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Strength to Endure, by Tristi Pinkston
Reviewed
by Jennie Hansen
Strength to Endure is one of those rare and startling books that portrays
heartbreaking violence and pain while leaving the reader
refreshed and filled with hope. I approached this book
with reluctance, feeling today’s headlines and tragedies
provide me with enough gloomy reading that I didn’t need
to revisit the horrors of World War II and the Holocaust.
I came away feeling I had found another Corrie
Ten Boom.
Right
from the start Tristi Pinkston draws the reader in with family-like intimacy.
She writes of a little girl, Anneliese Klein, who is more interested in potato bugs than
politics. With her, we worry about older brothers who
have always spoiled and loved her, but are now changing
into vicious strangers who bicker with their father and
sneak out at night to meet their friends. Their handsome,
arrogant friend who pays too much attention to little
Anneliese, frightens us. As
does the violence and hate these young men and others
in the rural farming community direct toward their Jewish
neighbors and anyone who is different or who stands up
for those who are different.
When
Anneliese’s best friend and
later her father disappear, there are still chores to
do, farm animals and crops to care for, and dreams to
dream – even though her brothers have run off to join
Hitler’s army and she’s the only one left to help her
mother. As she grows older, she and her mother isolate
themselves as much as possible, not knowing who can be
trusted and fearing the fate that has been rumored to
have befallen other attractive young women with Anneliese’s
blonde hair and blue eyes.
Two
significant events bring happiness and hope into Anneliese’s
life. A stranger takes shelter with them for a few days
and leaves his most priceless possession, a copy of the
Book of Mormon, in their keeping when he leaves. And
a young man who suffers from a genetic disability, which
precludes his forced entry into Hitler’s army, arrives
at a neighboring farm to help his uncle.
With
Anneliese, we experience all
that is the worst of humanity. We also experience the
transformation of ordinary people into saints and heroes
as they transcend hate and ugliness by placing other people’s
lives and welfare above their own wants and needs, even
when their actions bring death. We witness the love between
a mother and her child, see one who has little of redeeming
value in her life sacrifice the little she has and risk
her own life to save a stranger’s child, and we see the
pettiness and degradation of those who choose evil, bigotry,
and the selfish pursuit of power over God’s laws and humanity
toward others.
Along
with the shattered families who can seemingly never be
put back together again, we find the rewards of faith
and hope for the future passed on by those who have the
strength to endure. We see small miracles that bring about
changed lives. And we see survivors who go on in faith,
even as they choose not to forget the sacrifices made
in the past. Most of all, this is a book whose story
continues even after the last page has been read. There
is a lingering warmth from a reminder that with all devastation
the adversary can dish out, our Creator endowed the human
spirit with the ability to conquer all by enduring to
the end.
Pinkston
has done a number of things well in this novel. She has
magnified the horror of Hitler’s mesmerizing influence
over his countrymen by allowing the reader to view him
through the eyes of an innocent child. In another novel
the abrupt changes of point-of-view she uses several times
would damage the continuity, but in this case it serves
to emphasize the shock element at those crucial points.
She has done extensive research and even provides a bibliography,
but her work flows smoothly and I was not left feeling
anything was inserted to merely make use of that research.
I
wasn’t completely comfortable with her backtracking to
provide background for a couple of characters near the
end of the book, but neither was I bothered with it enough
to consider it a serious flaw. I was bothered by the
book’s cover. Though beautiful, it does nothing to catch
attention. In fact the title disappears into the art
work and is difficult to read.
All
in all, I highly recommend this remarkable book.
--
Strength to Endure, by Tristi Pinkston
Published
by Granite Publishing, 256 pages, $14.95
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