“The tragic story of a destiny is transformed into a voyage back to Ukraine and to the multiethnic city of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov, where Jews and Russians, Poles and Turks, Italians and Germans lived side by side. Without hesitation or fear, with the dogged single-mindedness of a detective, Wodin retraces her own dramatic experiences through the desolate landscape of desperate decades, in the search of this complicated ancestral network.”—From La Stampa (Turin, Italy)
"The unexpected and surprising revelations are structured like a crime thriller: the tension increases with every detail, and chance generates a spectacular, wide-screen story. […] The catastrophic events of twentieth-century history are dealt with here in miniature, but with existential impact."—From Die Zeit (Hamburg, Germany)
"[…] Wodin recreates her mother’s experience during WWII, first working for the Germans while they occupied Ukraine and “recruited forced laborers,” and later becoming one herself. It adds up to a moving look at the lives of people caught up in global conflict, and one that takes on an eerie timeliness now."—Publishers Weekly