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Tears of Amber Kindle Edition
From the bestselling author of The Murmur of Bees comes a transportive novel of two families uprooted by war and united by the bonds of love and courage.
With war looming dangerously close, Ilse’s school days soon turn to lessons of survival. In the harshness of winter, her family must join the largest exodus in human history to survive. As battle lines are drawn and East Prussia’s borders vanish beneath them, they leave their farm and all they know behind for an uncertain future.
But Ilse also has Janusz, her family’s young Polish laborer, by her side. As they flee from the Soviet army, his enchanting folktales keep her mind off the cold, the hunger, and the horrors unfolding around them. He tells her of a besieged kingdom in the Baltic Sea from which spill the amber tears of a heartbroken queen.
Neither of them realizes his stories will prove crucial and prophetic.
Not far away, trying and failing to flee from a vengeful army, Arno and his mother hide in the ruins of a Königsberg mansion, hoping that once the war ends they can reunite their dispersed family. But their stay in the walled city proves untenable when they find themselves dodging bombs and scavenging in the rubble. Soon they’ll become pawns caught between two powerful enemies, on a journey with an unknown destination.
Hope carries these children caught in the crosshairs of war on an extraordinary pilgrimage in which the gift of an amber teardrop is at once a valuable form of currency and a symbol of resilience, one that draws them together against insurmountable odds.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAmazon Crossing
- Publication dateMay 1, 2021
- File size4.2 MB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
A New York Times Globetrotting Pick!
“Readers will quickly bond with the families and secondary characters, as Segovia, author of the acclaimed The Murmur of Bees (2019), makes each individual memorable. The variety of background stories and voices allows for greater understanding of shared experiences and creates deeper emotional engagement…Segovia’s novel provides the domestic perspective of those caught in conflicts they have no power to change. Book groups and individual readers will find plenty to appreciate and discuss.” —Booklist (starred review)
“Ably translated into English for an American readership by Simon Bruni, Tears of Amber is a deftly crafted and inherently engaging novel that fully showcases author Sofia Segovia’s genuine flair for eloquent originality and the kind of narrative storytelling style that is memorably entertaining and holds the reader’s rapt and riveted attention throughout.” —Midwest Book Review
“Segovia’s vivid descriptions of how refugees do whatever necessary to survive compels readers to be sympathetic with human struggles, rather than simply taking sides in a conflict. This story demonstrates the staggering toll war takes, especially on women, left to carry on…” —Authorlink
“Translated from Spanish, this breathtaking novel follows the stories of three children caught in the midst of war. In the middle of Prussia’s harsh winter, Ilse and her family must take part in the world’s largest exodus in history if they want to survive. While fleeing the Soviet army, she has only the folklore stories of Janusz, her Polish friend, to keep her spirits up. Not far away, Arno and his mother hide in an abandoned mansion, hoping to stay out of the clutches of war. But all of their lives will collide in this story of war, hope, and resilience.” —BuzzFeed
“A skillfully rendered tale, at once heartbreaking and heartwarming.” —The Washington Post
“Inspired by real events and published in English for the first time, Tears of Amber is an extraordinary and inspirational story.” —Ms. Magazine
“The novel provides thought-provoking information on the demise of the Prussian state…Interestingly, the famous real-life Aleksander Solzhenitsyn, who was imprisoned for criticizing the violence against Prussian civilians, makes an appearance in the novel. The story continues after the ending of WWII for, as Segovia says, history never ends.” —Historical Novel Society
“[An] achingly beautiful page-turner.” —Women’s Writers, Women’s Books
“Segovia’s newest novel, one sure to warm your heart, is Tears of Amber (Peregrinos is the Spanish version), focuses on two families from different regions of Prussia who flee their villages in an exodus provided by the horrors of World War II. It is hope that carries Ilse Hahlbrock and Arno Schipper, children caught in the crosshairs of war, on an extraordinary pilgrimage in which the gift of an amber teardrop is at once a valuable form of currency and a symbol of resilience. It draws them together against insurmountable odds.” —Brooklyn Digest
“This is the type of book that you need to take your time with. It is a gripping read that grabs hold of your heart and doesn’t let up. The characters come alive on the pages and you feel as if you are living the struggles, and some moments of joy, that they are going through right along with them. It truly is an atmospheric, all-encompassing read that it so hard to describe.” —Always With a Book
From the Publisher
With husbands and sons off to war and few ideas of what to do next, their mothers lead the children on the journey of their lifetimes, cobbling together makeshift communities along the road and in the rubble. Each must create a family so strong no struggle can tear it apart. Spinning ancient tales of heartbroken queens whose tears crystallize into the valuable amber they now trade for food not only passes the time but brings the sparkle of magic into even the grimmest circumstances. These small acts of love show that the bonds that connect us are grander and more powerful than the movements of history: love weaves the fabric of our experience just as much as war or politics. Together with these beautifully drawn characters, readers may find they, too, are twinkling brightly against even the darkest night—our worst moments the fuel for another tomorrow.
I won’t spoil the story of how love protects the children not only from bombs but also from trauma—suffice to say, hope wins. I invite you to get lost in another spellbinding, beautiful family saga from Sofía Segovia, every book club’s favorite guest and author of The Murmur of Bees.
- Gabriella Page-Fort, Editor
About the Author
Sofía Segovia was born in Monterrey, Mexico. She studied communications at Universidad de Monterrey, mistakenly thinking that she would be a journalist. But fiction is her first love. A creative writing teacher, she has also been a ghostwriter and communications director for local political campaigns and has written several plays for local theater. The Spanish edition of her bestselling El murmullo de las abejas (The Murmur of Bees) was an Audie Award winner and named novel of the year by iTunes, and the English translation by Simon Bruni and narrated by Xe Sands and Angelo Di Loreto was one of Audible’s Top 10 of 2019 and a Voice Arts Award winner. She is also the author of Peregrinos (Tears of Amber), Noche de huracán (Night of the Hurricane), and Huracán (Hurricane). Sofía likes to travel the world, but she loves coming home to her husband, three children, two dogs, and cat. She writes her best surrounded and inspired by their joyous chaos. For more information visit www.sofiasegovia.com.
Simon Bruni translates literary works from Spanish, a language he acquired through total immersion living in Alicante, Valencia, and Santander. He studied Spanish and linguistics at Queen Mary University of London and literary translation at the University of Exeter. Simon’s many published translations include novels, short stories, video games, and nonfiction publications, and he is the winner of three John Dryden translation awards: in 2017 and 2015 for Paul Pen’s short stories “Cinnamon” and “The Porcelain Boy” and in 2011 for Francisco Pérez Gandul’s novel Cell 211. His translations of Paul Pen’s The Light of the Fireflies and Sofía Segovia’s The Murmur of Bees have both become international bestsellers. For more information visit www.simonbruni.com.
Product details
- ASIN : B08CDWLTD8
- Publisher : Amazon Crossing (May 1, 2021)
- Publication date : May 1, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 4.2 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 495 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1542027918
- Best Sellers Rank: #60,337 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Sofía Segovia was born in Monterrey, Mexico. She studied communications at Universidad de Monterrey, thinking mistakenly that she would be a journalist. But fiction is her first love. A creative writing teacher, she has also been a ghostwriter and communications director for local political campaigns and has written several plays for local theater. Her novels include Noche de huracán (Night of the Hurricane), El murmullo de las abejas (The Murmur of Bees)—which was called the literary discovery of the year by Penguin Random House and named Novel of the Year by iTunes—and Huracán. Sofía likes to travel the world, but she loves coming home to her husband, three children, two dogs, and cat. She writes her best surrounded and inspired by their joyous chaos.
Simon Bruni translates literary works from Spanish, a language he acquired through total immersion living in Alicante, Valencia, and Santander. He studied Spanish and linguistics at Queen Mary University of London and literary translation at the University of Exeter.
Simon’s many published translations include novels, short stories, video games, and nonfiction publications, and he is the winner of three John Dryden awards: in 2017 and 2015 for Paul Pen’s short stories “Cinnamon” and “The Porcelain Boy,” and in 2011 for Francisco Pérez Gandul’s novel Cell 211. His translations of Paul Pen's The Light of the Fireflies and Sofía Segovia's The Murmur of Bees have both become international bestsellers.
For more information, please visit www.simonbruni.com.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story fascinating and heartbreaking. They praise the writing quality as well-crafted and the narration as excellent. The storyline is poignant and inspirational, highlighting the resilience of the human spirit. Readers appreciate the rich and memorable characters. The pacing draws them in and immerses them in the experiences of real families. Overall, customers describe the book as a stirring account of the times.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the fascinating narrative and storytelling. They appreciate the author's weaving of two stories together, based on a true story. The book is described as stirring, fantastic, and one of the best historical fiction books they've read. Readers appreciate the author's note explaining the backstory. The ebbs and flows of the words warm their hearts.
"...It is a long book, but it needed every page. It is unflinching in recounting the fear, the hunger, the cold, the brutality, the cruelties, and the..." Read more
"This is a sweeping narrative of two German families and a young Polish man in East Prussia during World War II...." Read more
"...So, the book follows two families from different statuses & different towns, and also an orphaned boy, during the years of Hitler's rise to power,..." Read more
"...She takes her time in crafting a deep story where you feel as if you are there in the deep snow of Germany and hiding from bullets or in the back..." Read more
Customers find the book emotional and heartbreaking. They describe it as a tragic story of families torn apart by war. The suffering brings tears, but the reunions are joyous. Readers appreciate the real insights and struggles of the main characters. They understand the good in humans and the greed and cruelty.
"...in recounting the fear, the hunger, the cold, the brutality, the cruelties, and the realities of war as they devastate the civilian population...." Read more
"...this is a book I will likely never forget, the emotion and vivid descriptions so powerful as they were...." Read more
"This was a beautiful, descriptive, heartbreaking, hope-giving, gut-wrenching story of a side not written nearly as often as others during WWII!..." Read more
"...of the novel from the small children’s perspective was not too interesting to me...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book. They find the stories well-written, well-narrated, and vivid. The narration is excellent and the translation is superb. Readers praise the author's descriptive writing style and find the book engaging and worth reading.
"...The writing is so skilled that I was immersed in the lives of the families. The perspective in each of the families is through the eyes of a child...." Read more
"...I’m glad I finished it as the last half of the book was very well-written." Read more
"...And MY GOSH, how well-written their stories are!..." Read more
"...Segovia is a phenomenal author, and despite her narrative style being slightly odd and it taking me a beat to get accustomed to, I ultimately felt..." Read more
Customers find the storyline poignant and inspiring. They say it's a story of survival and how two families are joined. The content is meaningful, substantial, and thought-provoking. Readers appreciate the characters who come to life and acknowledge the challenges and hardships of war. The book gives insight into normal families during a war, with children keeping them interested. The author portrays the sacrifices and lingering effects of war.
"...fear, the hunger, the cold, the brutality, the cruelties, and the realities of war as they devastate the civilian population...." Read more
"...This is a fascinating read as it examines a perspective generally different from that the West usually sees...." Read more
"This was a beautiful, descriptive, heartbreaking, hope-giving, gut-wrenching story of a side not written nearly as often as others during WWII!..." Read more
"...It made the characters come to life and acknowledged the challenges and hardships of war regardless of which side you are on...." Read more
Customers enjoy the characters' development. They find the characters likable and well-written, so you can easily connect with them and their stories. The author has a talent for creating memorable characters and telling truthful stories that feel relatable.
"...Sofia Segovia is an enormous talent. She has a gift for creating memorable characters and telling a story that feels filled with truth...." Read more
"...Vivid and beautifully written with a deep investment in the characters so well described...." Read more
"Fantastic novel. Every character so well developed, your heart soared when theirs did, broke when theirs did, feared when theirs did...." Read more
"This was a very moving novel. It made the characters come to life and acknowledged the challenges and hardships of war regardless of which side you..." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and moving. They say it draws them into the lives of real families. The story is thought-provoking and holds their interest until the end.
"...Janusz, his story was so heartbreaking. Very different take than many other WW2 reads...." Read more
"...The story flowed slowly with(perhaps too much) great detail ...." Read more
"...Easy flow made it impossible to put down." Read more
"...It's a shocking relevlation that continued beyond the so-called end of the war. Now I understand his quirks...." Read more
Customers find the book authentic and believable. They describe it as a poignant, sad, and inspirational story based on real people's childhood experiences. The novel is described as honest and poetic.
"...for creating memorable characters and telling a story that feels filled with truth. It is a long book, but it needed every page...." Read more
"...were getting them out of danger and putting food on the table and good honest work for which they would be paid an honest and fair wage...." Read more
"...If you read history, mystery, romance , adventure or speculative dystopian fiction you will enjoy, treasure your time with this novel." Read more
"...Based on real people, the novel is about the childhood experiences of two Prussian children and their families as they fight for survival...." Read more
Customers find the book emotionally engaging. They feel the characters' experiences and emotions, including war, work, hunger, and family. The writing captures a true sense of time and place. Readers cry when the characters cry, feel their fear and despair, and navigate a terrible new reality. The story is tender yet raw, with heartfelt memories.
"...It is very well written with a true feel for time and place...." Read more
"...The author to great pains to relay the story and interwoven with touching and sometimes horrific recounts of the fleeing families from allies,..." Read more
"...survive the war, with tender details of their courage, determination, fear, sorrow, and resilience...." Read more
"...You will cry when the characters cry, feel the fear they feel, run when they run, despair as they do and live the hope they live with...." Read more
Reviews with images

Atmospheric and moving
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2021This is a story that will haunt your dreams. The novel is focused on two German families and their experiences during WWII. We have all studied the huge scale of the war and the enormous losses perpetrated by the Nazi regime and those incurred by all sides in the war. The reader will understand more about that scale and collateral losses with the intensely personal accounts that are told here about German civilians. These are not the losses that I studied in a history class. You may feel conflicted about a sympathetic portrayal of patriotic German civilians who listened to Hitler and supported the war effort. The sympathy is not directed to their politics but to their humanity. (A humanity that was denied for victims of Nazi persecution. We are called to be better than the Nazis.) The two families have not embraced all the Nazi hate toward Hitler’s targets of persecution, and they probably knew nothing of the holocaust, but they knew about the Untermensch doctrines and the risks to anyone viewed as inferior. The writing is so skilled that I was immersed in the lives of the families. The perspective in each of the families is through the eyes of a child. Ilse is the daughter of a farmer who is essential to the war effort as a farmer. Arno is the son of a carpenter who is drafted to serve on the Eastern front. They are each about 10 years old at the beginning. Their families are from different towns, and their stories are told separately. I bought it this book because The Murmur of Bees was so beautifully written. This novel is completely different, except that is also brilliantly written. Sofia Segovia is an enormous talent. She has a gift for creating memorable characters and telling a story that feels filled with truth. It is a long book, but it needed every page. It is unflinching in recounting the fear, the hunger, the cold, the brutality, the cruelties, and the realities of war as they devastate the civilian population. It is memorable and harsh with moments of great grace and beauty.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2021This is a sweeping narrative of two German families and a young Polish man in East Prussia during World War II. In it we see things mostly from the children’s perspective. Both families lived on farms; the young Pole was a slave laborer provided by the Army on one of the farms.
The glory at the beginning, the contributions to the war effort, the propaganda and brainwashing; later the privation, starvation, and terror. This is a fascinating read as it examines a perspective generally different from that the West usually sees.
I have to say that the beginning of the novel from the small children’s perspective was not too interesting to me. I put down this book for some time, and only picked it up again when I finished another book while staying at a lake cabin in Montana. It’s what I had downloaded. I’m glad I finished it as the last half of the book was very well-written.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2021This was the first book I'd ever read written about "the OTHER side". I've read plenty of books about the oppressed, and more specifically, the persecuted peoples of WWII... but never have I read about what it was like for the ordinary German people who started off fully embracing & supporting Hitler & the Nazi Regime.
Let me start by saying... whoa.
So, the book follows two families from different statuses & different towns, and also an orphaned boy, during the years of Hitler's rise to power, through the war, and on past its bitter end. And MY GOSH, how well-written their stories are!
I've heard my fair share of war stories from the viewpoint of a peasant farmer via my mom, who grew up in China during Japan's invasion... so the hardships the families all eventually found themselves in were all too familiar a tale to me. What was "new" (for me) was the realization that the German people (especially those on the Eastern side of the country) had it really bad towards the end of the whole deal. I hadn't even considered that the Germans suffered... I know, I know... don't judge me. I know, pretty ignorant of me, but it's the truth.
I remember the Berlin Wall coming down. I remember it being toted as this BIG DEAL... But I find it funny how this fictional book (based on real people), read some 32 years later, is finally putting into perspective for me some of the biases that existed, long before that wall ever went up, that divided a country in such a concrete way (pun intended).
Sorry, where was I?
So the author didn't hold back... my gosh, there's pain, and violence, and death, and some vivid imagery. But for a long time, I was reading about these seemingly "normal" families just living their best, ordinary-in-the-middle-of-their-country's-huge-looming-success-in-the-war-lives, thinking to myself, "this isn't too bad." And then slowly and steadily their lives begin to change... Little by little, they compromise and they make sacrifices... small ones at first, extra food, extra clothes... then bigger ones... They (mostly unwillingly) gave away their lands, their children, their fathers... then their ideals and values, then their most precious, of secret valuables... and then for more than some, ultimately their lives. And it's just this smooth/steady incline to the ultimate, sharp decline in their shared human experience.
And it's all written in a way that was impossible to look away from.
I've often questioned if we as a people would ever again fall into the same trap of hatred & destruction under a falsehood of hope & greatness, and the answer is always an unfortunate, terrifying & resounding, yes... Yes, of course, we will & of course, we can... The saying (paraphrasing, probably) "Those who do not study history are doomed to repeat it," is scarily accurate. Germany learned... learned the extremely hard & terrible lesson, and on a global, modern, scale. But they DID learn. There are no Nazi or Hitler statues in Germany. Nazi imagery/propaganda is illegal/not tolerated. But what of the rest of the world?
Did we learn?
Yeah, this book moved me... at least it moved my IDGAF-o-meter a little more towards Idk, empathy for others?
Ya know, nobody wins in war. They're all losers. And for the survivors, the effects of war don't stop with them, they're felt for many generations afterward.
This book is heartbreaking, but my goodness, it's such a necessary read. Look, if you're not able to speak to a REAL person, face to face, that survived the war, any war, then start reading some books like this... learn from the ugliest of human nature, vicariously through (based on real) fictional characters... And tell everyone else to, too. Maybe we can all GAF again about humanity as a whole and stop another genocidal a-hole from rising to power.
There is no good & evil... just nuance & our concessions left to the interpretation & judgment of our descendants.
Final thought... Just read the book. And sorry for waxing poetic, this is why I usually try to stay with a format. Sorry again.
Top reviews from other countries
- Carole BracamontesReviewed in Mexico on November 12, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars A literary jewel
TEARS OF AMBER is among the best books I have ever read. Kudos to Sofia Segovia (who, by the way, was my student) who takes us on a literary journey with two families in the midst of World War II. The characters are beautifully developed throughout the book allowing you to see and feel their experiences and emotions. I can’t wait for Sofi’s next book. Though I am fluent in Spanish (original language of her books), I chose to read them in English. Kudos to translator Simon Bruni as well.
- David O.Reviewed in Poland on January 7, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A good read. A touching story based on two real families
This book tells the story of two families caught up in the 1940 invasion. It tracks their fleeing what becomes a war zone where they live in the old Prussia. I enjoyed this historical novel very much.
- Aviraj Singh MehtaReviewed in India on May 16, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars A review
Loved the book it's being a long time have I read a WWII book that doesn't speak about the war but the people, people who lived and survived.
- YorkshireReviewed in Germany on April 18, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully told saga about two families during a turbulent time in history
After enjoying 'the Murmur of Bees', I was excited to come across 'Tears of Amber'. This book turned out to be quite different from 'Murmur of Bees', but also absolutely outstanding.
My grandmother and her family were part of the great flight from Eastern Prussia at the end of WW2. It's something I'd only heard snippets of, and reading this book really immersed me in the time and place.
The character development was excellent, the setting beautifully done - you felt yourself transported to the time and place. The author's careful research helped avoid any obvious jarring inconsistencies.
- Jo FountainReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 10, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Definite 5* from me!!
I chose this as my monthly first reads and what a super long saga! I feel quite bad that I got it for free actually.
I love historical fiction, it is my favourite genre. However I admit I did not know until I'd finished reading it that the story is loosely based around the true journey that Ilse told the writer. Ilse being the main little girl, who starts the story aged 3!! I won't say anymore as it will give spoilers.
However reading it mainly through the eyes of 3 children, as well as a few adults, was very refreshing and was written excellently. It is a long book through a long period of time but despite the heart wrenching circumstances & the dreadful stage of war that the story pulls you through, I could not put it down.
The first half being crammed with their day to day intimate lives. The sights, sounds, smells and emotions of these ordinary people. Their struggles at a very volatile and poverty stricken time period leading up to WW2 never mind what they went through during it!! The circumstances that eventually lead all of them into the second half of the book. How anyone survived is a true testament of character and it's heartbreaking to read. There are NO winners in war and as it is said a few times, war never ends because the survivors have a constant ache for all those they lost!
I highly recommend giving this a read and I am now going to look for anything else she has written!!