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Tamar: A Novel of Espionage, Passion, and Betrayal | 
| Author: Mal Peet Publisher: Candlewick Category: Book
List Price: $8.99 Buy Used: $4.19 You Save: $4.80 (53%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 109178
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 432 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.4 x 1.1
ISBN: 0763640638 EAN: 9780763640637 ASIN: 0763640638
Publication Date: September 9, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Hard cover. In dust jacket. Clean pages. Ships fast!
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Product Description bFrom acclaimed British sensation Mal Peet comes a masterful story of adventure, love, secrets, and betrayal in time of war, both past and present./bbrbrWhen her grandfather dies, Tamar inherits a box containing a series of clues and coded messages. Out of the past, another Tamar emerges, a man involved in the terrifying world of resistance fighters in Nazi-occupied Holland half a century before. His story is one of passionate love, jealousy, and tragedy set against the daily fear and casual horror of the Second World War #8212; and unraveling it is about to transform Tamar#8217;s life forever.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Angieville: TAMAR November 1, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I was sucked in by the first line:br /br /"In the end, it was her grandfather, William Hyde, who gave the unborn child her name. He was serious about names; he'd had several himself."br /br /One day, out of the blue, William Hyde asks his son to name his daughter Tamar. He explains that when he was a Dutch resistance fighter working for the British during WWII, their code names were taken from rivers in England. His son assumes it was his father's code name and agrees to name her Tamar.br /br /After this brief introduction, the story jumps back in time to follow two young Dutch secret agents, code names Dart and Tamar. The two friends parachute into the occupied Netherlands in the dead of night. Tamar is charged with organizing the fragmented resistance efforts. Dart is his wireless operator. When they arrive, Tamar finds he is based out of the farm where a young woman named Marijke lives. It turns out the two met and fell in love a year ago but never thought they'd see each other again after Tamar was sent back to England. As they rekindle their romance amid the terror and starvation gripping the country, Dart is not so lucky. Based out of an insane asylum, he poses as a doctor, making trip after treacherous trip into town to relay encrypted messages and receive directions from headquarters in England. The events that overtake these two friends combine to create a web of deception and anger that reaches out to cover three generations.br /br /This story is bleak. The focus is on the horrors of war and what they do to the men and women involved, the indelible mark left on their lives long after the guns are silenced and the violence is over. In the WWII chapters, the writing is coolly objective. It is impossible not to sympathize with Dart and Tamar and Marijke, though it is difficult to really feel like you know them. The war obscures everything. However, their story is broken up periodically by excerpts from the future. A future in which William Hyde dies suddenly, leaving a box of strange items to his granddaughter Tamar. Tamar's father disappeared years ago, her grandmother is in a home for the elderly, and her mother knows next to nothing about the family history. With the help of her quirky "cousin" (but not really) Yoyo, Tamar sets out on a journey to the river that shares her name to discover why and what her grandfather left her. These chapters are told in first person and come across a bit warmer than the rest of the tale. They show up more frequently as the novel comes closer to its conclusion and, I admit, I would have liked a few more of these present-day chapters throughout the book. Nevertheless, it is a harrowing and fascinating read. I wanted to understand the characters and their motives. I wanted Tamar to understand. In the end, Mal Peet leaves it up to the reader to determine which of them deserves forgiveness and which of them achieve peace.
Courtesy of Teens Read Too September 25, 2008 In 1944, two spies are sent deep within Nazi-occupied Holland. Their mission - to help those involved with the Dutch resistance movement. Both men are trained to send, receive, and translate coded messages. These messages contain valuable information concerning the movements of the Nazi army. Even though these men face death at every turn, they are committed to stopping the evil that is associated with the Nazi regime.br / br /In 1995, Tamar is dealing with the suicide of her grandfather. He has left Tamar a box full of clues that she cannot decipher. She decides that it is one of his elaborate puzzles; one that Tamar may not be able to solve. After enlisting the help of her cousin, Yoyo, Tamar sets off on a journey to discover why her grandfather left her these treasures, and what they mean to her family.br / br /Mal Peet has created a novel that intertwines the story of a young girl's journey of self-discovery and a young soldier's fight to stay alive. It is a beautifully written novel that contains secrets within secrets. Peet leads the reader on an adventure that is both intriguing and frightening. Readers may be left speechless once the truth unfolds. br /br /A definite must-read for those who love historical fiction.br /br /Reviewed by: LadyJay
Unforgetable! July 20, 2008 The plot grips you and is interwoven throughout the book-- I love it when bits and pieces of stray information all come together in the end. The characters are developed so well that you can understand their pain, even those you'd like to hate. An excellent novel for discussion, and for any age. I read it looking for books to use with high school students, I'm going to recommend it to my reading club (we're all over 50), and I think both groups will enjoy it. The best book I've read this year.
A great book in general but also a great YA book July 14, 2008 I find that the best way to tell if a work of historical fiction is effective is if, after reading the novel, I wind up doing a bit of research on the computer to try and corroborate facts from the book. If the story can weave history and fiction together that well, chances are that aside from being a good piece of historical fiction it is also a good book in general. Such is the case with Mal Peet's latest novel targeted at young adults (though, as usual, this distinction is really a moot point--more on that later).br /br /I don't usually put much stock in subtitles to books. However, with this book, I have to admit that the subtitle really tells you everything you need to know. Tamar: A Novel of Espionage, Passion, and Betrayal really is just that. In other words, it's an exciting and suspenseful read with quite a few mysterious twists thrown in along the way (to be fair I should point out that I had guessed one of the major twists about thirty pages in, but that only made me want to read faster to see if I was right and, perhaps, made the ending slightly less shocking--you'll have to see for yourself though).br /br /Tamar is actually two stories. What I am going to call the main story (because it takes up more of the novel) occurs between 1944 and 1945 first in England and later (and mostly) in Holland. World War II is well under way, but as time passes, it becomes clear that the Nazis will not win. The main question, then, becomes whether the Germans will have the chance to leave their occupied countries behind intact or in a state of burning rubble. In order to prevent the latter, England's Special Operations Executive (SOE)--a covert military group--have trained and dispatched operatives to go undercover in the Netherlands and undermine the German authority. These operatives, as far as the government are concerned, have no names being known only by an alias. The two SOE operatives at the center of Tamar are named for rivers in England: Tamar and Dart. Working from in Holland, Tamar's job is to consolidate the resistance movement into a more coherent group. Dart accompanies Tamar as his wireless operator. Many other memorable, and important, characters make appearances here. The last of the main characters are rounded out with Marijke, a young woman who lives with her grandmother on the farm Tamar will call his home while undercover.br /br /The other, smaller, part of the story is set in England. The year is 1995 and the narrator is a fifteen-year-old girl named Tamar--the granddaughter of one of the resistance fighters. Tamar's life seems to be falling into chaos. Her father has disappeared, her grandmother Marijke is ill, and her grandfather William Hyde is dead. Inheriting a mysterious box from her grandfather inspires Tamar to follow his clues to understand his death and, although she doesn't know it yet, to uncover one of her family's oldest secrets as well.br /br /I really liked this book. The story is a real page turner but at the same time Peet also offers a very clear examination of the human condition. World War II is a huge event for, basically, everyone. But as time passes, the immediacy of the War also seems to diminish. One of the great things about Peet's writing is how eloquently he conveys the fear these men and women felt during the War--even as they chose to put their lives at risk to fight for what they thought was right. Nothing is black and white in this novel, even as characters make mistakes and stumble down their roads paved with good intentions, Peets offers them a chance for redemption and, maybe more importantly, forgiveness. That is why, I think, the Carnegie Medal committee gave Tamar its award and, write that the book "ultimately offers a sense of optimism."br /br /By comparison, the 1995 sections fall flat. These parts of the novel, serve as a nice counterpoint to the novel, but don't really feel vital until the end. Similarly, Tamar (the girl) seems rather less likable than her 1944 counterpart (or Dart or Marijke) until the very end of the novel where she proves herself to be a strong, smart young woman.br /br /So, the book is fantastic and you should read it. But now we come to a cataloging issues. This book was first recommended to me by "Amy" a young adult librarian with excellent taste who said the cover didn't do justice to the exciting writing found within (the cover has actually grown on me). Anyway, the book was given to me by a YA librarian, I saw it shelved as a YA book. Then my other friend "Lea" (a children's librarian) read it and told me she was having doubts about it being a bonafide YA novel. Having read the book, Lea's review, and having talked briefly with Amy. I've concluded that it is a YA book although I'm uncomfortable making that distinction because so often people think that means it isn't also an adult book (this one is).br /br /There are a lot of things that make a book fit into the broad YA genre. In a general way it can mean having a teen character, which Tamar does, although as Lea points out in her review--not a teen with a very large role in the narrative. There are two other reasons to classify a book as a YA: it's a book teens will enjoy reading and it's a book that teens should read in that it speaks to their own experiences. As to being a good read, I hope I already made a case for that but I will add the caveat that this is a thick book and will take some time to get through with its smaller print and 400 some odd pages.br /br /Now the only question is does Tamar speak to the teen experience. In one sense it doesn't. Although the WWII characters are very young, I don't think any of them are actually teens. And honestly age never becomes relevant in that part of the book anyway. But on the other hand it does because there is a lot to be learned (about forgiveness among other things) from the story and the characters and who better to learn than teens?
War, Love, Lies, and Spies! June 29, 2008 ::ABOUT:: br /1/2 the novel takes place during WW2 in Holland, the other have takes place in present time London. The basis is a 15yr old girl trying to reconstruct her grandfathers life. He left her behind a box filled with clues/relics of the war. She goes on a road trip down the Tamar river, which she is named after, searching for the meaning of it all. Meanwhile the book is moving through the grandfathers station in the war and the trials and tribulations of the Holland resistance. br /::REVIEW:: br /This book can be slow and confusing but it does all come together. I think a quickening of pace and more excitement would have much improved the novel. I do like the WW2 Europe time-frame, it's such a great emotion filled era and has been the backdrop to many great movies novels. Perhaps as a movie, it would be even better. I liked that you did feel like you learned things in the novel, and came away from the book with yet another view of the war and the difficulties of that time. Recommended ages 16 and up.
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