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From Sand and Ash

By: Amy Harmon
Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
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Publisher's summary

Italy, 1943—Germany occupies much of the country, placing the Jewish population in grave danger during World War II.

As children, Eva Rosselli and Angelo Bianco were raised like family but divided by circumstance and religion. As the years go by, the two find themselves falling in love. But the church calls to Angelo and, despite his deep feelings for Eva, he chooses the priesthood.

Now, more than a decade later, Angelo is a Catholic priest and Eva is a woman with nowhere to turn. With the Gestapo closing in, Angelo hides Eva within the walls of a convent, where Eva discovers she is just one of many Jews being sheltered by the Catholic Church.

But Eva can't quietly hide, waiting for deliverance, while Angelo risks everything to keep her safe. With the world at war and so many in need, Angelo and Eva face trial after trial, choice after agonizing choice, until fate and fortune finally collide, leaving them with the most difficult decision of all.

©2016 Amy Harmon. (P)2016 Brilliance Audio, all rights reserved.
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Critic reviews

A Goodreads Choice Award Finalist, Historical Fiction

"Amy Harmon is a fresh and creative voice in fiction. I marvel at her ability to weave together a story that grips hold of my heart and my imagination."—Debbie Macomber, #1 New York Times bestselling author

"I was mesmerized. It felt completely and utterly authentic, painstakingly balanced between history and fiction and faith. I barely took a breath."—Katy Regnery, New York Times bestselling author

What listeners say about From Sand and Ash

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Possibly the best audiobook I ever heard

I haven’t read a WWII era book since high school. I am not a lover of sad and ugly cry books. I read to be happy. But I read so many people saying that From Sand and Ash by Amy Harmon was a favorite of the year that I decided I could use a change of pace, and I grabbed the Audible version. I’ve not read Amy Harmon before because she is known for ugly cries, but after listening to From Sand and Ash, I bought two more Amy Harmon audible books immediately.

First of all, I need to start by talking about the narration. This is one book where the audible version has got to be even better than the regular. The narrator did an AMAZING job of taking Eva from a young girl to a mature woman, as well as using Italian, Yiddish, German and French accents so perfectly it just enhanced an already incredible story.

Next, the story. Yes, it’s an epic forbidden romance, but it is SO MUCH MORE. It’s a history lesson disguised in a compelling, emotional story based on true events. There are a lot of stories that take place during the holocaust, but most take place in Germany or Poland. I honestly did not realize how many Italian Jews there were, and what happened to them during the war. It felt good to really learn something while doing what I love (reading), and this inspired me to pick up more books like this where I can learn and not just escape.

"Why do people hate us so much?"

Eva Roselli is Italian. Her family is Jewish, but they are not religious. They don’t attend temple, but they still follow the Jewish traditions. Angelo Bianco was 12 when he was sent from America to live with his grandparents who worked for the Roselli’s in Italy. At 12 he already was slated to be a Priest, going to Catholic school and then the seminary. There was no other path for him, it was what he was born and raised to do. Angelo and Eva grew up together. She loved him and he loved her, but knew he had to avoid any situation where that love gets out of control. His first commitment is to God, and as a Priest in training, there is no other love allowed.

"I never really thought about being Jewish until I started to be persecuted for it."

Amy Harmon did an excellent job of showing how little things that may seem like nothing at first can snowball into bigger and bigger things. To read about how first non-Jews couldn’t work for Jews, then Jews couldn’t own businesses or go to school, Jews couldn’t marry non-Jews, then Jews couldn’t vacation where they had their whole lives. Instead of running, the thoughts that it couldn’t get worse, or that the Pope would step in kept the Italian Jews in Italy waiting it out. But it did get worse. Much worse, as the Jews began to be rounded up.

"They can humiliate us and dehumanize us. But they cannot take our thoughts. They cannot take our talents. They cannot take our knowledge, or our memories, or our minds."

As the war gets worse and worse, somehow despite the horrors, Amy Harmon is able to weave hope into the story, and pride in the characters who did everything they could to help.

"Fear is strange.
It settles on chests and seeps through skin, through layers of tissue, muscle, and bone and collects in a soul-sized black hole, sucking the joy out of life, the pleasure, the beauty.
But not the hope.
Somehow, the hope is the only thing resistant to the fear, and it is that hope that makes the next breath possible, the next step, the next tiny act of rebellion, even if that rebellion is simply staying alive."

Angelo loves Eva. but he knows he can do more to help as a priest than anything else. I had no idea how much the Catholic Church did to help the Jews during the war. But the Nazis weren’t picky. They were rounding up priests and anyone who helped the Jews.

"Eva is just a girl. She wasn’t given a choice.
The Jewish people have been stripped of choice. They have been stripped of liberty. They have been stripped of dignity. And they cannot save themselves."

Who will help them? Angelo saw his Eva in every Jew. He worked tirelessly to help Jews, get them fake papers, get them out of Italy or hide them as best they could. But it wasn’t just the Jews who lived in fear, it was everyone. Still, Angelo lived his life to protect Eva. All he wanted was her to hide out and be safe.

Eva was so strong. There was no way, no matter how much she loved Angelo (even though she could never have him) that she would sit by and hide, so she fought and did everything possible to help fight the horrors.

My goodness. We think things are bad in the world? We think our lives suck? Read this and believe me, you will thank your lucky stars for everything we have. The fact that these horrors happened recently enough that people are still alive from that time is just unbelievable to me, and similar things still happen today.

From Sand and Ash was filled with suspense and action, but at the heart of it was the love between a Jewish girl and an Italian priest. It never felt sordid or wrong. In war, you grasp at anything to bring some light into your life, and their love was the only light they had.
"With our hands, we reach for things we shouldn't have and we grasp what isn't ours. The way I have always reached for you."

Likes:

•While the characters were fiction, the events were true.
•How much I learned about Italy in WWII.
•Gripping and emotional it was completely unputdownable.
•How despite the hopelessness and despair, there was always a thread of hope and love that ran through the story.
•The narration was some of the best I have ever heard with the narrator doing Italian, Yiddish, French and German accents.
•The way the music was tied into the story.
•There was just enough romance to make this a romance book, but it was way, way more than that.
•The priest and a woman part of the story never felt sordid or wrong.
•There was no shielding us from the horrors and brutality that really happened.

Dislikes:

•I obviously dislike that any of this happened in real life, but there is absolutely nothing to dislike from this book.

The Down & Dirty:
From Sand and Ash is one of the most important books I have read since I began blogging. I feel like everyone should read it. The more we know about the past, the more we can recognize if it starts again in the future. The horrors of WWII are not sugar coated in any way, and Amy Harmon transports you to Italy during all of the events. There was so much background, and you know the characters so well that you feel like you are Eva. I literally felt her fear, and as I write this, I am flashing back to moments in the book and I’m crying again. Being Jewish, this story also helped me understand a bit more of my parents, who were children during this time. But you don’t have to be Jewish to relate and connect to this book. I honestly think From Sand and Ash should be required reading for high school students the way The Diary of Anne Frank is for elementary.

My words can’t do a book like this justice, but I can tell you that it will not only be on my best of 2016 list, but my all-time favorite list. Amy Harmon is an author that has been recommended so many times. I have several of her books on my Kindle, and just purchased more of her audiobooks. If they are even half as good as From Sand to Ash they will be 5 star reads for me.

Rating 5+++ Stars, Narration 5+++ stars

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74 people found this helpful

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A Good Book

It was a good book, although sometimes predictable, sometimes too coincidental. I did enjoy it though and many times found myself a little eager to get back to it. That is always a good sign. There is so much incredible sadness in any Holocaust novel and this was no exception. What I did find interesting (and disgusting) was the degree to which Jews in Italy had to withstand the same atrocities that their German counterparts did, although not to the same staggering numbers. Still it was way too much. I will never understand how human beings can be so incredibly evil toward one another.

Like so many Holocaust survivors, those who lived through it were able to pull together a happy life, even though their basic personhood would never be the same and so many of the people close to them had had their lives ended in Auschwitz, or some equally despicable place. I guess you could say this is a sad-happy novel, as one written on the lives of most holocaust survivors could be described.

Beautifully written and well narrated.

One little annoyance to me, however, was the many references to the music of Chopin by an accomplished violinist. Chopin almost exclusively wrote for the piano. His violin literature is minuscule. He was also referred to as a German composer which is erroneous. He was Polish. He is hardly the composer a violinist would dream of and cling to. There were so many other composers of much great violin music the author could have chosen.

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33 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Beautiful

I read an ARC of this book in November. I love everything Amy Harmon writes. This was my first venture into historical romance. I was a good way through the book when I saw a post where Amy mentioned taking your time to absorb the story. That's not how I generally read, and not how I had read to that point.

When the book officially released at the beginning of December, I bought the ebook and audio versions (both pre-orders) as well as a few copies for gifts. I started listening to the audio on my work commute, which is only 30-45 minutes per day. So this time around, I definitely had plenty of time to absorb. Now that I've finished the reread, I'm ready to share my thoughts.

The amount of research Amy put into this novel to include all the details that make the story perfect is nothing short of amazing. I'm not a history lover, but my husband is. I found myself discussing events and other things I had read in the book with him. I even dreamed about the setting and about things I had read, more than once. The character development really makes you embrace the people in the story. And the narration is absolutely spot on! I enjoyed my first read, but I loved my audio reread.

Eva and Angelo's story is not an easy one. There's nothing easy about war. This isn't a light and fluffy book. But it's so worth it. I went in blind, knowing nothing more than that the softy was set during WW2, and trusting Amy to take me to wonderful places. As always, she does not disappoint.

Set aside and preconceived notions that you may have about historical romance or war stories. Open your mind and just start reading. Talk your time and enjoy it. Fall in love. You won't regret it!

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Perfection

Loved every minute! And the narrator was perfection. Highly recommend. Going to buy more from this author.

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Best Book in a long time!!

I usually just review with stars but I have to say, “listen, and be deeply touched!” Just my kind of beauty of story and the narrator is marvelous.

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A beautiful story....brilliantly performed

The book brings to life a horrendous part of history, but also tells a beautiful love story. The reading is sublime.

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Excellent

Loved everything about this book. The story line, narration absolutely fantastic!! I would highly recommend this book!!

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Affected Me Deeply

I really didn't think the story would hit me so hard, but I was wrong. Maybe it was because of my Jewish heritage or because my father fought the Nazis in WWII. He had me watch documentaries featuring Nazi atrocities at a young age and implored me to "never forget". It may just be that I am witnessing fascists ans Neo-Nazi sympathizers infiltrate our own government with not enough push-back. Everyone has either forgotten or never known how slippery the slope can be and how quickly it can be too late. Historical fiction can be a very powerful teaching tool. Read it!

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Epic wartime romance

one of the best historical war time romances i have ever read. Right up there with The Thorn Birds, but better. Absolutely loved this book

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Beautifully narrated love story in war-torn Italy

Despite what some have written, i found Cassandra Campbell's narration of this book exceptional, and what drew me in immediately. This is a historical love story set in Florence and Rome, Italy, before and during the German occupation. Eva and Angelo grew up together, and despite the fact that she was Jewish and he was Catholic, they were both foremost Italians, and formed a close bond at a young age. Even after Angelo entered the seminary and became a priest, Eva never stopped loving him, and he never stopped caring for and protecting her. The most outstanding aspect of this book is the feelings it evokes. While many books are visually descriptive, few are emotionally descriptive, and i loved From Sand and Ash for this. With all that happened in their lives and those who they strived to help during the Nazi occupation, Eva and Angelo never lost their humanity. It was Eva who especially touched my heart. She was born into a wealthy family but, even under the worst conditions, she didn't lose her faith in humanity. And she played exquisite violin!

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