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David Gillham

    David R. Gillham es un autor superventas del New York Times cuya transición de la escritura de guiones a la ficción se caracteriza por una profunda inmersión en los detalles históricos. Con experiencia en el negocio editorial, Gillham aporta una perspectiva única a sus narrativas. Su obra se distingue por una investigación meticulosa y una profunda exploración de la resiliencia humana y las complejidades morales durante momentos históricos cruciales. Descubre hábilmente facetas poco conocidas de eventos significativos, ofreciendo a los lectores un viaje íntimo y cautivador al pasado.

    David Gillham
    Shadows of Berlin
    City of women
    Annelies
    • Annelies

      • 448 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      Having survived the concentration camps but lost her mother and sister along the way, a sixteen-year-old Anne Frank reunites with her father, Pim, in newly liberated Amsterdam. But it's not as easy to fit the pieces of their life back together. Anne is adrift, haunted by the ghosts of the horrors they experienced, while Pim is fixated on returning to normalcy. Her beloved diary has been lost, and her dreams of becoming a writer seem distant and pointless now. As Anne struggles to overcome the brutality of memory and build a new life for herself, she grapples with heartbreak, grief, and ultimately the freedom of forgiveness. A story of trauma and redemption, Annelies honors Anne Frank's legacy as not only a symbol of hope and perseverance but also a complex young woman of great ambition and heart.

      Annelies
      3,8
    • City of women

      • 437 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      Hiding her clandestine activities behind the persona of a model Nazi soldier's wife at the height of World War II, Sigrid Schroeder dreams of her former Jewish lover and risks everything to hide a mother and two young children who she believes might be her lover's family.

      City of women
      3,8
    • Shadows of Berlin

      • 416 páginas
      • 15 horas de lectura

      "1955 in New York City, the city of progress. But in the Perlman residence, the past is as close as the present. Rachel Perlman, a child of Berlin and an artist bearing her mother's legacy, arrives in New York as part of the wave of Jewish Displaced persons who managed to survive the brutalities of the war. But despite her efforts, Rachel is unable to live the "normal" life of an American housewife, not until she can shake the ghosts of her past and the tremendous guilt that weighs down on her, her own "crime" of survival"--

      Shadows of Berlin
      3,7