What Remains is Hope
Beginning in 1930s Germany and based on their real lives, four cousins as close as siblings—Bettina, Trudi, Gustav, and Gertrud—share the experiences of the young, including first loves, marriages, and children.
Bettina, the oldest, struggles to help her parents with their failing business. Trudi dresses in the latest fashions and tries to make everything look beautiful. Gustav is an artist at heart and hopes to one day open a tailoring shop. Gertrud, the youngest, is forced by her parents to keep secrets, but that doesn’t stop her from chasing boys. However, over their seemingly ordinary lives hangs one critical truth—they’re Jewish—putting them increasingly at risk.
When World War II breaks out, the four are still in Germany or German-occupied lands, unable or unwilling to leave. How will these cousins avoid the horrors of the Nazi regime, a regime that wants them dead? Will they be able to avoid the deportations and concentration camps that have claimed their fellow Jews? Danger is their constant companion, and it will take hope and more to survive.
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The Meaning of the Title “What Remains is Hope”
The novel tells the story of four Jewish cousins and their attempts to stay alive in Germany and German-occupied territories during World War II.
The idea of hope is mentioned several times in early portions of the book. Then, in 1937, as two cousins are helping a third cousin in her move from Frankfurt to Munich, the three begin to discuss this move to a city known for its history of anti-Semitism. One of the cousins, Gustav, draws a picture of a butterfly and tells the story of Pandora’s box, about how Pandora had received the box and was told never to open it. But curious, she opened it and all of the world’s ills flew out of the box and attacked Pandora, causing her to take on the world’s ills. She quickly closed the lid, but she soon heard a banging in the box. When she opened the lid, a butterfly flew out of the box, touched her arm, and she was healed of the world’s ills. Gustav told his cousin who would be leaving for Munich that what remained in the box was hope and that she should take that hope in the form of the butterfly with her. That cousin took the drawing with her to Munich.
Throughout the book, the characters continue to discuss hope and the importance of hope. The reader knows from the beginning of the story that one of the four cousins did not survive the war. During the war, many Jews committed suicide, losing hope and falling into despair. More than six million Jews were murdered by the Nazis; no amount of hope could save them. But those Jews who survived, like the three cousins in What Remains is Hope, could not have survived without hope.
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Thank you so much for hosting Bonnie Suchman today, with such an insightful article about her new novel, What Remains is Hope.
Take care,
Cathie xx
The Coffee Pot Book Club