Instead, it’s also the history of a country?and of the people who lived in it during a terrible time.”?The Montreal Gazette
 
?The authors' alternating micro/macro viewpoint is thoroughly effective in portraying an entire country in the throes of war. Rationing, round-ups of Jews, arbitrary raids for available men and labor, bombings and random acts of violence by Nazi soldiers became the norm. The authors depict the infamous collaboration of the treasonous socialist Anton Mussert, as well as countless heroic moments by local people who harbored Jews and other refugees. Meanwhile, Wilhelmina sent heartening missives from exile, while her daughter, Juliana, who eventually took over the throne, and granddaughters were safely ensconced in Ottawa, Canada. A full-bodied, moving story of a battered populace that refused to be annihilated.”?Kirkus Reviews

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  • History worth learning from... deeply touching
    From Amazon

    Fascinating and wonderful. A very interesting and much needed perspective on life during WWII. This book is written by two sisters whose father and his siblings were born to Dutch parents just before, and during WWII in the Netherlands. It offers a deeply touching account of the family's life during this period of time, from the courtship of the author's grandparents, to their marriage, young family life, invasion of German forces and German occupation of the country, and their struggle to survive these horrifying years, to their eventual emigration to Canada a few years after the war. The reader is given a glimpse into the Dutch way of life during this period of time, their customs, family life, etc., as well as the history of Holland's WWII war experience, which was shocking to me as an American who knew little about the reality of living through this period of time in a country occupied by enemy forces. Much is also included about the monarchy of Holland during this period, which is fascinating. The Dutch held their then Queen Wilhelmina in high regard, even though she and her family fled to England and Canada during the war. She continued to be an inspiration to the Dutch people by communicating to them via BBC broadcasts which gave strength to the resistance within Holland and helped her people continue to press for liberation and not succumb to the harsh and often brutal German occupiers. This book shows the plight of the Dutch people who, as an unarmed citizenry, and as a weak military power, were totally vulnerable to the complete and swift takeover by German forces who literally dropped into their backyards, and took over their government, towns, businesses, and even their very homes! Dutch military was small, unprepared for war and did not have modern weaponry with which to protect its borders and citizens. For these mistakes, they paid dearly and many lives were lost and tragically affected, including those of many Dutch Jews. To me, one of the most glaring lessons of this book and of this period of history, is that a nation of people without access to and ownership of their own personal firearms to protect themselves, their families and their homes, will be victims of those who do. It is a fact of history that is undeniable, yet difficult to accept for those who feel that gun ownership is a bad or wrong thing. The German Occupation of Holland, and this little town particularly, worsened progressively until people were starving, suffering, and lived in absolute fear with no rights and few freedoms. Yet, they doggedly, as a people, resisted the oppression! Many of the Dutch people were part of an organized resistance in this long and horrific occupation. The resistance efforts were valiant, persistent and deeply moving, yet also caused much reprisal and revenge-seeking on the part of the Germans. There were many German sympathizers amongst the Dutch population, but by and large, the people did not not buckle to the Nazi's, but instead, passively resisted in many creative and effective ways. Further into the occupation, the resistance grew and became necessarily much more aggressive and violent once they had help from Allied Forces and were funnelled weapons and other supplies through airplane drops into their countryside. Not always knowing who was and was not a sympathizer often complicated daily life. There is some information about carrier pigeons and their role in the war, which I found fascinating. Eventually, with the help of Allied forces and after many years of increasing deprivations of basic goods and services, including food, the Dutch people were liberated. I admire and thank these two sisters for digging deeply into their own family history, as well as the history of Holland (and beyond) to bring together all the parts of this truly amazing story. It is very personal and very authentic. I was left stunned by the horrors of the war, as well as by the courage of these people to press on and make the best life they could for themselves and their growing family (they had their 5th child during the war; the 6th child was stillborn). I was also left wondering what happened to all of these children, greedy for more information about them, their lives and family history, after the family left Holland to start new lives in Canada.

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