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Oranges for Christmas
Oranges for Christmas | Margarita Morris
1 post | 1 read | 3 to read
The War is over, but for Sabine the fight for freedom has only just begun. 1961. The Cold War. Berlin is an occupied city - the Western Allies in the West; the Soviets in the East. Berliners go about their daily lives as best they can, until one day they wake up to discover their city has been torn in half by barbed wire - great tangled coils of it snaking through the city. Within days East German soldiers are turning the barbed wire into a solid wall. The Berlin Wall. 17 year old Sabine lives in East Berlin with her mother and younger sister. Sabine's brother, Dieter, lives in West Berlin. The family is divided and they have no hope of being reunited. The only answer is for Sabine, her sister and mother to escape Communist East Berlin. But the Berlin Wall is guarded by armed soldiers who are operating a shoot to kill policy and almost everyone is under surveillance by the secret police, the Stasi. The smallest error can have you arrested and interrogated. Even imprisoned. Can Dieter find a way to get his family out of East Berlin? Can Sabine escape the clutches of the secret police? Can she lead her mother and sister to safety? And who, amongst her friends and neighbours, can she trust? Oranges for Christmas is an historical thriller that will keep you gripped to the end. Author Q&A Q - What inspired you to write Oranges for Christmas? A - I studied German at university and in 1987 I spent three weeks in West Berlin. I was fascinated and shocked by this vibrant city with the Wall running through the middle of it. From viewing platforms in the West you could see the death strip and the guard towers - this was the Cold War for real. I remember standing on a platform in West Berlin and looking across the Wall at the Brandenburg Gate. One day my friend, who is a West Berliner, and I travelled to East Berlin. This would not have been possible for West Berliners in 1961 when the Wall first went up. We travelled on the U-Bahn, the underground, through a series of ghost stations, to Friedrichstrasse. East Berlin was a drab place with old-fashioned Trabants on the roads and virtually nothing in the shops. It was clear that the Communist experiment was a failure. Q - Have you been back to Berlin since the Wall fell in 1989? A - Yes, I first went back there in 1991 on an Inter-rail holiday. It was a fabulous experience to be able to walk through the Brandenburg Gate from West to East Berlin, so different from my first experience of seeing the Brandenburg Gate behind the Wall. I also took my family to Berlin in 2013. So much has changed. Potsdamer Platz used to be part of the death strip, but now it's a dynamic and exciting city centre with modern sky-scrapers and a huge Imax cinema. Q - Is it still possible to see parts of the Berlin Wall? A - Yes. I would recommend anyone interested in this period of history to visit the Wall Memorial at Bernauer Strasse where a large section of the Wall remains. There are also two visitor centres at Bernauer Strasse with informative and moving displays and videos. The Stasi HQ at Normannenstrasse is now a museum and the remand prison at Hohenschonhausen is a memorial centre where you can take a very informative guided tour. Q - Who should read Oranges for Christmas? A - Teenagers and adults alike all really seem to enjoy the novel. 13+ is probably the lower age limit, but there's no upper age limit."
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Oranges for Christmas | Margarita Morris
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#ChristmasinJuly @Roary47 @Littlewolf1 I'm listening to the audiobook of Oranges for Christmas. There's only an hour left, and so far, there's no Christmas. It is a good book for historical fiction, middle grade fans. It's very similar to A Night Divided.
I finished the Great Fire of London for #bookedintime I was somewhat disappointed, too short and dry. I have several more books for 17th century Britain. @Cuilin

Cuilin That is disappointing, hope your other reads are an improvement. 1y
Littlewolf1 😊 1y
Roary47 How disappointing! Maybe a happy ending with Christmas. 1y
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