Heuvel,
Eric, Ruud van der Rol, and Lies Schippers. (2009). The Search. Illustrated
by Eric Heuvel. Farrar Straus Giroux, New York.
Reader’s annotation: Esther Hecht was separated from her family during the German invasion of
Amsterdam. Now with the help of her grandson she sets out to find the truth
about what happened to them.
Evaluation: At first glance, The Search looks like a classic comic book from the 1950’s, with vibrant colors and plenty of speech bubbles and action to keep any reader interested until the end. The Search however is the moving story of Esther Hecht, now a grandmother living in the United States, who wants to find out what happened to her family during World War II.
Evaluation: At first glance, The Search looks like a classic comic book from the 1950’s, with vibrant colors and plenty of speech bubbles and action to keep any reader interested until the end. The Search however is the moving story of Esther Hecht, now a grandmother living in the United States, who wants to find out what happened to her family during World War II.
Esther and her parents were separated
during the Nazi invasion of Amsterdam, and while Esther survived by running
away and hiding, her parents did not survive the concentration camps. With the
help of her grandson, Daniel, Esther finally learns the horrible and searing
truth.
Written in conjunction with the Anne Frank
House in Amsterdam, The Search introduces readers to World War II and
its effects. Through Esther and the other characters, readers learn about
Hitler’s rise to power, his subsequent persecution of Jews and the atrocities
that these people faced.
Author/illustrator website: http://www.eric-heuvel.nl/ (in Dutch)
Media: Pen and ink.
Curricular connection: Middle school history: Introduces readers to the effects of WWII on Jewish people and the eventual creation of concentration camps.
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