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''Someone Named Eva'' is a young adult novel by Joan M. Wolf. It concentrates on the life of Milada, an eleven-year-old Czech girl who lives during World War II, after Hitler annexes Czechoslovakia during the years 1942–1945. ==Plot summary== Milada, a young Czechoslovakian girl, lives in the village of Lidice. She doesn't understand at first when Nazi soldiers come to her house, ordering them to pack belongings for three days and leave the house. Her father and her older brother, Jaro, are separated from the rest of the family to be taken elsewhere; Milada, her mother, younger sister Anechka and grandmother, are subsequently held together with the rest of the female inhabitants of Lidice in a school building. While in the school building, Milada is taken to a health examination where her facial features are measured and checked by doctors. With her ostensibly "perfect" features, blue eyes and blonde hair, Milada fits the "Aryan ideal", is separated from her family, and along with one of her classmates and several Polish girls, sent to a center outside of Pucshkau, Poland. At the center, Milada is renamed Eva, a more "German" name, and the other girls are renamed too. The center employs harsh disciplinary methods and the girls are schooled in the German language, Nazi philosophies and home economics so they can eventually join German society as proper German wives and mothers. As hard as she works to remember, she forgets a little about herself in the process. During the two years in the center, she develops a friendship with a girl named Liesel and is also repulsed by how Franziska, her classmate from back in Lidice, is so quick and eager to renounce her previous life in Czechoslovakia. Once judged sufficiently trained, Eva is adopted by a German family from Fürstenberg near Berlin. The Werner family is composed of Vater, (father in German), a high official at the Nazi government, Mutter (mother), Elsbeth and Peter, her new adoptive siblings. While there, she notices a horrible smell that penetrates the house most of the time. She later learns that that smell is from the bodies being burnt in the nearby Ravensbrück Concentration Camp, where Vater works at. One day, as she is walking back to the house after a picnic with Elsbeth, Eva hears the Czech anthem being sung. Coming closer, she discovers a concentration camp with female prisoners. This brings back memories, enabling Milada to see clearly who she really is. Elsbeth explains to her that this is the Ravensbruck concentration camp, and that her Vater is the head of the camp. By April 1945, the Nazis are losing on all fronts and Berlin is encircled by Russian troops. Vater decides to go into hiding and takes Peter with him, while Mutter, Elsbeth and Eva move to the basement shelter to protect themselves. In May, Soviet Red Army troops come and ask for the documents left by Vater in his office, but Mutter tells them that she is not aware of anything. They leave without causing any harm to the family, but tore the house apart, and taking everything in Vater's office. A few days later, Hitler is declared dead and the war is over. Some time after, representatives from the Red Cross Association comes to the house and announces that Milada's mother is alive and she has launched a search for her daughter. Milada recognizes that she is the person they are looking for. At that moment Eva is Milada again. She is taken back to Czechoslovakia. She meets her mother in Prague, discovering that she was indeed detained in Ravensbruck, a few steps away from the Werner household. Milada also learns sadly that her father and Jaro, along with all the other adult and teenage males in the village were killed by the Nazis on the same day they were separated. Her grandmother died in the Ravensbruck concentration camp because of her old age. Her sister Anechka was adopted into a German family and the Red Cross is looking for her. Milada's mother was ravaged from harsh conditions of the camp, and after her recovery, move to live with a cousin in Prague. They return to visit Lidice, but discover that their house, and pretty much the rest of the village, had been completely razed by the Germans. Milada slowly relearns the Czech language, nearly from scratch. Milada and her mother get closer again as they tell each other what happened during the horrific times of their separation. Finally, Milada manages to recover her true identity and pride. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Someone Named Eva」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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