(4/23/2024)
This powerful book takes place primarily within 2 settings - one in California in 1938, the other in Austria in around the same time.
The first part of the book is about Roseann, who is orphaned at 16 yo when her parents and younger brother are killed in a tragic accident. The owners of the vineyard where her father worked take her in and have her serve as their maid and assistant cook, to give her life skills. When she gets pregnant, the wife has her sent to an institution for the feeble minded, psychotic and otherwise dysfunctional individuals. Here, her Synthesia (the sensory experience of seeing colors and shapes when hearing words or music) is explored. She has the baby, a little girl, but is not permitted to bond with the child, and is involuntarily sterilized soon afterwards.
The last half of the book takes place at the same time, where Helene, the sister of the vineyard owner, who has lived in Europe for 20 yrs, working as a nanny in England, France and Austria. She becomes attached to the children that she tends and when one child, with minor disabilities is taken from the home and placed in an institution where she suddenly dies from Pneumonia, Helene is forced to find other employment. She eventually returns to California.
The ending was predictable, but fortunately, poignant and happy.
The author thoroughly researched Eugenics and it's effects here and in Nazi controlled countries, and brought together the two parallel stories beautifully. I had heard of Eugenics, although did not imagine the extent of it's use in the USA well before the Nazis used it (legalized in California from 1909 -1979 where 20,000 people were sterilized).
I received a complimentary paperback copy from Bookbrowse and am participating in their current book discussion - and there is a lot to discuss about this book, which I highly recommend.