The Lost Letter, by Jillian Cantor (2017)
This Holocaust novel alternates between Austria in 1938 and 1989 Los Angeles.
In 1938, young Kristoff, an orphan who had no family life, finds himself an apprentice to Frederick Faber, a Jewish engraver who specialized in making stamps. Faber was a famous for his engraved stamps. As an apprentice, Kristoff lives and dines with the family. Although not a Jew himself, he finds himself attracted to the Shabbat rituals and prayers. He also has a crush on Faber’s 17-year-old daughter, Elena.
In Los Angeles in 1989, Kate Nelson is struggling through a painful divorce and a father suffering from dementia. She has just placed her father in a nursing home and is going through his belongings. He had been a stamp collector and Kate had wonderful memories as a child going with her father as he sought out his “gems”. She takes his stamp collection to be appraised, thinking that there might be something of value that can be sold to help defray the costs of his medical care.
She takes the stamps to Benjamin Grossman, a philatelist, for his appraisal. He discovered among the collection an unopened letter with a unique Austrian stamp. It was the picture of an Austrian church with a small unauthorized edelweiss on its steeple. The letter was addressed to one of Faber’s daughters, and the stamp appears to have been a Faber design, but seemed to have been issued after his apparent death.
Still thinking that the stamp might be of value, Benjamin and Kate locate Fraulein Faber in hopes of discovering the mystery of the edelweiss on the stamp.
I thoroughly enjoyed this novel.
Read: October. 27, 2020
4.5 Stars