Between Shades of Gray

Between Shades of Gray

2011 • 303 pages

Ratings47

Average rating4.3

15

*Audiobook Review

Appears I'm in the minority here. Let me start off with this: World war II was brutal, and this book covers a very important topic. It is a solemn reminder that non-jews were also affected and persecuted. In this case, it focuses on the Lithuanian people.

So why two stars?
- Audiobook narration. Oh god... where do I start? It was like Barbie narrating the holocaust. There was too much bubbly personality shining through. It was great for the flashback scenes, but completely took me out of their suffering. Made it sound like they were at a summer camp.
- Cliche love interest, hold heroine, artistic, misunderstood enemy, etc. Honestly, felt like the publisher made her include these to qualify as a YA novel. I enjoyed the non YA cliche moments.
- Ridiculous main character. She was outspoken, made brash decisions, stole, fought back. Maybe some real prisoners where like that, but I expect she'd have been shot the first time she spoke out.
- unrealistic. A man with a broken leg survives, while women are murdered for sobbing. Yes, it's eventually explained, but it was far fetched.

Was there any good?
Yes!
- suffering. There were some incredibly heartbreaking scenes. They reminded me of classics like Schindler's List, and The Pianist. I thought they were very strong images that young readers should be more aware of.
- theme/plot/story. The story was strong. I didn't know about the Lithuanian tragedy before this book. I applaud it for brining attention to their suffering.


Overall, The topic was incredibly important, but the YA stereotypes cheapened the story. The audiobook narration was way too bubbly and ruined the book. I know I would have enjoyed it more if I had read it in regular book format.

January 10, 2018Report this review