Good Night, Maman
Karin Levi’s world of family, school, and friends is torn apart when the German army occupies Paris in June of 1940. Karin and her brother, Marc, like Jews all over Europe, find themselves on the run, seeking safety wherever they can find it. When Marc obtains two coveted places aboard a ship bound for the United States, Karin knows that crossing the ocean means she may never see her beloved parents again. Yet she and Marc have little choice if they are to survive. Karin’s unforgettable story—revealing the little-known world of a handful of European refugees in World War II America—tells of survival, of growing up, and of love’s ability to endure even the most extraordinary circumstances.

1101230792
Good Night, Maman
Karin Levi’s world of family, school, and friends is torn apart when the German army occupies Paris in June of 1940. Karin and her brother, Marc, like Jews all over Europe, find themselves on the run, seeking safety wherever they can find it. When Marc obtains two coveted places aboard a ship bound for the United States, Karin knows that crossing the ocean means she may never see her beloved parents again. Yet she and Marc have little choice if they are to survive. Karin’s unforgettable story—revealing the little-known world of a handful of European refugees in World War II America—tells of survival, of growing up, and of love’s ability to endure even the most extraordinary circumstances.

12.95 In Stock
Good Night, Maman

Good Night, Maman

by Norma Fox Mazer
Good Night, Maman

Good Night, Maman

by Norma Fox Mazer

Paperback(First Edition)

$12.95 
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Overview

Karin Levi’s world of family, school, and friends is torn apart when the German army occupies Paris in June of 1940. Karin and her brother, Marc, like Jews all over Europe, find themselves on the run, seeking safety wherever they can find it. When Marc obtains two coveted places aboard a ship bound for the United States, Karin knows that crossing the ocean means she may never see her beloved parents again. Yet she and Marc have little choice if they are to survive. Karin’s unforgettable story—revealing the little-known world of a handful of European refugees in World War II America—tells of survival, of growing up, and of love’s ability to endure even the most extraordinary circumstances.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780152061739
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 04/12/2010
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 185
Product dimensions: 5.10(w) x 7.50(h) x 0.60(d)
Lexile: 510L (what's this?)
Age Range: 10 - 12 Years

About the Author

NORMA FOX MAZER is the award-winning author of many novels for young people. She has been honored with the Christopher Award, a Newbery Honor, the Edgar Allen Poe Award, and a National Book Award nomination. She and her husband, novelist Harry Mazer, divide their tiem between Jamesville, New York, and New York City.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

The Visitor

Madame Zetain had a visitor downstairs. Whenever this happened, everything stopped in our attic room, everything went silent. We didn't talk. We didn't move. We didn't sneeze or scratch an itch. We could breathe, but it had better be silent breathing.

As soon as we heard the knock on the door, Maman went to the mattress, I eased myself to the floor, and Marc took his Buddha pose.

The voices murmuring below went on and on. What could they be talking about for so long? Maman said small towns had few secrets. Mat if Madame was telling the secret of us? Leaning across the table, whispering, Don't say a word, my friend, but I've got three Jews hidden in this house. Right up there. Right above our heads. Her friend would gasp and make a terrible face, as if the very thought of Jews made her sick to her stomach.

Marc sat on top of the black trunk like a princecalm, his legs crossed, his hands loose in his lap. Was he thinking about home? Or girls ... or Papa? He said that at times like these, he went into his mind and stayed there.

"It's like taking a trip. Being somewhere else. Do it," he told me.

Fine for him to say, but for me it wasn't so simple. TO begin with, my heart beat like a drum. I read that in a book, and it was true. Whenever someone came into Madame Zetain's house, my heart beat just like a drum. It was doing it now, as if it were being pounded over and over, always on the same note. Huge thumps that felt as if they'd break open my chest and slam my heart straight through the floor.

It would be just like my heart to be so noisy and stupid.

Papa had called me Na NaNoisemaker-his nonsense name for me ever since I was little. I was always zooming around, making a mess, drawing and singing and talking. If I had no one to talk to, I talked to myself. When Papa came home from work, I'd fling myself at him like an arrow, shouting his name and telling him everything that had happened all day. Papa.

Sometimes when I had to be still, when I could do nothing, then that was what I felt. Nothing. But other times, what I felt was ... everything. Like now. It came over me like a huge wave, that feeling, my head turning hot as a stove and my breath rushing in and out. Inand-out, in-and-out, in-and-out—stop! I pinched myself hard.

Maman lay on the mattress like a log. Like someone dead. Maman. Open your eyes. Maman!

I was sure I hadn't even moved my lips, but Marc looked at me and shook his head.

I straightened my back. I would sit like this, utterly still, until Madame's visitor left. For the rest of the day, and all night, too, if necessary. Marc wasn't the only one who knew how to be patient.

That was one of Papa's favorite words. "Patience, Na Na Noisemaker," he'd say. "In time, the grass turns to milk." The first time I heard him say that, I was four years old. Grand-mere explained about cows and their several stomachs and how grass got digested. "Then I'm drinking grass?" I had shouted.

Now I understood a lot of things, and not only about cows and milk. I understood about patience. And that Papa, for once, had been wrong. Sometimes it made no difference how much patience you had. All the grass in the world could turn into all the milk in all the milk bottles, and one thing would never change. It would still be true that Papa had been arrested by our own French police and handed over to the Germans.

It was bad to think about this.

All right. I'd tell myself a story, and I'd begin it properly. Once upon a time...

Once upon a time there was a girl named Karin Levi. She was ten years old and quite nice and ordinary, like any French schoolgirl. Her brother, Marc, was two years older and skinny as a stick, although once he'd been a plump, plump boy. Karin had never been plump, but when they lived at home her knees were nice and padded. Now they were like two old bony faces, and as for her arms.

The muscles in my legs were cramping again. Marc claimed I could uncramp them if I concentrated properly. I concentrated. I ordered my legs to uncramp. It wasn't working.

The last time my legs cramped, I had leaped up without a thought and stamped my feet. Maman had been furious. "Mat if someone was in the house, you stupid girl!" Maman had never spoken to me like that before. Marc said, "Maman, it was an accident. She didn't mean to—"

"No," Maman said. "No excuses. Everything each of us does now matters. Everything. Do you understand? Karin! Answer."

"Yes," I said. I understand."

Maman nodded. "All right, then. It won't happen again." Her eyes had that swollen look, as if she'd been crying for hours.

I bit that place below my thumb where it was still a little fleshy. My skin tasted salty. When the war ended, I planned to eat everything I wanted to, salty and sweet, and no turnips or cabbage ever again. Madame Zetain was very fond of turnip stew and cabbage soup, and turnip and cabbage stew, and cabbage and turnip soup. Whatever it was, I ate it all-and whatever it was, it was never enough.

I breathed in, breathed out, deep slow breaths from my belly, the way Maman had taught me. I breathed and listened. Listened with ears, eyes, skin. Listened for a door slamming. For heavy footsteps and voices shouting, Come out, Jews, we know you're in there.

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