The Silver Music Box

by Mina Baites

Silver Music Box (1)

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"A captivating cross-generational novel from German author Mina Baites about a Jewish family divided by World War II and an inheritance with the power to bring them back together. 1914. For Paul, with love. Jewish silversmith Johann Blumenthal engraved those words on his most exquisite creation, a singing filigree bird inside a tiny ornamented box. He crafted this treasure for his young son before leaving to fight in a terrible war to honor his beloved country--a country that would soon turn show more against his own family. A half century later, Londoner Lilian Morrison inherits the box after the death of her parents. Though the silver is tarnished and dented, this much-loved treasure is also a link to an astonishing past. With the keepsake is a letter from Lilian's mother, telling her daughter for the first time that she was adopted. Too young to remember, Lilian was rescued from a Germany in the grips of the Holocaust. Now only she can trace what happened to a family who scattered to the reaches of the world, a family forced to choose between their heritage and their dreams for the future"--Page [4] cover. show less

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16 reviews
"The Silver Music Box" was a beautiful, touching story spanning nearly 50 years. At the centre of the story was the silver music box, made in 1914 by Jewish silversmith, Johann Blumenthal, for his then four-year-old son, Paul, before the father joined up during the Great War.

The book was basically divided into three sections - Johann, Paul and Lilian - although Paul's life was given the greater focus. His struggle to protect his family from Hitler's clutches was not only terrifying, but heart-wrenching. The choices he had to make were ones no parent should ever have to face. I loved his story the most although both Julian's and Lillian's stories were still engrossing.

I liked Lilian and her determination to uncover the story behind the show more music box which unexpectedly came into her possession. In fact, I cried more in her story as she journeyed back to Germany, than I did in either Paul's or Juliann's section. Unfortunately, though, her story felt a bit rushed. A lot happened in a few pages and when I reached the end, I still wanted more.

"The Silver Music Box" was an engaging read with wonderful characters and a captivating storyline that took me on an emotional journey of joy and heartbreak from the first to the last page. A delightful read.
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Johann Blumenthal is a German silversmith, a talented silversmith who counts both Gentiles and his fellow Jews among his regular customers. Filled with love for a homeland that doesn’t always love him back, he enlists in the German Army to fight in World War I. Before he leaves, he crafts an exquisite silver music box for his young son, Paul, to remember him by. When Johann doesn’t return from the front, Paul and his mother, Lotte, are left to pick up the pieces with the help of Uncle Max, also a talented jeweler.

Fast-forward to the 1930s. Paul, now a young adult, is still captivated by his father’s music box. He’s also captivated by Clara, a doctor’s daughter who longs to be teacher, an occupation closed to those of her show more religion. So she determines to convert to Christianity in order to fulfill her dreams. Paul does the same in order to be with the love of his life, and for a while all is well. Of course, we know that things don’t stay that way. As life in Germany gets increasingly more difficult and dangerous for Jews, the Blumenthals looks for ways to protect themselves from the coming storm. Each of them — Lotte, Uncle Max, Aunt Martha, and Paul and Clara — seek different paths to safety.

I wasn’t in the best head space to read historical fiction about the run-up to the Holocaust, to be honest, but I was invested enough in the characters and story to keep reading, and I’m glad I did. The narrative takes a big leap in time from 1939 to 1963, content to fill in the tragic details in the form of a later descendant of the family searching for her roots. This lightened the tension, which I appreciated.

It’s a good story, perhaps a bit simplistically told, but captures well the growing fear of the German Jewish community as the Nazis grow in strength and power during the lead up to World War II.
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I absolutely loved the first 2/3 of this book. The story was beautiful and heartbreaking, and the writing was perfection. I was so invested in the family and their story, and went through so many emotions while I was reading. But all of that fell apart when it came to Lillian's portion of the story, the modern-day section. Everything began to feel rushed, as if Baites wasn't quite sure what she wanted to say and just wanted the book to be over. It didn't ruin the book for me, but it did lower my overall opinion of it some. It was disappointing to go from such a strong, emotional beginning to a lackluster ending. The second book in the series is set to be published, but I have no plans to read it, unfortunately.
Good plot and characters. Novel is moving; sad and yet hopeful.

But parts felt stilted, forced, watered-down and inauthentic Makes me wonder if novel is geared to readers, young or old, with little knowledge of the Holocaust.
3.5 When choosing to read a book about the Nazis and the Holocaust, one knows they are opening themselves up to some of the darkest days in history. Yet, if the word gentle, could be applied to any book that touches on this subject, this is the one. The focus is on one Jewish family, the Blumenthals. The men Jewelers by trade, and the events that touch them are unveiled gently, with much of the focus on the Germans who were their friends, and others who went out of their way, at great risk to themselves, to help them. That is not to say they don't have their share of suffering and losses, just that is was different to read a book where this happened.

The silver music box, is the connector between the generations, both symbol of love and show more a means of identity.i am not going to rehash the plot, the summary for this book, is one of the better ones. Gives enough away without saying too much. The first two-thirds of the book covers the family in Germany and starts in the 1930s, when they begin to realize where the future, for Jews, may be heading. This part is strongly written, well done and the focus is again on various members of this family. I liked this part very much, which made my disappointment with the last part vividly stand out.

The last part takes us to the 1960's, and a young woman has had some surprising news. This will send her on a guest to find those forgotten or scattered after the war. Some of the revelations at this point lack the shock value, they would have had if this story had been told in a linear fashion. It is also a little over written ,and one line in particular I felt was cheesy, didn't fit at all. Still all in all this is a good story, with a different bent than many of these years. This is the box a mother can read with her young teen to introduce the Holocaust, much to discuss and not horribly graphic.

ARC from Netgalley.
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½
So good!

I could not put this story down. While it is not long, I read this book in under 12 hours. What a compelling, heart breaking story told with emotions leaping off the page. It is a unique look at the Holocaust and the struggles of Jews in Germany. Highly recommended!
This gave a really personal view of what happened to people during WWII. Especially the impact of children and their families when they had to split up. The narrative showed love, sorrow and perseverance in the face of adversity.

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7 Works 270 Members

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Layland, Alison (Translator)

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PT2702 .A375 .S5513Language and LiteratureGerman, Dutch and Scandinavian literaturesGerman literature2001-
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137,779
Reviews
14
Rating
(4.04)
Languages
English, German
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
2