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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: someone named eva, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 14 of 14
1. The Tropical Growing Season Begins!

Today I planted my organic seeds in a tiny greenhouse, seed starter. There are 10 varieties of tomatoes, plus peas, artichokes, broccoli, lettuce and eggplant. The seedlings will be transplanted into larger containers in a couple of weeks, and then into big pots in Oct. I am making a photo documentary of the process, which I will share with you in December, when I can enjoy my first harvest. Several of my friends are going to try their hands at organic tomato gardening, with my guidance. So I am growing extra plants for them.

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2. Tansy, Chipmunks & Tools

It’s been a busy week. Yesterday I had to further cut down my ten foot tall Tansy that was blocking sunlight to tomatoes and squash and peppers. The Tansy has bloomed and has pretty little yellow cap flowers that smell sweet rather than flowery. The Tansy flowers dry easily and are a nice addition to Potpourri.

Then there is the rascally chipmunk digging up my pea seeds, removing the pink seed cover and chomping on the newly sprouted seeds. I sprayed the pea bed with animal repellant, which is thoroughly repulsive and I put an ultrasonic solar animal repeller aimed right at the bed. I bought three of these things from www.animaloff.com. Quickly entering the As Seen on TV Sucker club.

Ms. Chipmunk ate seeds right in front of me and with the ultrasonic animal repeller aimed right at her. I could see the red light flashing detecting her movement. She did not leave my garden until I yelled right in her seed-stuffed puffy cheeks, “YOU are not allowed in here!” So yesterday, I worked on the outside of my garden, the side that backs to the woods, and cleared weeds and patched a large section of fence with small gauge wire fence and then rocks along the base of the fence for those dig-ins. Hopefully, this worked as I re-planted the pea bed after. The ultrasonic animal repellers are going back for a full refund.

Harvested:

  • Napoles Carrots — I stuffed a gallon Ziploc bag full of these huge orange beauties
  • 3 Heads of Snow Crown Cauliflower — I am the only one who eats cauliflower so I only grow it for myself. The heat we’ve had this summer gave the cauliflower a purplish blush.
  • Mini Red Bell Peppers
  • Northern Delight Tomatoes — these are small 2″ round tasy tomatoes.
  • More cucumbers, yellow squash and zucchini — Don’t forget that chickens love overgrown summer squash. I cut them into chunks right there in their yard for them. We are too close to our neighbors to let our chickens run wherever so they have a large fenced yard and coop.

I have a gardener’s apron that ties around my waist. I have these things in my apron pockets that I never go into my garden without and which makes my time there easier and more efficient:

  1. Sharp-pointed Garden Shears
  2. Twine
  3. Plant Labels
  4. Permanent Marker
  5. Gloves

For suppers past week:

  • Sliced Cucumber, Grilled Yellow Squash (Olive Oil & Herbs), Grilled Chicken Breast, Pasta, Fresh Green Beans
  • Cheesy Eggs with Bacon Burritoes with peppers and onion
  • Matt’s Green Bean Casserole
  • Homemade Pizzas with blanched Yellow Squash, Mini Red Bell Peppers, Green Pepper, Onions, Sliced Olives, Mushrooms and Pepperonis

What came from the garden or farm for the above foods:

  • Cucumber
  • Yellow Squash & Zucchini
  • Herbs- Basil, Oregano, Parsley, French Thyme
  • Red & Green Peppers
  • Green Beans
  • Onion
  • Eggs

Matt’s Green Bean Casserole

2 Large Handfuls Green Beans, trimmed

1 Can Cream of Potato Soup

1 Onion, sliced and caramelized

3 slices Bacon cooked crispy and crumbled

Fresh Basil & Oregano

1 tsp. Sea Salt

Throw all ingredients together in casserole dish, cover and back at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes or so, until bubbly. Even the 12 year-old wolfed this down. Delicious!

It looks like the unknown chickens from the Hatchery are all roosters!


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3. July 30, 2010 Strawberry Margueritas

Supper last night:

  • Vegetable and Bean Minestrone from 500 Best Healthy Recipes. Recipe found by daughter Sarah. From garden: potatoes, broccoli, carrots, onions, celery, basil. Delicious. 500 Best Healthy Recipes

Supper Tonight:

  • Strawberry Margueritas made with frozen OG strawberries from the garden
  • Little Caeser’s Pizza! Yes. My neck hurts. I couldn’t make homemade pizza tonight.

Harvested:

  • 2 Very large bundles of Aroma and Sweet Basil. Basil was washed and then hung upside down to dry. I keep the bundles together with rubber bands and store the bundle in a paper bag, with holes cut out, and hang this.
  • A handful of Gusto Hot and Jalapeno Peppers
  • 1/2 gallon of Bush Beans
  • 2 large Zucchini and 3 large Yellow Squash

My chiropractor is getting a bag of vegetables tomorrow, the Hot Peppers were especially picked for him. He usually plants a garden but just couldn’t this year. Dr Kyle saved me on Memorial Day from the worse pain ever when I threw some of my ribs out.

Jen’s Strawberry Margeuritas:

  • 4 oz Strawberry Marguerita Mix. My favorite is Mr & Mrs T’s.
  • 2 oz. Bacardi Rum
  • 1/2 to 1 cup frozen strawberries

Put the Marguerita Mix liquid in the blender first, then the rum, then the frozen strawberries on top. Blend until smooth. No ice is needed. This makes one serving.

Margueritas take the edge off the anxiety that comes when your economic future is unclear after your economic assets have been devastated through no fault of your own, you just happen to be living in the here & now and your small business is struggling to survive after being successful before that economic crash that was no fault of your own.


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4. July 28, 2010 Eating out of the Garden

We are trying to live out “Eat Local” and especially, “Eat out of our Garden”. Inspired by the economic crash, desiring tasty vegetables and a healthy lifestyle and further reinforced by Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.

For lunch:

  • Sliced fresh cucumber 
  • Amy’s Vegan Zucchini Carrot Muffins from the recipe book Well Preserved by Joan Hassol

For supper last night:

  • Grilled chicken with grilled Yum Yum Gold sweet peppers
  • Disappearing Zucchini Orzo from Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle — from the garden: zucchini, thyme, onion
  • Fresh Pole Beans

For supper tonight:

  • Vegetable Chili — from the garden: carrots, zucchini, onion, celery, homemade salsa from 09, green pepper
  • Bread Machine made Sourdough Bread

I can’t use Hassol’s jam recipes as she uses sugar in abundance. We are happy with the Sure-Jell Reduced Sugar Jam recipes from the direction sheet that comes right inside the pectin box. The muffins are delicious though, but only the adults like them thus far. The Disappearing Zucchini Orzo did not go over well and won’t be cooked again.

Harvested:

  • 2 gallon bags of Renegade Bush Bean from just two 4′ rows
  • 1 gallon bag of Hurricane Bush Bean from two 4′ rows
  • Another gallon bag of Malibu Pole Bean
  • Another 1/2 gallon bag of Sunset Pole Bean
  • One large Tigress Zucchini
  • 4 Yellow Crookneck Squash

All beans are to be blanched and laid on cookie baking sheets then bagged in Ziploc Freezer Bags and stored in freezer.

While picking bush beans I found four Monarch Butterfly caterpillars eating my Dill. Farmer Bob and I carefully carried them over to the Milkweed Plant I have left growing in the garden. I do need the Dill to make pickles and to make the most scrumptious Old English-style fried fish in winter.

The Gate to the Garden

 The Monarda or Bee Balm growing on the outside of the garden fence has been a constant buzz of action this summer. Without bees, there is no pollination. Yes, I overhead water. Same as rain falls. I water my garden between 4pm and 6pm in the evening, cooling plants down while not wasting water during a day of hot sun.

A Monarch Caterpillar ?

Ageratum <

2 Comments on July 28, 2010 Eating out of the Garden, last added: 7/30/2010
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5. Our Small Farm Update

I have always wanted a farm, since I was a very young child. Every year, me and Farmer Bob expand our small farm. This year we have an additional small corn field with pumpkins growing at the edges to keep the raccoons out. We did not prepare the soil well enough and the corn and pumpkins have needed alot of fertilizer and we cannot keep the weeds down. The field is aprox. 60 feet by 35 feet. Lesson learned.

My main garden is truly beautiful this summer. Pole beans have been in for a couple of weeks. I am especially pleased with the Malibu Pole Bean. Bush beans need harvesting tomorrow and more yellow squash is in. I left the garden alone for a couple of days and so today, the chickens feasted on overgrown yellow crookneck squash.

For supper tonight, fresh veggie tray with early carrots (thinned out from main crop), Diva cucumber sliced, early Tango celery stalks. Fresh green beans — Sunset and Malibu Pole. Lettuce for our hamburger and pickles from last season.

Planted my fall crop of broccoli and cabbage after pulling the Candy Onion crop from its bed. Not a fantastic crop of onions — raised bed lacking in adequate depth I think. Planted fall crop of Premium Shelling Peas.

Expanded our turkey brood to 22 turkeys this year. Narragansett turkeys. We will harvest so many, sell so many, and keep some to breed and raise a new flock. When we received our shipment of young turkeys this May, many many were dead in the shipping box. This was especially upsetting and we won’t use this hatchery again. When they shipped our replacements, they also included seven chicks of unknown variety. We opened up our old coop and fenced the yard and now we have seven chickens of unknown variety and unknown sex.

Still did not get a blueberry crop. We have done something wrong to our blueberry plants and they no longer fruit. Looks like we need to cut them down and start again. Not a good strawberry year either.

I have picked off more slugs and snails and thrown them to the chickens than I care to ever remember.


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6. 15 Pounds of Carrots


I harvested about 15 pounds of organic carrots yesterday out of my kitchen garden. My kitchen garden is a large raised bed outside, right next to my — yes, you guessed it — kitchen! By Golly, Ned, you just won a free copy of my limited edition Guide To Parallel Universe Travel For Less.

Carrots store very well in the fridge, but I will slice and freeze about 9 pounds of these carrots for stews and soups and roasts this winter. I have carrots growing in my main garden in amongst my tomatoes and the end of this month I will sow my fall crop of carrots. My daughter will eat Mom’s fresh garden carrots raw but not “store ones”.

I harvested more calendula yesterday and hung the flowers to dry. We ate fresh green beans with our dinner.  There is quite a measure of assurance for me to grow some of our own food. Not to mention that it tastes superior to anything you can buy in a grocery store.

My daughter and I then canned 10 jars of blueberry jam. This jam cost me 6$ in jars, $2.50 in Reduced Sugar Pectin, $4.50 in fresh blueberries and about .30 cents in sugar. For $13.30 we made $30 (at least) in jam. Next year, we will have the jars and hopefully, the blueberries in our berry patch will fruit better.

Canning jam with my 11 year old was a lot of fun. She pushed the pulse button on the food processor to chop (not puree) the blueberries, she measured precisely — remember canning is chemistry — she poured the sugar quickly into the blueberry jam in its rolling boil — and her most favorite, she ladled the ready jam into the funnel on the jar. She got very good at knowing how much to ladle in to get the right headspace. I did all the hot dangerous activities with the hot jars and boiling water. We have a lid lifter — a green plastic stick with a magnet on one end — and this fascinated her to no end. She also enjoyed filling out the pretty labels and wants to be the one who sticks the labels on the jars.

It is much cheaper to entertain children then we give them credit for. And they enjoy being productive and contributing to the family’s well-being.  Canning teaches math, chemistry, language arts, domestic arts, fundamental business principles and how to be self-sufficient.  And it is not as time consuming as you might think, we canned the blueberry jam in about one hour.

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7. Canning 101


This week I took my second class in home preservation. Not the kind of home preservation where you storm into the bank and make them stop all the foreclosures in your neighborhood so that your own property value doesn’t fall into the black abyss of no return.

Rather, the class covered how to can fruits and tomatoes in a hot water bath and the week before was how to can jams/jellies and how to freeze vegetables and fruits. Why take these classes?

  1. It may be the end of the world and I’m gonna want some fruit.
  2. It is kinda stupid to grow food and throw away what you can’t eat. Like investing in the stock market.
  3. You never know what they really put in those cans you buy at the grocery store, especially anything from China.

A long time ago, I canned some strawberry jam. Otherwise, I have mostly frozen my garden produce or stored it. Last summer I tried to make refrigerator pickles that were put in jars, but stored in the fridge. These jars of pickles became fizzing stink bombs, needless to say, no pickles for us.

It is not that hard to make your own jams/jellies and can your own tomatoes and fruits. There is also pectin now for freezer jam and last weekend, I made 5 jars of blueberry freezer jam. It is much cheaper to make your own jam.  Even if you have to buy the fruit. For instance, I needed 5 cups of crushed blueberries, the pectin, and the fancy twist-on-caps freezer jars. I spent 8.69$ to make 15$ worth of jam and next year, I will not need to buy jars again. Hopefully, if the bees ever make a comeback, I will grow enough blueberries again to produce jam. It’s not looking good this year for blueberries here.

Our teacher shared many enlightened stories in case we were mentally impaired. For instance, canning in a hot water bath is never done in the bathroom. The bathtub is not where you work at. What a revelation! We also learned not to use Alzheimer inflicting aluminum pans and instruments when canning tomatoes after we did so in our hands-on classroom. I mean she actually made us use an aluminum pan to make salsa in. I could feel the aluminum robbing my capacity to remember what I was learning as I breathed in the salsa fumes cooking in the pan.

I am going to work on adding to my horde soon. Apricot jam. Blueberry Jam. Peaches. Pears. Tomatoes. Canned to store on a shelf. Hopefully, raspberry jam from my patch, but I’m worried about not seeing a lot of fruit.

Do you ever wonder if there is some kind of mass conspiracy to prevent us from being able to grow our own food? I mean, what is it with the weather? I truly have no idea what will grow in my garden this year because of this freaky weather. And how about GMO seeds- seeds that grow produce that have sterile seeds and cannot grow without being sprayed with cancer inducing pesticides? And what has happened to our bees? No bees, no pollinization, no fruit/vegetables.

When you work your tush off planting non GMO seeds and hoeing and weeding and siccing the chickens on the slugs and snails that are taking over the world and spraying NEEM oil and picking the bugs off by hand and there is not much food produced as a result, there is something going on. Don’t you think?

I figure if the aliens invade, or if they declare Martial Law, or if hyper-inflation brings out the wheelbarrows to haul our dollars in, my family and I can hide in the basement and eat jam out of the jar.

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8. Delicious & Quick Homemade Strawberry Jam


I tried a new recipe for jam the other day. I didn’t want to can any strawberry jam and didn’t want to make alot of it. It is not the big flavor in our house. I will wait for my raspberries to come in and make raspberry jam.

Which reminds me to sign up for the MSU extension food preservation workshops today. It has been a long time since I tried canning. I usually freeze or store. Last year, I tried to can refrigerator pickles (six month life in fridge) and ALL of those failed. Fizzing bubbles in the cans and bad smell. Canning makes me nervous, but I want to tackle it.

This homemade organic strawberry jam is so delicious I have begun inventing excuses to have some. It tastes like jam used to taste when I was a child in the 1970’s. We usually don’t eat jam that has sugar in it, so I lessened the amount of sugar the recipe called for and then further lessened it when I made a second batch. The recipe takes about an hour from start to finish and produces about one cup of strawberry jam that will sit in the fridge for two weeks. This is a good way to use imperfect strawberries. Slice off the imperfections and tops into a container for the chickens and rabbits and slice the good parts into your measuring cup.

From The America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook:

4 cups sliced thin strawberries

2 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice (yes, I squeezed a fresh lemon)

3/4 cup sugar (but I reduced this down to less than 1/2)

Put these ingredients in a stainless steel skillet for faster cooking or a pot for slower cooking. On medium heat, stir nearly continuously and keep on a simmer. When strawberries have cooked down to about half their original amount and the concoction looks syrupy and is thickening, take a small spoonful out and put into a bowl that sits on top of ice water in another bowl. If after 30 seconds, the jam doesn’t run when you tip the bowl, the jam is finished. Keep cooking if it is too runny. I cooked my jam much longer than the recipe called for, as I’m not interested in runny jam.

I made a couple of extra batches of this jam out of another bucket of strawberries I just picked for Father’s Day presents.

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9. Strawberries


BerriesThis is what I picked out of my organic berry patch today. Sarah, 11, helped only until her legs got sore. Berry picking is hard work. This is my second bucket and it is only June 13th. I am predicting I will need to pick at least two more times.

Today, I will wash through them all. The ones with defects, I cut off their tops and the defects and put these in a container. I then slice the remainder of the berry into a 2 cup size bowl and add maybe a 1/4 cup sugar. This will be topping for shortcake and angel food cake, and some of us just eat it out of a dish.

The container of berry tops and bad parts will be shared between the rabbit and the chickens.

A small portion of the rest will go in another container for fresh eating.

Cookie Loves Eating Strawberries

Cookie Loves Eating Strawberries

I will freeze the remainder. First, I pull the tops off — not cut them off — then I set them in a single layer on cookie sheets that I’d covered with wax paper. These cookie sheets will be placed in my freezer. In a couple of days, I will then bag the frozen strawberries into freezer plastic bags. Frozen strawberries are used in my house in fruit smoothies, strawberry margaritas and as snacks. All of my kids have always eaten frozen berries as a snack.

My strawberry patch is about 20 feet long by 10 feet wide. It is a raised bed made from recycled railroad ties (recycled in that they were pulled off other people’s yards) and we filled the strawberry side of the bed with sandy soil. My berries are both June-bearing and everbearing and I planted many varieties. I probably have about 150 plants. The spray I generally use for pests is Neem oil or other organic pest sprays and I fertilize my berries using the all natural Spray-n-grow products.

BerryPatch

Strawberry and Blue/Black Berry Raised Bed

The strawberry patch is combined with our blueberries and blackberries and it is fenced with also 2′ of chicken wire running along the bottom. Steel hoops were placed over the top and the entire area was covered in a netting that in its former life was used in a pond to keep the leaves out in fall.  The netting has holes large enough to allow the bees in and out, but small enough to keep the birds out. 

We did run a water line out to the patch, the spigot can be seen in the left front corner. I do water my berries once weekly, if it did not rain enough. It is especially important to keep well-watered new strawberry plants their first summer.

Strawberries are very easy to grow. This year, I grew Borage from seed and placed several of these plants in the strawberry patch to help repel pests. But pests have not really been a problem in the berry patch.

I am making strawberry shortcake tonight — with homemade whipped cream!

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10. Garden Update Aug 4th


No blueberries this year! First-year raspberries coming in, but in handfuls. Enough to sprinkle on a bowl of yogurt.

Lots of zucchini and yellow squash. Thinking of freezing it in cubes for vegetable chili.

Still freezing pounds of green beans.

Two holes dug under the fence. Coons? Corn will be ripe in about 2-3 weeks. Things seem to be growing slowly. Will put masking tape around the corn cobs soon so coons can’t eat them.

Harvested then dried my own snow pea seeds then planted four to see if they’d grow or if they were GMO seeds. Next year, will make sure I know where the seed came from. No Monsanto seed for me! One of my seeds sprouted - 25% germination rate.

Having a problem with the potatoes I grew near the roots of an Oak tree. They are withering and failing to produce much while others are flourishing.

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11. Garden Update June 24th


Picked my first bowl of snow peas. Brocccoli not doing well, even though I purchased plants. Tiny heads and they have been flowering. Not enough to freeze, only a serving or two to eat fresh.

Still have strawberries to pick today. Still have lots of weeding to do and then mulching.

A male rose-breasted grosbeak has perished and was stiffly on his side in my potato row. I found him yesterday and could see no evidence of disease or injury. West Nile Virus? The neighbor’s cat? Why there? Did he land and hop around in my garden and then suddenly keel over?

My entire property is overrun with slugs and snails this summer. Piles of them everywhere and in all of my gardens and flower beds. We are hand-picking them and removing them to the woods and spreading diatemaceous earth. Did the grosbeak eat a powdered slug?

There is a large garter snake making her home in my garden. I don’t mind if I see her before she slithers away, but otherwise, she startles me.

 

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12. Garden Update June 16th


Picking buckets of strawberries out of the patch. Making pound cake and strawberries tonight.

Two moles have been found dead and just lying there, in the grass. Are these my arch-enemies with their just dues? What killed them?

Lot’s of lettuce- anyone want salad?

Disappointed with Jung’s seeds. Germination rate on some seeds is only 10% and none of my Spirit pumpkin seeds germinated at all. None of the germination rates match Burpee’s or Park’s seeds. Will not buy Jung’s seeds ever again and have to gather empty packets and call for refund. Replanted summer squash and pumpkins with Burpee seeds — it’s not too late to get pumpkins in for Halloween.

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13. Bouncing on toes

I am standing at the mouth of the Cave of Revision, impatiently waiting for the coffee pot to finish making coffee. I think I have a few more long days on this revision before I turn it in.

So. Here are my rambling, hurry-up-coffee-pot notes:

1. Yesterday, I corresponded with readers in Brazil and Norway. How cool is that?

2. My latest obsession is worm castings. Yes, that is a polite word for worm poop. I am gardening organically this year and worms are my new best friends. I am looking for a source in Central New York, if anyone knows of one. So far, I've been ordering them from Vermont, and am having a friend's family (who are in the business of producing worm poop, don't ask) bring me some on their next visit to the area.

Go ahead, laugh, but you should see what it is doing to my broccoli plants.

3. If you live in Michigan, please vote for the Thumbs Up! Award by May 30th! (twistedtwistedtwistedtwisted)

4. Little birds have been reporting that the TWISTED paperback version is turning up in stores in one of those cardboard stands. (Those are called dumps, but after my discussion of worm poop, I am not going there.) Have you seen one?

5. When you are in the bookstore, be sure to buy Tanya Lee Stone's newest wonderful picture book: Elizabeth Leads the Way: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Right to Vote. It has been named a Book Links Best New Books of 2008, and a Booklist Top Ten Youth Biography, and is sure to garner more awards soon.

Not only is it a wonderful book, but Tanya just made a generous contribution that brought my Beloved Husband's fund raising efforts to his goal of $2,500!!! ALL HAIL TANYA! (Please give her some love on her blog!)

The fund raising is done! The fund raising is done! Our nice friends chipped in $5000 for cancer research! ::dances around the cave!!

Now all we have to do is run 13.1 miles on June 15th! ::sits down on cave floor::

No, really, our training has been going very well, so it shouldn't be a problem. We ran 13.3 miles two weeks ago, and had a hilly 10.5 mile run on Sunday. That one aggravated some tendon issues, but everything will heal in time because I said it would.

6. INDEPENDENT DAMES received another awesome blog review. This one is of particular interest to middle school teachers.

7. CHAINS has been chosen as a Junior Library Guild selection!

8. Did I mention how great my broccoli looks?

The coffee is done and my characters are whining for me to hurry up because they have a lot to do today. See ya!

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14. Someone Named Eva

I’ve read quite a bit of historical fiction set in Nazi Europe, but SOMEONE NAMED EVA by Joan M. Wolf takes a look at a part of World War II that I never knew about.  Eva is really Milada – a young Czech girl who has blond hair and blue eyes that allow her to pass as a German.  The Nazis raid her village and steal her from her family; they take her name, her language, and her very identity in an attempt to remake her into one of them.  

This book is beautifully written, and I simply ached for Milada, renamed Eva, every time I turned a page.  Wolf writes with a sensitivity that allows us to understand how a young Czech girl could feel herself slipping into another identity.  

The characters in this historical novel seem painfully real, and the author’s extensive research, which took her to Czechoslovakia in search of her roots, is evident throughout the book. The author’s note explains how that research is woven into the novel, though it never feels like you’re being fed facts while you’re reading. No matter how much you’ve read about the Holocaust, you’ll come away with a new perspective.  Mostly, though, your heart will break for Milada.

Joan Wolf’s debut novel provides a unique perspective on a much-written-about chapter in world history. More than that, though, it provides readers with a heartbreaking and thought provoking journey through the human spirit – at its best and at its worst.  SOMEONE LIKE EVA is a poignant book about survival, redemption, holding on, and remembering who you are.

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