A review by wwatts1734
Eva by Meyer Levin

4.0

This book is one of the surprising treasures that one finds at used book stores or other unlikely locations. It is a novel of the holocaust, the story of a girl named Eva who ran away from her Jewish town in Southeastern Poland and posted as a gentile, a Ukrainian peasant girl named Katya. The story follows Eva as she works as a maid in the home of a prominent Austrian family in Linz, and then as an office worker in a German munitions factory in the same town. When she is finally discovered as a Jew, she is sent to Auschwitz where she spends the rest of the war. At the end of the novel she is trying to find a home, which was difficult because the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe were destroyed by the Nazis.

The novel is a strange combination. On the one hand it is a story of a teenage girl, the kind of girl who loves to hang out with her friends, who dreams of romance, who wants to find her place in the world. But this teenager is a Jewess who is literally hunted down by the Nazi Final Solution. Even simple things like sharing her name with others is an act of potential danger. Who would betray her? Who could she trust? It makes us all look back at our own upbringing and consider the difficult times that we have all faced. Surely the little trials of adolescence are nothing compared to this girl, who survived years in hiding, and who even survived Auschwitz.

There are some novels which bring a profound sadness to the reader because these novels bring home the reality of evil in the world. Novels about the holocaust are like this, just like the movie "Schindler's List", which deals with similar subject matter. Solzhenitzyn's novels about the gulags are also like this, as are the novels of Khaleed Hossein that were set in Taliban ruled Afghanistan. It reminds us that we should not take for granted what we have, especially the intangibles, like freedom and acceptance. In "Eva", Levin does not lay the guilt trip of the holocaust at the feet of all gentiles as other authors tend to do. In "Eva" we meet righteous gentiles who help Eva, sometimes at the risk of their own lives. In the end Eva survives, and the means of her survival are both compelling and realistic.

I would recommend this novel to anyone who is interested in historical fiction, especially fiction having to do with the holocaust.