Returning to the country that has inspired some of her best-loved fiction - including the modern classic, The Island Victoria Hislops enthralling new novel explores love across battle lines and the lasting repercussions of splintered loyalty. As Greece is fractured by German occupation, brutal civil war and dictatorship, one womans life is shaped by her countrys history, forced to choose between her principles and the promise of freedom.
Those Who Are Loved is set against the backdrop of the German occupation of Greece, the subsequent civil war and a military dictatorship, all of which left deep scars.
Themis is part of a family bitterly divided by politics and, as a young woman, her fury with those who have collaborated with the Nazis, drives her to fight for the communists. She is eventually imprisoned on the notorious islands of exile, Makronisos and Trikeri, and has to make a life or death decision. She is proud of having fought, but for the rest of her life is haunted by some of her actions. Forty years after the end of the civil war, she finally achieves catharsis.
Victoria Hislop sheds light on the complexity of Greeces traumatic past and weaves it into the dynamic tale of a woman who is both hero and villain, and her lifelong fight for justice.
" Those Who Are Loved has been germinating for a decade now, from the moment I first saw the island of Makronisos from the Greek mainland. I was told it was uninhabited, but had been a prison camp for communists. The discovery compelled me to read about the Greek civil war (in which many women played a role), but of course it also meant researching the events that led to that conflict as well as the long-term after-effects that are still seen in Greece even today. Everyone knows how much I love Greece, but exploring this story has taken me to some new and disquieting places." - Victoria Hislop
Publisher: Headline Publishing Group
ISBN: 9781472223227
Number of pages: 512
Weight: 400 g
Dimensions: 196 x 128 x 36 mm
'Nobody writes about Greece quite like Victoria Hislop' - Red magazine
Returning to the country that has inspired some of her best-loved fiction - including the modern classic, The Island Victoria Hislops enthralling new novel explores love across battle lines and the lasting repercussions of splintered loyalty. As Greece is fractured by German occupation, brutal civil war and dictatorship, one womans life is shaped by her countrys history, forced to choose between her principles and the promise of freedom.
Those Who Are Loved is set against the backdrop of the German occupation of Greece, the subsequent civil war and a military dictatorship, all of which left deep scars.
Themis is part of a family bitterly divided by politics and, as a young woman, her fury with those who have collaborated with the Nazis, drives her to fight for the communists. She is eventually imprisoned on the notorious islands of exile, Makronisos and Trikeri, and has to make a life or death decision. She is proud of having fought, but for the rest of her life is haunted by some of her actions. Forty years after the end of the civil war, she finally achieves catharsis.
Victoria Hislop sheds light on the complexity of Greeces traumatic past and weaves it into the dynamic tale of a woman who is both hero and villain, and her lifelong fight for justice.
" Those Who Are Loved has been germinating for a decade now, from the moment I first saw the island of Makronisos from the Greek mainland. I was told it was uninhabited, but had been a prison camp for communists. The discovery compelled me to read about the Greek civil war (in which many women played a role), but of course it also meant researching the events that led to that conflict as well as the long-term after-effects that are still seen in Greece even today. Everyone knows how much I love Greece, but exploring this story has taken me to some new and disquieting places." - Victoria Hislop
Publisher: Headline Publishing Group
ISBN: 9781472223227
Number of pages: 512
Weight: 400 g
Dimensions: 196 x 128 x 36 mm
'Nobody writes about Greece quite like Victoria Hislop' - Red magazine