From School Library Journal:
YA?In this third book in a series that begins with Loss of Innocence and continues with Adolescence (both NBM, 1997), Jonas tries to take action against the people oppressing him. He and his friends hide forbidden manuscripts for his employer the night before the bookseller is arrested. Jonas begins dating Tatiana, the daughter of a Russian attache to the Embassy. When her parents find out he is the son of an "enemy of the people," they forbid her to see him, but the young lovers arrange secret meetings. In the end, however, her parents take her back to Russia. Jonas also finds out that this father has been sentenced to 10 more years in prison, setting up the situation for the fourth (and possible final) book. The story is conveyed not only through words, but also through pictures, which create the world of Prague in the 1950s. Nuances of expression and body language add shades of meaning to the story, which is told solely through dialogue. Giardino manages to suggest characters' flaws and quirks using only pen and ink. From Tatiana's mother, sly and manipulative, to hard-drinking, practical Slovak, each character has a unique look and personality. Jonas's plight is real and dramatic without those who persecute him ever becoming caricatures of evil. They are simply people acting on their own motivation. A must for collections that own the first two books, and highly recommended elsewhere.?Susan Salpini, Kings Park Library, Burke, VA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist:
Teenagers Jonas Finkel and Tatiana Gostrov, who met in A Jew in Communist Prague: Adolescence , are getting serious about each other. In 1950s Czechoslovakia, because of who they are, that is serious indeed. Jonas is a Jew, the son of an imprisoned enemy of the people and the employee of a bookseller regarded with suspicion by the state. Tatiana is the daughter of the business attacheat the Russian embassy; for her, seeing a shady character like Jonas is risky--her father could lose his job if she continues. Giardino takes his beautifully realized graphic novel into star-crossed-lovers territory in its third volume while keeping the theme of political repression foremost. For the net is closing around the bookseller, who is helping distribute contraband literature from a cache of it, in the store's basement, that Jonas and his friends--clandestine readers of it--move off site just before security officers raid the place. And then Jonas learns that Tatiana's parents have taken her back to Moscow. To be continued. Ray Olson
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