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Song of a Blackbird

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Fictionalized but based on true events, Song of a Blackbird has two intertwined timelines: one is a modern-day family drama, the other a thrilling tale of a WWII-era bank heist carried out by Dutch resistance fighters.

In the present day, teenage Annick is desperate to find a bone marrow donor that could save the life of her grandmother, Johanna. She turns to her family history and discovers a photograph taken by Emma Bergsma.

Decades earlier, Emma is a young art student about to be drawn into what will become the biggest bank heist in European history: swapping 50 Million Guilders' worth of forged bank notes for real ones―right under the noses of the Nazis! Emma’s life―and the lives of thousands, including a young woman named Johanna―hangs in the balance.

In this stranger-than-fiction graphic novel, Maria van Lieshout weaves a tale about family, courage, and the power of art. Deeply personal yet universal, Song of a Blackbird sheds light on an untold WWII story and sends a powerful message about compassion and resistance.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published January 21, 2025

15 people are currently reading
806 people want to read

About the author

Maria van Lieshout

21 books38 followers
Maria grew up in the Amsterdam area, and studied Visual Communications at George Washington University in DC. Maria has a background in brand design and innovation and has illustrated/written 15 picture books for kids. Song of a Blackbird, Maria's historical graphic novel about a female artist in the Amsterdam resistance during WWII, is available NOW!

Please follow Maria on Instagram at @vanlieshoutstudio or visit www.vanlieshoutstudio.com for more information.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 146 reviews
Profile Image for Inconceivably Bookish | Ren.
1,877 reviews148 followers
January 17, 2025
{ Song of a Blackbird }
by Maria van Lieshout

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

𝙬𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙩𝙤 𝙚𝙭𝙥𝙚𝙘𝙩:
🐦‍⬛ historical fiction
🐦‍⬛ graphic novel
🐦‍⬛ real images + artistry
🐦‍⬛ family secrets
🐦‍⬛ WWII references

Length:
Source: ARC - TBR & Beyond, NetGalley
Release Date: January 21, 2025

•••••••
What an absolutely mesmerizing historical fiction graphic novel! This book right here needs to be used in EVERY SINGLE CLASSROOM. Told between dual timelines, with Annick in 2011–searching the history of her family and Emma in the early 1940s–who was a huge part of Annick’s family.

The entire premise behind this amazing story is based on true events. I don’t recall ever learning about Amsterdam during WWII classes and yet it seems to have some of the most important figures in the takedown of Nazi control.

The artistry is SO GOOD. The combined usage of real photographs with subtle yet powerful animations on top was enthralling. The poems, the importance of the blackbird, all could be felt through the pages.

I’m honestly blown away right now. Such an invaluable resource that includes a thrilling plot full of rich history. And I LOVED how the author included all the facts at the end. I’m obsessed.


Profile Image for Mireille.
539 reviews88 followers
Read
June 14, 2025
Een graphic novel die met recht zo genoemd kan worden: een verhaal met literaire inslag dat via beeld wordt verteld. Toen ik enkele jaren geleden Maus van Art Spiegelman tot me had genomen, kon daarna geen graphic novel aan dat niveau tippen. Het lied van de merel van Maria van Lieshoutdoet dat wel, met eveneens de Tweede Wereldoorlog als thema.

Het verhaal, dat uit twee lijnen bestaat, wordt aan elkaar geknoopt door een merel. Hij neemt de lezer mee door tijd en ruimte, als het ware onzichtbaar voor de personages maar toch met het vermogen om hen soms een gedachte te laten hebben en zo het verhaal te sturen.

In de 2011-lijn is de oma van Annick op zoek naar bloedverwanten die haar goede lichaamscellen kunnen doneren i.v.m. een ziekte. De broers en zussen die oma heeft, blijken niet met haar te matchen. Annick gaat voor haar op zoek naar biologische familieleden en krijgt aanknopingspunten in de vorm van vijf prenten van Amsterdamse gebouwen.
Door als eerste de Hollandsche Schouwburg te bezoeken ziet de merel kans om het perspectief te verplaatsen naar Emma in 1943. De Schouwburg werd een deportatieplaats voor joodse inwoners, iets wat Emma ook meekrijgt omdat ze aan de overkant op de kweekschool zit. Met een paar klasgenoten raakt ze bij een verzetsdrukkerij betrokken.

Maria van Lieshout heeft er in de positieve zin een visueel kunstig boek van gemaakt. Foto’s uit de oorlog zijn verwerkt in tekeningen; pagina’s met zowel foto als getekend werk zien eruit als één. Door het sobere kleurgebruik richt je je automatisch sneller op de inhoud van het verhaal in plaats van dat de bladzijden schreeuwerig overkomen.
Het plot zit ook goed in elkaar. In beide verhaallijnen vinden gebeurtenissen met logische opeenvolging plaats waardoor je de Amsterdamse oorlogsgeschiedenis vanuit diverse invalshoeken beleeft. De vervolging, onderduik, illegaal druk- en verspreidingswerk, fusillade van verzetslieden, propaganda en in de hedendaagse lijn zijn verwantschap, archiefonderzoek, diaspora en kunst verwerkt.

Het lied van de merel is al met al een gevuld boek waarvoor informatie welhaast moet zijn geverifieerd. Achterin geeft Van Lieshout daar (gelukkig) ook blijk van. ‘Gelukkig’ omdat deze uitgave wellicht lezers vanaf ongeveer 15 jaar aanspreekt die minder romans lezen maar wel eerder naar een beeldverhaal grijpen. In een uitgebreide bibliografie en uitleg over mensen, instituten en Van Lieshouts eigen familie kan de lezer genoeg aanknopingspunten vinden voor een goed inhoudelijk gesprek.

Op het moment van schrijven is Het lied van de merel genomineerd voor de Thea Beckmanprijs 2025; hopelijk komt het op de shortlist. Deze uitgave verdient meer aandacht.
https://lezersgoud.nl/maria-van-liesh...
Profile Image for Irene.
958 reviews
June 22, 2025
Bizar goed. Mijn woorden zijn er nog niet.


Met recht een graphic novel te noemen.
Profile Image for Emily McKee.
106 reviews11 followers
February 11, 2025
I wanted to give this five stars. Or even four. But I just can’t get past a couple style choices here.

As a graphic novel, it is actually very beautiful, though a bit underdeveloped, and I would have preferred to read this story about the Dutch Resistance as a traditional novel. But the limited colors made it hard to differentiate characters.

It’s also narrated by a blackbird. I was anticipating something like The Book Thief, but this was just strange, distracting, and unnecessary—there are two time periods/plot lines plus the blackbird.

Finally, the theme of art would have been moving if this were based on a true story rather than bits of truth. Excluding the treasure hunt set off by the art, the 2011 cancer premise was so believable that the rest of the novel almost feels dishonest (the blackbird does tell us in the beginning that it is fiction though). I don’t normally feel this way about historical fiction.

Should you or your kids read this? If you are interested in WW2/Dutch resistance, sure. It will only take an hour or so, and it’s both entertaining and educational.
Profile Image for Julie  Ditton.
1,867 reviews82 followers
April 24, 2025
This graphic novel tells a fictional story based on the efforts of the Dutch Resistance. By using dual timelines, the author tells a tale that takes place eighty years ago, in a way that makes it relatable to today's teens. In 2011, Annick's grandmother is dying of Leukemia. When running donor tests, she discovers that she is not actually related to her siblings. With only works of art from her grandmother's childhood which depict different buildings to use as clues, Annick discovers the truth. The novel tells a story of a young woman at a teacher school who beco9mes active in the Dutch resistance. The opera house across the street from the school was used as a transportation depot fro Jew who would be sent to the death camps. Families were separated and children were taken to a child care facility next to the school, while they waited. Young women would smuggle some of the children out to waiting foster families. The story reflects the fact that sometimes, if the child was very young, they never found out that the family they knew was not their first one. The story is a moving piece of fiction that weaves in the facts. and the illustrations are fantastic. The afterward tells the facts of the truth behind the fiction and shows photographs of the real Resistance heroes who were the basis of the novel's characters.

Although listed for grades 10-12, I can comfortably recommend this to any youngster over 10. If a parent or teacher is looking for books centering on WWII or the holocaust, this is a story that shows the goodness of ordinary people during a time of great evil. As I write this review, today is Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, an appropriate day to review this book.
Profile Image for Sharon.
1,753 reviews24 followers
November 7, 2024
Thank you to Netgalley and First Second Books for the digital arc.
Unique graphic novel offers a fictionalized account of actual events in WWII Amsterdam. During the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam, the Resistance conducted operations to hide Jewish children from the Nazis. Unfortunately children were often separated for their siblings. Hanna and Sol were two of these siblings. In 2011Annick discovered that her grandmother, Oma, was not biologically related to her siblings, but was one of the children smuggled out of Amsterdam. With just a set of prints of Amsterdam buildings Annick begins to solve the mystery of Oma's background and along the way, she uncovers the incredible story of Emma Bergsma, an art student who joins the Dutch Resistance. Both timelines are told through the narration of the Blackbird . The Song of a Blackbird is a masterpiece in in storytelling. Engrossing and I highly recommend.
Profile Image for K..
4,610 reviews1,144 followers
May 26, 2025
Content warnings: war, antisemitism, genocide, grief, explosions

What a freaking brilliant way to tell a historical story in graphic novel format. It's a mix of illustration and historical photos of wartime Amsterdam and the two mesh together BRILLIANTLY. The story itself is utterly compelling and equal parts hopeful and heartbreaking. Will definitely be looking out for more from this author in the future!
Profile Image for Nicole.
677 reviews5 followers
July 29, 2025
Everything about this graphic novel was beautiful: The story, the characters, the illustrations. It’s a work of art. I got teary-eyed, I got angry, I had all the feels and now feel uplifted for having experienced it. Just gorgeous.
Profile Image for Kim.
1,586 reviews33 followers
May 16, 2025
This graphic novel blurs the lines between fiction and nonfiction, drawing heavily from the history of the author’s family. Brilliant artwork, often overlaying archival photos, clearly delineates the two storylines, one set in the 1940s and one set in 2011. I wasn’t sure about the omniscient blackbird at first, but by the end, I really enjoyed the bird’s asides and perspective.
The book’s back matter is fascinating, and adds a lot to the overall package.
I highly recommend this tribute to resistance fighters and the power of uncovered stories.
Profile Image for Shannon.
7,784 reviews407 followers
January 11, 2025
One of the BEST and most BEAUTIFULLY rendered graphic novels I've ever read based on true events, this dual timeline story tells about Dutch resistance workers, siblings separated by war, chronic illness and the power of art to beat down the dark in troubling times. I devoured this and loved the mixed media format of the artwork. HIGHLY recommended especially for fans of books like Art Spiegelman's Maus. Many thanks to NetGalley and FirstSecond for an early digital copy in exchange for my honest review. I will 100% be running out to get a print copy for my forever shelves when this book is released!!
Profile Image for Peacegal.
11.5k reviews102 followers
February 28, 2025
A 21st-century teenager searching for help for her ill grandmother stumbles upon a secret that dates back to WWII and the Dutch Resistance. The ways in which everyday people stepped up to battle the Nazis and smuggle their neighbors to safety are highlighted throughout in intense vignettes, inspired by the lives and actions of real individuals.

While I found a couple elements of the story a bit weak, such as the teenage crush storyline, I also understand that they were included to help the modern-day middle school audience more fully immerse themselves in a story that takes place in a time that seems so long ago...yet is also as present as modern-day political figures and celebrities doing Nazi salutes to cheering crowds.
Profile Image for Megan.
672 reviews39 followers
February 13, 2025
Extraordinarily difficult to read, considering we're repeating history verbatim. Infuriating that we haven't learned any lessons.
Profile Image for Becky • bookmarked by becky .
747 reviews36 followers
January 23, 2025
I was mesmerized by this graphic novel! The story intertwines two compelling timelines: one set during World War II and the other in the present day, as a grandmother and granddaughter uncover their family history.

In the past, we learned about the courageous Dutch resistance fighters, including women who smuggled Jewish kids to foster families, artists who forged vital documents, and individuals who orchestrated a daring bank heist to fund the resistance. The risks these people took are unimaginable, and I found these real-life events fascinating. The contemporary storyline is a touching counterpoint, as the granddaughter researches old prints to understand her grandmother's past and search for her family. I loved the blend of historical fiction and family drama.

The standout feature of this book is the stunning artwork. Maria van Lieshout combines actual historical photographs and letters with her own illustrations. She also uses a subtle color difference to distinguish between the past and present timelines, making it clear to the reader which period the story depicts. I love all these details.

Van Lieshout's meticulous research shines through in how she presents the real-life people behind the story. At the end of the book, she includes a section that details the historical figures who inspired the characters, a bibliography, and detailed information about the photographs. Her dedication to historical accuracy is evident.

This book serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of preserving history and sharing stories—whether passed down orally or through written words—so that future generations will never forget the sacrifices made during difficult times. I highly, highly recommend this book to every reader. Easy 5 stars!!
Profile Image for Zoe Brumbaugh.
29 reviews
January 27, 2025
It’s international holocaust remembrance day and I thought I’d spend it reading this new book (written by my mom’s old post-grad roommate!) -- I’m so glad I did.
It's a graphic novel, so a quick read but didn’t at all take away from the meaningful story it told. In fact I think the beautiful illustrations mixed with old photographs added even more to it.
Like a lot of Jewish kids, I had a phase growing up where I almost only exclusively read books about the Holocaust. Song of a Blackbird was unlike any other book I remember reading with its unique perspective and ability to switch between time frames so effortlessly. I wish I had been able to read this book when I was younger!
Profile Image for Ty.
160 reviews32 followers
February 27, 2025
A fictionalized account of people involved in and rescued by the Dutch Resistance during the Holocaust and Nazi occupation of Amsterdam. I really liked some of the storytelling conceits and illustration choices here, but I found myself wishing it had focused on the true stories of the real people involved in the resistance who are described in the afterword instead of taking this historical fiction approach, and having the whole thing be narrated by an omnipotent omnipresent blackbird was odd and occasionally confusing.
Profile Image for Katie.
536 reviews34 followers
February 18, 2025
I devoured this and couldn't put it down. The mixed media format of this graphic novel is mesmerizing and effective- the combination of the photos and the animations is beautiful. And with what the U.S. is facing today, the story of Emma and Hanna and Soli is even more poignant and important.
Profile Image for grieshaber.reads.
1,693 reviews41 followers
February 25, 2025
Wow. This piece of art is very impressive. It's a story told partly from the POV of a blackbird (much like Death in The Book Thief) that follows two different but related timelines - one during the Nazi takeover of Amsterdam during WWII and one in the same location in 2011. The storyline line in 1944 focuses on the heroics of the resistance fighters, including those who smuggled Jewish children to safety. The 2011 storyline follows a teen girl researching her dying grandmother's past in order to find a possible sibling she was separated from during the war for the purpose of finding a blood marrow donor. The details are so meticulous that I completely forgot I was reading fiction until I got to the end of the book and read the author's notes. As always, when I read little-known history (Amsterdam's resistance fighters), the author's notes are a wealth of information. And these are some of the most detailed (and interesting) author's notes I've ever read. The amount of research this author did was jaw-dropping. It was interesting to learn that although this story was not strictly a story from her family, aspects of it were. As with all excellent graphic novels, the style of art is a huge part of the story. The coloring is all black, white, and red, and the illustrations and speech bubbles are drawn directly on top of actual historical photographs on almost every page.

This book is a no-brainer for the 2026 Denny O'Neil Graphic Novel List and a must-purchase for every high school library.
Profile Image for Oskar.
9 reviews
July 26, 2025
Mooi vormgeven en goed gedaan met de foto’s van de ondergedoken camera erin verwerkt.

Maar:

Wat is dit een stereotype Amerikaans verhaal en kijk op de tweede wereldoorlog in Amsterdam. Schrijfster woont in Amerika en dat is te merken.. die fucking Merel ook hele tijd met die vage teksten.

Het is ook voor mijn gevoel geen volwassen graphic novel maar eerder iets voor tieners (onderbouw middelbare school)
Profile Image for Jess Klug.
95 reviews5 followers
March 6, 2025
This was a truly compelling story and I loved the artwork layered in with historical photographs. It was a page turner from the start and left me sobbing at the end.
Profile Image for Madelyn (Vaughn) Burke.
163 reviews
April 25, 2025
If this isn’t this generation’s Maus, I don’t know what is (this is fictional, though, but it does have a bunch of historical information in the back about who/what this story is based on)
Profile Image for Ash.
186 reviews5 followers
May 3, 2025
This book was fantastically written. The pairing of archival images with art, the use of colour to denote time periods, was brilliant.
Reading the information at the end really puts the whole thing in perspective - knowing how intricately every aspect of this book is tied to real world events and real people, even to the author's parents & grandparents. It is a gut punch of a story, and one that I couldn't stop thinking about every time I put it down.
Profile Image for Cherlynn | cherreading.
2,100 reviews1,002 followers
April 20, 2025
Brought me to tears 🥹

Although fictional, this graphic novel felt very much real. Not only is it inspired by real-life experiences and people, the illustrations are also overlaid with actual photographs from the past on some pages, making this an even more powerful read. I enjoyed both timelines and appreciate learning about yet another lesser-known part of history.

An illuminating tale of hope, courage and to never stop fighting even when it's dark or hard ❤️
Profile Image for Laura.
3,180 reviews101 followers
January 31, 2025
The Song of the Blackbird is the fictionalized story of a young girl trying to track down relatives for her grandmother, who is dying of leukemia and needs a bone marrow transplant, but can’t find a match. But she finds out that her grandmother’s relatives are not related to her. That is because her true mother gave her up to save her life, and she was put in a non-Jewish family in Netherlands, and her brother was put into a Catholic boys home.


So Annick tries to track down her brother, by following the only clues that her grandmother has, a set of art prints of places around the Netherlands.


The story is told in two time lines. The modern one, and the one set during World War II. Although the story is fiction, the people written about are based on real people in the Dutch resistance, and in the end of the book the author shows pictures and bios of each person she based someone on. One of the most fascinating things is the photos that are included in the story, shot by the resistance, with hidden cameras.


I read this book during International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which was January 27th. It seemed appropriate. But you don't have to do that, though it does add a bit of gravitas to the story if you happened to.

This book is available wherever you happen to buy your books.
549 reviews1 follower
April 10, 2025
Creative historical fiction graphic novel (with archive photos woven into the illustrations) covering the story of a girl in the Dutch Resistance in World War II and a girl trying to solve the mystery of her grandmother’a family in the present day.

Story: The story was compelling - I finished it in one sitting and it was easy to follow. I was invested in learning about Annick's grandmother's family history as Annick went on the journey to uncover it while using the prints signed by Emma as clues. I was thankful to find it wasn't too confusing to keep track of the different characters. I enjoyed that the kids that Emma rescues includes Annick's grandmother, and that Annick's grandmother gets to meet her biological brother in person before she dies. The story also captured the feelings people who were separated by war may have - joy, feeling like a part of their life was incomplete beforehand, anger and difficulty forgiving those who did not try to reach out after the war, sorrow in accepting their family was all dead, etc. The work also did well in portraying the danger and sacrifice in being willing to resist and save lives with different actions. I also loved the emphasis on hope, nature, art, resistance, and loving others.

Voice: The voice of the blackbird as narrator was kind of weird initially, but I think having an overarching narrator lends much to the story, especially in having it be the bird (the freedom to see so many viewpoints, spanning time, singing a song of hope), so I ended up liking it. The blackbird's parts are poetic, and showcased by the black speech bubbles. I appreciate the context the bird brings to the times and in narrating the characters' actions. The blackbird also reminds us of the hope that can be found, even when it is hard and when fear is present.

Style: The story flips between Amsterdam in 2011 and Amsterdam during World War II in the early to mid 1940s and is told by the blackbird following Emma (1940s) and Annick (2010s) throughout Amsterdam as Annick tries to uncover the truth about her oma's family history and how it connects to the prints she was given by Emma.

Setting: Sense of place was very clear and rooted well. The locations are similar and showcase what life is like in the same spot decades apart.

Accuracy: I appreciated learning so much more about the Resistance to the Nazis in Amsterdam, and particularly the role of women in the Resistance (pregnancy corsets to carry ration coupons, making fake IDs and ration coupons on printing presses, smuggling children to foster families). I LOVED the creative use of photographs from the Amsterdam City Archives and the National Museum of Photography in the illustrations - showing what life and history was like back then, and adding the fictional story layer on top of the images was neat. The back matter detailing the significant locations in the story, different real people who inspired the fictional characters, the role of women in the Resistance, the SS party in Amsterdam, and the photographers (I have never heard of the Resistance group of photographers called the Underground Camera before this) was neat - I love learning the history that's interwoven into this story. It's also neat to see how the author's personal history is included too - with the stories from her mom (bombing of the house aka Hannah's story) and both her grandparents in the story (office location and painting on the ceiling). "Civilian Deaths in the Netherlands as a Direct Result of the Nazi Occupation" was harrowing, and the Bibliography with multiple works in German was neat to see, in understanding how much research the author did for this work. The work was also accurate in teaching readers about the materials and processes for different styles of art - the materials needed for street art, and the process for creating prints using the printing press. I do wish, however, that it was more emphasized that this is a work of fiction based on true events/people, because that wasn’t clearly reiterated until the blackbird mentions it at the end of the book.

Characters: Emma in the 1940s and Annick in the 2010s were distinct in both personality and in illustration, which was good. Both girls were interesting characters driven by believable and relatable motives. I enjoyed how the characters were all connected - Annick's oma was Hannah, the girl that Emma saves, so at least the two timelines that we're following intertwine/are related. The story was more focused on bigger themes rather than character development, so I don't feel like I got to know the characters well or see them grow, but the characters supported the story's themes - Mia/Annick/Emilie (Soli's daughter, JoHannah's granddaughter, Emma's daughter) showing us the next generation continues on, Koenji the boyfriend showing us the beauty and resistance in art (+art developing over time), Hannah/Soli reuniting (never forgotten as long as you remember).

Theme: Stories are important, and remembering is important to keeping people alive. Art is a way of expression, freedom, and resistance. Sacrifice is honorable and can make a difference in one life and in thousands and generations to come. The lives of ordinary people and their stories matter much. This work also showcases the beauty of art and the importance of art as resistance in the face of great evil. The work also demonstrates the value of preserving information and of sharing it, and the crucial work of informational professionals in providing that information (Annick's visit to the Dutch Theater and seeing the exhibit with a staff member, visiting St. Agatha for the church's archives filled with letters). The blackbird's presence throughout reminds us that darkness and fear may be present, but so is the light and hope for those who believe.

Illustrations: Black and white were used the most, with the occasional golden orange, red, and green-blue to make certain aspects stand out, such as red for blood and fire, and golden orange for flowers and hope as Annick visits different historical locations and people provide her with information. Very simple illustration type (bold, simple lines, a bit crude) but the archive photos layered underneath it help make the story come alive.

Design (including format, organization, etc.): There are maps in the front and the back of this fictional story's location points in Amsterdam and of Amsterdam today. I absolutely loved how photographs showcasing what life was like in the 1940s during the war were included in the graphics here alongside van Lieshout's drawings - it was like the photographs were pasted into the backgrounds and made up snippets of different pages' scenes with the main characters still drawn in them. The mixed media with the photos and illustrations amplifies the importance of art and history in storytelling. This work was so creatively done!

"...making ORIGINAL ART under Nazi rule is a radical act of FREEDOM and RESISTANCE." (78)
"Care enough to keep taking risks. But not so much that it destroys you." (95)
"Retelling. Remembering. This is how we keep STORIES and MEMORIES alive. This is how we keep PEOPLE alive." (157)
"History isn't a set of events confined to the past. It's a CURRENT that pulses through FLESH and BONES, and it's passed on through generations." (204)

No cursing or sex, but blood shown and men marching to their death, guns/SS soldiers about to execute people, and images of Jewish families being torn apart/transported. Mentions of torture, death camps, death, and suicide.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Grietleest.
196 reviews8 followers
September 18, 2024
Collega Joris zei: Griet, dit moet je lezen, wat een bijzondere graphic novel.
Merci Joris, merci!

Dit boek gaat over Annick wiens oma een beenmergtransplantatie nodig heeft. Daarvoor moeten ze in het verleden van oma Hanna duiken dat zich afspeelde in Amsterdam. Te midden van de bezetters en verzetsstrijders speelt zich een verhaal af dat ik al min of meer kende maar dat niet genoeg verteld kan worden.
Over enkele moedige Amsterdammers die Joodse kinderen uit de crèche smokkelden om hen bij onderduikgezinnen te brengen. Over moedige drukkers die bonkaarten vervalsten.
Kortom over mensen die mens bleven ondanks de moeilijke omstandigheden en zo het leven van zovele anderen konden redden.

De stijl van de graphic novel is adembenemend mooi. Oude foto's genomen door verzetsstrijders worden overtekend door Maria van Lieshout. Ze gebruikt maar enkele kleuren naast zwart en wit en maakt er zo een waar kunstwerk van. Je kan uren verdwalen in de pagina's.
Fight hate. Make art.
Dat deed van Lieshout.

Doe jezelf een plezier. Lees dit boek.
Profile Image for Melissa.
393 reviews3 followers
May 5, 2024
Toen mijn collega me dit boek aanraadde, leek het me toepasselijk om het te lezen in het weekend van 4/5 mei. Het is een mooi verhaal over verzet en familiegeschiedenis, met prachtig geïllustreerde pagina's. De mix met historische foto's werkte goed om het verhaal een extra laag te geven van realiteit. Ik moest even wennen aan de toon, omdat het voor een jong publiek geschreven leek te zijn, maar wel vrij zware onderwerpen bevatte. Het heen en weer springen in de tijd werkte goed om het verhaal te vertellen. Op die manier leerde de lezer samen met de hoofdpersoon steeds meer over de geschiedenis van Annicks oma. En van niets word ik blijer (al is dat in dit geval niet het passende woord) dan wanneer een historisch verhaal afsluit met een overzicht van de historische feiten waarop het verhaal is gebaseerd.
Profile Image for Eline Pullen.
202 reviews4 followers
June 20, 2024
Sprakeloos: wat een prachtige graphic novel over de tweede wereldoorlog, het verzet, drukkunst, Amsterdam, familiebanden en merels.

Een must-have in elke middelbare school collectie, heel bruikbaar bij geschiedenis en burgerschap.
Profile Image for Jerry Jennings.
310 reviews8 followers
March 28, 2025
Song of a Blackbird (2025) by author illustrator, Maria Van Lieshout is a historical graphic novel connecting, 1) the time of Hitler and the Nazi regime with 2) a modern-day need for a bone marrow donor. And the connection occurs through the song of a blackbird who is our all-knowing narrator for both plot lines. Because the story of the Nazi’s and a needed medical donation are very much connected to the Holocaust – the Song of a Blackbird is an addition to the World War II Holocaust cannon.

The intended audience is twelve- to eighteen-year-old readers. In my opinion, his book will be deeply appreciated by many adult readers, as well.

Van Lieshout’s artistic presentation is as important as the text. Her graphic art, use of actual black and white photographs, and her placement of the blackbird’s narration enhances the story.

When Maria Van Lieshout was interviewed by Publishers Weekly for an article published in January of 2025, she had this to say about her passion for Song of a Blackbird and for her impressions of the world we currently live in. “I've been working on this for 11 years, and throughout that period, it became obvious to me that a lot of the stories are already beginning to slip away, despite the fact that there are so many books and movies about this period. It's our job to perpetuate this story.”

Part of the reason the book took a long time to write rests in the many deliberate decisions Van Lieshout made to ensure the story would be assessable to readers. Thus, the book is based on many real people and Van Lieshout chose to fictionalize them to help the story flow. Plus, after the story ends, she has assembled pages of photographs and historical information to present the facts and people this graphic novel was based on.

I highly recommend this book to readers interested in learning more about how fascism affects people and freedom.

The last thought in this review is from the Publishers Weekly interview with Van Lieshout. “I feel like in today's world, stories and art are more important than they have ever been, because art and stories allow us to see the world through the eyes of another. They are uniting whereas people all over the world are trying to actively divide us, because they realize that when we're all divided, they can rule - divide and conquer. Writing stories, telling stories, sharing stories, making books, making art is an act of resistance, because we are contributing to a sense of belonging, to a sense of empathy, to recognize that we are all much more similar than different. That was exactly not something that was in my head when I started this book, but it is very much in my head today.”


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