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The Winter Guest #1

The Winter Guest

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A stirring novel of first love in a time of war and the unbearable choices that could tear sisters apart, from the celebrated author of The Kommandant's Girl.

Life is a constant struggle for the eighteen-year-old Nowak twins as they raise their three younger siblings in rural Poland under the shadow of the Nazi occupation. The constant threat of arrest has made everyone in their village a spy, and turned neighbor against neighbor. Though rugged, independent Helena and pretty, gentle Ruth couldn't be more different, they are staunch allies in protecting their family from the threats the war brings closer to their doorstep with each passing day.

Then Helena discovers an American paratrooper stranded outside their small mountain village, wounded, but alive. Risking the safety of herself and her family, she hides Sam—a Jew—but Helena's concern for the American grows into something much deeper. Defying the perils that render a future together all but impossible, Sam and Helena make plans for the family to flee. But Helena is forced to contend with the jealousy her choices have sparked in Ruth, culminating in a singular act of betrayal that endangers them all—and setting in motion a chain of events that will reverberate across continents and decades.

352 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2014

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12541 people want to read

About the author

Pam Jenoff

30 books6,630 followers
Pam is the author of several novels, including her most recent The Woman With The Blue Star, as well as The Lost Girls of Paris and The Orphan's Tale, both instant New York Times bestsellers. Pam was born in Maryland and raised outside Philadelphia. She attended George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and Cambridge University in England. Upon receiving her master’s in history from Cambridge, she accepted an appointment as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Army. The position provided a unique opportunity to witness and participate in operations at the most senior levels of government, including helping the families of the Pan Am Flight 103 victims secure their memorial at Arlington National Cemetery, observing recovery efforts at the site of the Oklahoma City bombing and attending ceremonies to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of World War II at sites such as Bastogne and Corregidor.

Following her work at the Pentagon, Jenoff moved to the State Department. In 1996 she was assigned to the U.S. Consulate in Krakow, Poland. It was during this period that Pam developed her expertise in Polish-Jewish relations and the Holocaust. Working on matters such as preservation of Auschwitz and the restitution of Jewish property in Poland, Jenoff developed close relations with the surviving Jewish community.

Having left the Foreign Service in 1998 to attend law school at the University of Pennsylvania, Jenoff practiced law at a large firm and in-house for several years. She now teaches law school at Rutgers.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 907 reviews
Profile Image for Tara Chevrestt.
Author 25 books313 followers
September 11, 2014
I rarely waste too much time on books I don't like, but I was curious enough about what was going to happen to Sam and Helena in this book, that even though I disliked it already at 17%, I kept chugging along, only to come to regret that decision.

Having read and enjoyed for the most part Ms. Jenoff's work before (see my review of the Ambassador's Daughter), I am surprised to be saying this, but I hated this book. Been a while since I disliked a book as much as I dislike this one, especially one I read all the way through. That being said, however, the fact I feel so strongly about it and what the characters do within its pages is actually a point in the author's favor. At least it evoked strong emotion in me.

I enjoyed Helena and her romance with Sam and this being a Harlequin book, I expected a nice romance, but something happens in the story that makes what starts beautiful turn into ugliness. I couldn't stomach it. There's a lot of things I can handle, but this was a sick twist I seriously disliked to the point it ruined the story for me. It was also utterly ridiculous. What woman is overtaken by lust at the sight of a man she doesn't know, who's hairy, stinky, and starved?

That being said, there's a war on, all right. It's Poland and the Germans/Nazis have taken over, the Jewish community is disbanded, trains are roaring past full of Jews on their way to the camps, there's very little food to be had, but in the middle of all this trauma and war, the book focuses on a stupid sibling rivalry and loads of resentment between two twin sisters. Sadly, that's where all the emotion of the story is: resentment between sisters. Helena resents that Ruth has been coddled, favored, considered prettier, etc. Ruth resents Helena having a romance while she's stuck at home raising three kids due their being orphaned. And it goes on and on.

I loathed, with an extreme passion, Ruth. What a horrid woman. I wanted to gouge her eyes out and sadly, she's half the story.

There are bad things happening and Helena witnesses them, yet there's so little emotion here that even things that should have been frightening just fell flat. Example: the hospital. You hide under the bed while a nurse is raped on top of it and it warrants a mere three or four sentences? Then it's never mentioned again? I would think the trauma of that would evoke a lot more reaction. As I said above, there's a lot more emotion when it comes to the sisters hating on each other or blabbering about their family history than actual traumatic events.

And Helena just traipses around all this danger unscathed. That was also a killer. I was like, seriously? Nobody stops to check your papers? You just waltz around the Jewish hospital, the ghetto, the blackmarket, and nothing happens? It's WWII, lady...and you're occupied.

Full review and slight spoiler: http://wwwbookbabe.blogspot.com/2014/...
Profile Image for Deacon Tom F. (Recovering from a big heart attack).
2,530 reviews222 followers
January 17, 2022
Without a doubt I thoroughly enjoyed it. I am very much an historical fiction aficionado but this one really took the cake It was so well written and incredibly well timed—I loved it.

The storyline was gentle but at times very very harsh. In the end it was a love story, with the final chapter being superior
Profile Image for Jewel.
578 reviews365 followers
July 31, 2014
The book is written in a way that doesn't make it exciting or interesting, thing are just happening, slowly.

Helena and Ruth are twin sister from a small village in Poland during the WWII. With their mother hospitalized they had to start taking care of their three younger siblings. The war is getting closer and supplies are scarce. Things are very dangerous and people are disappearing everyday. As the sisters struggle in their daily life, the rivalry and jealousy between them affects some of their actions and might prove dangerous after Helena saves an American solider and tries to help him.

One would think that with a storyline like this it would be a really emotional and interesting read. Unfortunately it was flat and emotionless. The conversation were dull and the actions were slow. Some of the events that happens deserved a better reaction from me but I just didn't feel. I couldn't feel the romance or any sympathy towards the characters, except maybe for Helena at times.

An investigation in 2013 starts the book and then the story unfolds as one of the characters remembers the events, but at the end I didn't really see the significance of this investigation and why it was a big deal. There were other things that could have been investigated that might have had a more emotional response from the readers.

The accurate history and the events that unfolds makes this book gloomy and the writing makes it somber.

This review is for a free copy courtesy of Harlequin via NetGalley.

Profile Image for Paula.
545 reviews7 followers
August 12, 2014
Set during the Nazi occupation of Poland during WWII, eighteen-year-old Nowak twins, Helena and Ruth, are living in a small village in Poland. They are struggling to keep their family, which includes their three younger siblings, together. We get to know both sisters throughout the story and see how each one faces important decisions and challenges that are put before them, choices which will eventually draw them apart. An interesting WWII setting and a bit of romance too, make this a very enjoyable read.
Profile Image for Kellie O'Connor.
385 reviews188 followers
January 10, 2023
This is an amazing story of Helena and Ruth, 18 year old identical twins raising their three younger siblings in a small town in Poland during WW2. They are identical in looks but they are very different from each other in their behaviors. Ruth is more domestic and lady like, Helena is definitely more adventurous and used to the outdoors. As they grow older, they begin to have secrets from each other.

When Helena finds an injured American soldier who parachuted out of his plane, the story of struggling to survive really begins and the sisters have to learn to work together or let their secrets get in their way of survival. ( Helena keeps the American soldier a secret for a long time.) Of course food is being rationed, black markets spring up and medicine is in short supply. The Germans are everywhere and sadly, the Jewish people are sent to concentration camps. The world as Helena and Ruth knew it is gone. Will they find a way of surviving and keeping themselves alive as well as their younger siblings and the American soldier? Hard choices have to be made by everyone... will they make the right decisions in time? Only by reading this fascinating story will you find the answers!

It's a fast paced, emotionally moving book that will keep you turning the pages and one that will stay with you for a long time. Be sure to read the Acknowledgements in the back of the book to learn about the importance of identification of bones as well as how Pam Jenoff got her idea for this book! This is my first book by her, but I already have two more of her books ready to read soon!! I can't wait... hopefully they will be as good as this one!! It's an easy 5 shiny stars rating from me and I very highly recommend this emotionally moving book to all!! Happy Reading, everyone!! 😊📖🍀💜🕊️
Profile Image for Caz.
3,213 reviews1,160 followers
September 7, 2016
Set in 1940, The Winter Guest is a hauntingly evocative tale of two sisters – twins – who are struggling to care for their three younger siblings in rural Poland at a time of great upheaval and uncertainty. Their father is dead, and their mother is ill in a hospital in Krakow, and the two girls, Helena and Ruth, are trying to fulfil their mother’s last wish by keeping the family together and keeping them all safe. But with severe food shortages, and the ever-present threat of the encroaching German army, life is tough and getting tougher.

While identical in outward appearance, Helena and Ruth are actually as different as chalk and cheese. Helena is a bit of a tomboy and was her father’s companion of choice when it came to hunting expeditions and performing tasks around the home. Ruth has always been regarded as the prettier of the two and is the one imbued with the more traditionally feminine traits – so the pair has fallen into the roles of male and female parents, with Ruth responsible for running the home and the bulk of the child-rearing, while Helena chops wood, fixes things, and hunts for food.

The girls are close – as twins often are – but there are lots of resentments bubbling under the surface, too. Helena resents Ruth for being their mother’s favourite, while Ruth envies the fact that Helena gets to escape their small dwelling every so often. It’s not that Ruth particularly wants to be out trudging through the forest on the weekly visit to the hospital, or out in the cold chopping firewood, it’s more that she is jealous of that little bit of freedom and time to herself that Helena has at those times.

The delicate balance between the sisters is further upset when, on her way back from visiting her mother, Helena finds a wounded American soldier in the woods, and decides to help him, without telling her sister and knowing that doing so could endanger her family. The young man is called Sam Rosen, and is one of a small group of American soldiers who were parachuted into Poland in order to make contact with the Polish partisans (which explains the presence of an American soldier in Poland in 1940, more than a year before the US entered the war).

Helena takes Sam to a small, dilapidated chapel and tends to his injuries as best she can. Over the next few weeks, she visits him as often as she is able, taking what small quantities of food she can spare, and they develop a fondness for each other. The development of their relationship more or less takes place off screen, as one chapter ends with Helena’s feeling an attraction for Sam, and the next begins a few weeks later, during the course of which they have their first kiss. I recognise that this is a work of Historical Fiction rather than an Historical Romance – but the romance is actually quite important as the catalyst for certain decisions and actions that occur in the latter stages of the novel, which makes me think that it should have been developed a little more strongly in order to give greater weight to those events.

Fortunately, however, by the time Helena and Sam have decided they’re in love, I’d been drawn in by the dynamic between Helena and Ruth, Helena’s growing conviction that trying to stay out of things isn’t going to save them, and the potential impact of the discovery she makes concerning her mother – so I was able to live with the lack of relationship development and immerse myself in the rest of the story.

I found the book a bit slow to start and it took me a while to get into it, but there’s no denying Ms Jenoff’s skill in setting the scene for her story. The undercurrents running between the sisters are quickly established and her descriptions of the deprivations felt throughout rural Poland and the suspicion and fear that are spreading throughout the community are very strongly realised. The way that Helena comes to the gradual understanding of the truth of what is happening to the Jewish population is excellently handled, and the pervading atmosphere of paranoia jumps off the page.

The sibling rivalry between Ruth and Helena is very well-written, and actually feels quite true-to-life in that sometimes, their petty jealousies eclipse the bigger picture for both of them. When Helena has to tell Ruth about Sam, Ruth immediately thinks that Helena is planning to leave with him, and in her determination not to let that happen, sets in motion a train of events that will have tragic consequences.

While the story is engrossing, there are some aspects of it that are not particularly successful. I’ve already mentioned that the romance isn’t very convincing, and neither is the way that Helena is able to so easily contact the Resistance in Krakow, to ask for help in getting Sam to safety. She’s been told that the churches are generally used as meeting places, so she goes to one and asks a random man – and voilà – the resistance leader no less, makes contact with her. The story is book-ended by two short sections set in modern-day New York, with the Epilogue very effectively tying up the loose ends left in the final chapter – but I couldn’t help but feel a little cheated, because the book “proper” ends on a cliffhanger, and we don’t get to see it resolved, or get much information as to what happened in the sixty-odd years between the two chapters.

Fortunately, those weaknesses didn’t spoil my overall enjoyment of the novel, which is intelligently written and, after the first few chapters, well-paced. Ms. Jenoff doesn’t sugar-coat the privations suffered by the family or the horror of what is happening to both the Jews and the Poles under the Nazi occupation, but the descriptions are subtle rather than graphic, and are often the more effective for being understated. After a slow start, The Winter Guest turned into a gripping read which packed quite an emotional punch, especially in the later part of the story, and I’d certainly recommend it to anyone looking for an absorbing and informative piece of World War Two-set historical fiction.
Profile Image for Jess.
381 reviews376 followers
July 10, 2019
Riddikulus. Despite the assurances and serious name-dropping in the bio and acknowledgments that Jenoff received a history master’s at Cambridge, worked in the Pentagon, and witnessed the most senior levels of government, The Winter Guest is astonishingly inaccurate, far-fetched, fanciful and implausible.

I'm frequently disgusted by the contemporary novels that romanticize or sentimentalize this time period. Cloying romances masquerading as gritty historical fiction where the war functions primarily as a dramatic backdrop are the usual culprits. Travesties such as The Nightingale are prime examples that perpetuate this attitude which I find, quite frankly, disrespectful (see my thoughts here). Unsurprisingly, The Winter Guest is no exception; it is little more than your saccharine and hackneyed run of the mill WW2 romance. It offers no unique or compelling insight into an already well-trodden time period.

For someone with a master’s in history, Jenoff appears to have little understanding of the linear events of WW2. The plot is fundamentally flimsy, relying extensively on American involvement… in 1940. America didn’t touch Europe with a stick until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour at the fag-end of 1941. So why, then, would America have any incentive to interfere in distant European affairs and risk lives if the country itself weren’t affected? Besides from its being intrinsically implausible, the plot is a meandering and predictable slog that never achieves anything. I skim-read from about twenty five percent, and, as far as I can tell, missed very little. It relies on convenient plot ‘twists’, including my favourite: the classic Measure for Measure bed trick. This is why twins get those ‘fantasy’ jokes. This is why people make fun of chick lit.

Perhaps a lukewarm or even an aimless plot can be excused if were to be redeemed by another facet of the novel. This, however, was not the case. The writing is hardly refined artistry; in fact, it’s amateur.

There was something dangerous about him. There was something enigmatic about him that made her want to follow him into his strange unknown world.

Yes, that is an actual line. Jenoff’s prose is dependent on tedious and uninspiring exposition which gives the reader very little credit. The characterization is equally as poor; the sister dynamic (supposedly integral) is unconvincing and lacks rigor. I’d go so far as to say that Helena and Ruth were virtually indistinguishable. The relationships (and narrative overall) are startlingly devoid of emotion, with the notable exception of sisterly angst and cattiness. Jenoff neglects to add depth to any one of the topics she touches upon, failing to explore the complexity of rape, assault and sacrifice. The novel as a whole lacks gravity; nothing was ever at stake. Helena is sucked into the resistance, untried, in the most stupidly simplistic manner, and earns reprisal from rules with her sex appeal. Does this give her much agency, really? What about the important and more admirable qualities real life resistance fighters would have possessed, like cunning, intelligence or reasoning? She also frequents the Jewish quarter, ghetto and hospital unquestioned and without much incident. Not only is this entirely unrealistic, it belies the tone of the subject matter and means that the novel is certainly never emotionally or psychologically compelling.

I wasn’t expecting much and that’s exactly what I got: not much. ‘A family torn apart by war’ runs the synopsis. No, bitchy sisters argue over only available male and agonize over their dysfunctional family, torn apart by daddy issues.
Profile Image for Nicole Overmoyer.
550 reviews31 followers
August 21, 2014
I just can't with this book. I wanted to love it, I really did. Historical fiction is my thing and I'll try anything centered around World War II. I also received a copy of this through the Goodreads FirstReads program so I really wanted to be able to like it and leave a review saying so.

But I can't.

I can say that the story could have been absolutely amazing.

But it wasn't.

To begin with, the first chapter (after the introduction) sets the story in 1940. And then Sam Rosen shows up. Sam is a downed American airman in the Polish countryside.

The trouble with this is simple... America was not involved in World War II in 1940. Pearl Harbor happened on December 7, 1941 and then, only then, did Americans start flying over Europe. And Sam's story just snowballs out of control from there. He's an airman, Jewish, trying to contact partisans in Czechoslovakia, an enlisted man because he killed his father with a baseball bat, and all important to the war effort.

No. It's just too much.

I can't help wondering why Jenoff didn't make him an RAF airman and British, because they were involved in the war in 1940, instead. That would have gone a long way to getting the story off on the right foot for me.

I love history, I love facts. There were too many inconsistencies in historical fact for me. And it didn't help that Jenoff says in the acknowledgments that she worked at the Pentagon. I can't help but think someone at the Pentagon should a) know America's role in the war in 1940 and/or b) do better research.

The heart of the story, though, is Helena Nowak. And even her story is too hard to believe.

She's a daddy's girl who discovers, completely by accident, that she's got more in common with the Jewish Sam than she imagines. And I don't mean just falling in love with him. She fights with her twin sister, Ruth, a lot. Mostly about Sam. Fighting between sisters is believable, absolutely.

But I gave up with a hundred pages left in the story when Ruth, ever the possibly jealous shrew, took advantage of the darkness in Sam's hiding place and pretended to be Helena. It was too much. I tried reading the epilogue then, to get myself interested in the hundred remaining pages, but that only made it worse.

Were it not for this last head smacking moment, I'd give the book two stars.
Profile Image for Mary Kubica.
Author 24 books25.8k followers
December 8, 2014
Such a beautiful story of two sisters in World War II Poland. Jenoff is a wonderful storyteller, painting vivid images of life during the war. I learned quite a bit from THE WINTER GUEST and was touched time and again by the plight of the characters and the atrocities of war. Can't wait to read many, many more novels by Pam Jenoff.
Profile Image for C.W..
Author 17 books2,488 followers
September 17, 2014
Pam Jenoff has built a strong reputation writing about World War II and its lingering effects on ordinary people. In THE WINTER GUEST, she returns to Poland in 1940, site of her bestseller, The Kommandant’s Girl, to tell the story of Helena and Ruth, twin sisters living with their younger siblings in a village near Krakow, as the Nazis seize control.

The setting is key. Isolated from the rest of the country, like many rural Poles, Helena and Ruth struggle for daily survival among food rationing, suspicious neighbors, and the looming threat of winter. Their mother lies dying in a Jewish hospital in Krakow — the only place that can care for her — and stalwart Helena makes the long trek to the city every week to visit her, while introspective Ruth stays behind to tend the children, nursing a recent heartbreak. Then Helena stumbles upon an injured American paratrooper in the woods and decides to hide him; this act of mercy sets the stage for a passionate affair and betrayal that changes the sisters’ lives forever.

Ms. Jenoff excels in her vivid portrayal of the deprivation and corrosive fear that afflicted those dwelling under Nazi aggression. The sisters are inherently different, convincingly drawn within the paranoia and seething anti-Semitism coursing under their village’s façade. Their claustrophobic insularity, however, can dampen the narrative at moments - until Helena awakens to possibilities beyond those she has known during her increasingly disquieting trips to Krakow. Her discovery of a secret and the tragic events that ensue shatter her confidence; as she fights to find meaning in a world descending into darkness, The Winter Guest proves compulsive in its race to a desperate denouement. The finale offers a moving testament to the suffering that so many endured during the war.

This review first appeared in the Historical Novels Review, August 2014.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
602 reviews17 followers
January 13, 2015
I received this book for free through Goodreads First Reads.

WOW!!! I literally just finished this book and have tears in my eyes!!! This is one of the best love stories I have EVER read! And I have read thousands of love stories!!! This is such an unique and beautifully written story! If you love and enjoy a good love war story this is the book for you! Its based in Poland during WWII and it gives you some idea as to what these families went through, and its absolutely heart wrenching! The bravery of these people! Your heart goes into this book! The story of a forbidden love during WWII makes this book a page turner and the sister who betrays that love.... (oh I hate her) makes this book unable to be put down! This is a story of two sisters who are left to take care of their younger siblings in a time of despair and destruction and hatred and how one sister is lucky enough to find true love in such a trying time. One act of jealousy changes everything this family ever stood for... love and loyalty! The ending is simply stunning and I love how everything comes full circle. One of my all time favorite books! READ THIS BOOK!

I am as we speak looking for more Pam Jenoff books to read! I absolutely LOVED this WWII Historical Fiction novel! And look forward to reading more Pam Jenoff! Thank you Pam Jenoff for giving me such a amazing story to read! I can't wait to read more! Ekk!! =)
Profile Image for Carole.
379 reviews38 followers
November 21, 2022
Twin sisters, Ruth and Helena are living in Poland during the German invasion of WWII. They live in a remote area, and they are taking care of their little siblings. Helena finds an American soldier injured in the woods and hides him in a small, abandoned chapel. Winter arrives, and survival on rations and in the cold is extremely difficult. The girls find out their family history isn't what they thought, and it increases the danger they are in.
I won't give away any of the plot, but this was a great story, and got even better as it went along.
I have read other books by Pam Jenoff, and they are all good.
Profile Image for Laura.
825 reviews118 followers
July 8, 2016
Eighteen year old twins Helena and Ruth are struggling. It is Poland, 1940. With their father dead and their mother institutionalised, they are left to jointly raise their younger siblings while desperately trying to ward off starvation and the harsh winters. When Helena comes across a young soldier stranded when his plane crashes, they begin a clandestine relationship and she gradually falls in love with the handsome American.

I loved this story because it features two equally strong women as its protagonists, something less often seen in historical fiction than I would like. Jenoff is an excellent historical storyteller; her novels truly capture the hardships faced by mostly ordinary people in wartime. In particular, the overwhelming hunger comes across throughout her writing in this book. Reading this story made me consider the plight of the Polish community during the war, a country sometimes forgotten in history.

Initially I was a little disappointed by the books ending because it seemed quite abrupt, but the epilogue solved this issue for me. It's a very emotionally charged novel, and one I would not hesitate to recommend for fans of world war two sagas. Jenoff has done well to maintain the high standard set by her debut novel.
Profile Image for Joanna.
455 reviews59 followers
June 28, 2014
Many thanks to Good Reads for letting me win the book that I really wanted to read. Beautiful written story that takes you to Poland during World War II.Family broken up by death,barely surviving 5 children during terrible holocaust times. We must never forget what happened to people during this terrible war, and fiction like this helps to remind us.Very sad at times....Characters are like real people...There is a love story in it....Pam Jenoff books never disappoints and I always highly recommend them. Super historical fiction to read.I will always be your fan Pam,can`t wait for the next one!
Profile Image for Natasa.
1,401 reviews5 followers
November 7, 2021
The story was forced rather than flowing naturally, the love story rushed and predictable, and then all but abandoned and wrapped up in the epilogue like an afterthought.
Profile Image for Joan.
443 reviews17 followers
May 29, 2024
A good story set in Poland in 1940. It dragged a bit in a few parts but overall another good look into history.
Profile Image for JackieBeau in a bad reading slump.
37 reviews9 followers
July 18, 2022
I loved this book ! I like the time period it took place ! I absolutely had to finish the book tonight. The last 4 chapters were exciting! I could not put it down ! I was surprised at the ending and sad too . I was kinda teary . At the beginning I didn’t like Ruth but came to like her towards the end of the book !
Profile Image for Elaine.
604 reviews241 followers
October 7, 2014
This should have been a really wonderful read but it fell just a little bit flat for me.

Ruth and Helena are 18 years old, twin sisters, who have taken on the role of caring for their homestead and younger siblings in rural occupied Poland.

Their lives are harsh. Due to the shortages of food they are constantly starving, they struggle to clothe themselves and their growing siblings. Ruth is the homemaker, caring for everyone whilst Helena has taken on a more “hunter gatherer” role, providing for everyone. The sisters have quite a complex relationship. They love each other, yes, but they are not quite friends, and there is an undercurrent of resentment throughout the book from Ruth.

Their lives and relationship are about to be altered forever when Helena stumbles upon a downed American airman, Sam, in the forest, who she takes to shelter and secrety tries to help with food and clothing. Gradually they build up a relationship and the story becomes one of a first, deep love which must be kept hidden for their own safety. My main gripe about the book is that Sam is an American airman, serving for the US armed forces. But, the book is set in December 1940, a full year before the bombing of Pearl Harbor which brought the Americans into the war. It could not have happened! He would not have been there!

The story develops as Helena tries to help him recover and set him on the tracks to complete his mission of contacting the Polish underground resistance. Up until now, their little part of Poland has been relatively untouched by the occupation, but with the German army getting closer and the desperate need to keep Sam’s existence secret, Helena will have to make decisions. Should the family risk staying and seeing out the war, or should they leave to somewhere safer? They may not even survive the journey itself. And what would her sister’s reaction be when she finds out about Sam?

It did make good, interesting reading and I wanted to see what happened, although at times it was a little unbelievable. For example, getting in touch with the resistance itself was a little too easy to be believed. There are events that happen after the end of the main story which are only revealed in the epilogue, almost as one liners really. Although these events wrap up the story well, they just did not have that ring of believability to them.

If you can get past that basic 1940/American involvement thing, then it is not a bad story, if a little far fetched in places, but it did colour the whole read for me and left me reading the rest of the book with a pinch of salt. Many thanks to the publishers for the advance review copy.

Profile Image for Sue Seligman.
542 reviews81 followers
September 16, 2014
This is an engrossing Holocaust novel set in the rural part of Poland during the Nazi Occupation. Eighteen year old twins Ruth and Helena are raising their younger brother and two younger sisters after the death of their father and the hospitalization of their mother. In fact their mother is in a Jewish hospital in Krakow, and Helena frequently walks there to check up on her as well as foraging for food and supplies at the markets. Life is bleak and hard under the Nazi rule, and neighbors are suspicious and hostile towards one another. Food is scarce, and the future is grim. One day, Helena discovers an American soldier whose plane has been shot down, and she hides him in a deserted chapel. Sam is Jewish, and as she brings him food and helps him recover from his wounds, they slowly fall in love. He even trusts her with helping him contact the partisans. But she has kept him a secret from her twin sister, and when she is finally forced to reveal the truth, it creates a division between them that will have drastic repercussions.
This is a vivid and realistic depiction of how the Nazi regime effected not only the Jewish of Eastern Europe, but also the Christians of rural Poland. The characters are empathetic, and the plot evolves quickly. The descriptions of the living conditions, the sights, smells, and events are so realistic that the readers' senses are fully engaged. This is an extremely riveting book.
Profile Image for Michele.
24 reviews
June 23, 2014
I won this book from the Goodreads giveaway and even though we have the same last name we are not related(although I wouldn't mind as she is an excellent author) I read the first 7chapters the day the book arrived because I couldn't put it down! I don't know why but I have always been fascinated by WWII stories and the perseverance of the Jewish people and others who were persecuted by the Nazis. The fact that the story was set in Poland and I am of Polish descent added to my interest especially the occasional Polish words that I 've learned from my mother and classes I've taken.I recommend this book to history buffs,romantics ,and anyone who wants a good read
Profile Image for Shirley McAllister.
1,081 reviews151 followers
February 19, 2019
A Family together

Twin girls struggle to raise their siblings during the German occupation of Poland after their mother is sent to the sanitarium and their father dies. Life becomes complicated when Helena discovers an American soldier and falls in love with him. It becomes more complicated when the find out their mother is part Jewish and they are all in danger. What happens next is their story. It is a great book and definitely a page turner.
Profile Image for Allyssa Graham.
133 reviews11 followers
July 11, 2021
Awful, terrible book. The plot didn't make sense, things went from bad to worse at the end, a love triangle that isn't really a love triangle, and an epilogue that's incredibly forced. Do not recommend ever.
Profile Image for Krista (Mrs K Book Reviews).
1,135 reviews89 followers
January 3, 2023
I was searching for a historical fiction ebook I could borrow from my local library and came across The Winter Guest and since I have read a couple of other books by Pam Jenoff I borrowed it and added it to my Kobo e reader. I was not disappointed.

Ms. Jenoff has written another wonderful, gut wrenching WWI​I story. The beginning pages grabbed me immediately, and the tension and interest continues throughout the book.

If you haven't read any of Pam Jenoff's books, you must read this one.
Profile Image for Ruth.
990 reviews55 followers
November 4, 2022
A friend lent this book to me. I do not seek out books that are about one of the wars and I was leery about this one. I read the description on the flap, however, and was truly intrigued.

Set in Poland, the Germans have arrived and everyone. lives with the constant threat of being arrested. They watch as the section where the Jews live becomes a ghost town. When Helena discovers an American soldier in the woods, she hides him, thereby risking the safety of not only herself but her entire family.

The horror of what happened to people during the war came alive in Jenoff's writing. People with very little food to fill their bellies and those of the children, searching for kindling to keep themselves warm and trying to keep a low profile to avoid any suspicion of wrong doing.

A powerful story that grips your heart and starts to tear out piece after piece.
Profile Image for Erin.
3,797 reviews468 followers
January 4, 2015
I do love a good Pam Jenoff story and "The Winter Guest" is no exception. I have previously read The Ambassador's Daughter (The Kommandant's Girl, #0.5) by Pam Jenoff , The Things We Cherished by Pam Jenoff and The Kommandant's Girl (The Kommandant's Girl, #1) by Pam Jenoff . Jenoff really knows how to keep her pulse on the events of the world wars especially WW2. The setting is Poland in the Second World War and concentrates on twin sisters, Helena and Ruth. The girls are trying to keep care of their two little sisters and one brother, while also tending to a sick mother who has recently been hospitalized. One day, Helena is in the nearby forest when she meets an American soldier who has become trapped behind enemy lines. Helena feels drawn to aide Sam but keeps from telling her sister what she is doing. Of course, it doesn't take long for readers to realize that this is going to cause a lot of complications for the characters.
If I had one complaint it was that the link in the epilogue to the events of the past seemed quite hurried and I felt like I lost the connection with the characters. Despite that one little hiccup, I thoroughly enjoyed getting lost in this book.
Profile Image for Kimberley.
2 reviews
July 31, 2022
I read quite a bit about WW2, both fiction and non-fiction, and this book was ludicrous. Beyond the fact that the author didn’t seem to research even the most basic facts such as when the US joined the war or when paratroopers first started being utilized, this was a thin plot that felt incredibly disrespectful considering the subject. Are we really supposed to believe that Sam, a Jewish American “paratrooper” was able to somehow get in and out of Auschwitz undetected to save Ruth’s child? The child who somehow managed to survive regardless of the historical facts of the Nazi’s killing pregnant mothers almost instantly? This almost felt like a WW2 madlib plot. Paratrooper- check, twins- check, Auschwitz thrown in-check check. I need to start vetting these books more carefully before I buy them because I have unwittingly purchased a few of these Holocaust based romance novels and it just feels icky that that subject is used in such a manner.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Carrie.
1,215 reviews40 followers
December 15, 2017
If the author was trying to evoke feelings in her readers then she succeeded. The Winter Guest pissed me off so much I almost rage quit the damn book. I don't understand why so many authors insist on pitting sisters against each other. I hate it and it's so far out of my comprehension, as it is nothing like the relationship I have with my own sister. Ruth's actions were inexcusable and I felt personally betrayed on Helena's behalf. Once that happened I knew what else would transpire and of course it did. I should have just quit but I wanted to see how the author was going to try and redeem the story. In my opinion, she did not.
Profile Image for Priscille Sibley.
Author 4 books243 followers
June 14, 2016
I've thoroughly enjoyed a few of Jenoff's other novels, but I would say that this one is my favorite so far. Every bit as intense, if not more so, as The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah, this book takes you into the ordinary people behind the lines in a World War II country. It felt credible and tender and devastating. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Amina Hujdur.
766 reviews36 followers
January 15, 2022
Idealno štivo uz toplu dekicu, čaj i vatru iz kamina. Još ako ste ljubitelj teme WWII bićete oduševljeni.
Ovo je roman atmosfere koji govori o odnosu dvije sestre blizanke u jeku rata u Poljskoj. Iako su neki dijelovi razvučeni, drugi zbrzani, dajem romanu ocjenu 4 jer drži pažnju i govori o ozbiljnoj temi bez patetike i žalopojki. Nakon čitanja vas neće boljeti glava 😂
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