Author:Morris Gleitzman
In Then - Morris Gleitzman's heartbreaking children's novel set during the Nazi occupation of Poland during the Second World War - Jewish orphan Felix and his best friend Zelda have been captured and are on the way to a concentration camp, unless they manage to escape . . .
A little hope goes a long way.
I had a plan for me and Zelda. Pretend to be someone else. Find new parents, be safe forever.
Then the Nazis came.
My name is Felix. This is my story.
Then is the second in a series of children's novels by Morris Gleitzman that began with Once about Felix, a Jewish orphan caught in the middle of the Holocaust. The other books in the sequence, Once, Then, After, Soon, Maybe and Now are also available from Puffin.
Undoubtedly her best yet - single mum, feisty daughter, jaunty style - but there is a darker thread running through it
—— Sunday TelegraphA book that children will respond to and be empowered by . . . A powerfully portrayed, sometimes shocking but ultimately uplifting story, this is a book not to be missed
—— The BooksellerDarker, shocking in its exposure of the vulnerability of streetwise kids who have to seem tough, luridly well-written yet curiously as sentimental as Dickens
—— Financial TimesMore than lives up the expectations of the many readers eagerly waiting for her new book . . . disturbingly perceptive and provocative
—— GuardianWilson is doing something important and rare. Not content to stand still, she's widening and deepening the scope of her work while maintaining its central hold on her readers. She's so good, it's exhilarating
—— GuardianWritten with affection and wit . . . this could have been a sad story, but somehow it manages to sparkle as brilliantly as the mother's own numerous coloured tattoos
—— IndependentRising star: Anna Perera. Her novel highlights the teenagers sent to the camp as it tugs readers into its vivid nightmare journey.
—— The IndependentWritten in a first-person voice of disarming honesty, the book rings true through all of its many layers
—— GuardianA good read for 11-year-olds who want to know their counterparts a century ago were truly human
—— TESA most enjoyable book, full of life, warmth and humour
—— The School Librarian