Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Story of the Forest

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A Paste Most Anticipated Historical Fiction for Fall

An "epic and marvelously entertaining" family saga by award-winning author Linda Grant about the European Jewish experience from WWI to the present day, that "constantly moves forward even as it looks sorrowfully back" (Financial Times).

It's 1913 when Mina, the young and carefree daughter of a Jewish merchant, roams into a forest on the edge of the Baltic Sea looking for mushrooms. Instead, she encounters a gang of unruly, charismatic Bolsheviks—an adventure that will become the stuff of familial lore for generations to come. Intending to save her from further corruption, and in an act that forever changes the trajectory of their family's life, Mina and her eldest brother, Jossel, board a ship to England.

There the threat of a different war looms large. When WWI hits, Jossel is sent to the front, where he keeps a severely wounded soldier in his unit alive 'til morning by telling him tales—including that his sister Mina will marry him if he survives. The soldier lives and asks for Mina's hand, their marriage uniting two growing trade dynasties. But over time Mina and Jossel will learn that not everyone in their family has survived the wars and pogroms, even as they and their offspring struggle to build new lives in Liverpool in the midst of ever-shifting discriminations.

Based on the author's own family history and legends, The Story of the Forest?is a remarkable record of family lore; a meditation on the power of stories to ground us, particularly in the face of life's inevitable losses, told with a keen wit and a sharp eye to the charms and the foibles of family by masterful British novelist Linda Grant.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 19, 2024
      The engrossing latest from Grant (A Stranger City) revolves around a fateful chance encounter in the Latvian woods. Mina Mendel, 14, is foraging for mushrooms on the eve of WWI when she stumbles upon a band of Bolsheviks. Back home, she rhapsodizes to her older brother Jossel about the soldiers’ dancing and singing, prompting Jossel to worry she’ll spoil her virtue. She sneaks back to the Bolsheviks and kisses one of them before Jossel arranges to take her overseas for a better life in the U.S., leaving behind their parents and three other siblings. In England, she and Jossel are waylaid by the war, and they settle in Brownlow Hill, where Mina marries Louis, a soldier. The novel’s second section, set shortly after WWII, follows Mina and Louis’s daughter, Paula, who works at a London film studio and whose boss is captivated by Mina’s story of the Bolsheviks in the forest and plans to make a movie about her life. Grant’s omniscient narration turns over dark corners of the story (the reader learns the boy soldier Mina kissed was killed and eaten by wolves), and she cleverly injects commentary on the family’s trajectory as the narrative unfolds. Readers are in for a treat. Agent: Gráinne Fox, UTA.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Loading