
about the Wagnerian themes of power and violence, and despite this Brunhilde's climactic bout with flame when she accidentally sets fire to the house in the middle of a party for Occupation functionaries, this is basically a suspense story of secret rooms, lost paintings and hidden passages. General, People & Places / Europe, Historical / Military & Wars. Janna's psychological shift, while complex enough to be credible of! the surface, is far less involving than the richly furnished, honeycombed interior of the house. moved inland near the van Halls, who lived in Astra near Zwolle the van Stockum house. and even faces up to the discovery that her Dutch Siegfried is a Jew. Father: Daniel Johannes (Dirk) van Stockum. Once the book gets going, however, it’s quite powerful. One of Hilda Van Stockum’s biggest strengths is her ability to build a delightfully three-dimensional cast, and it takes a little while for the characters in this book to be assembled.

Janna grows uneasy about the fate of a girl her age, whose possessions still fill her room in the confiscated house her mother has connived to get she overhears her mother's would-be lover (an officer described as a junker although he is Bavarian) criticize Hitler and eventually, when she discovers a Resistance worker in a hidden room, Janna helps keep his secret. The Borrowed House starts off a little slowly.

Janna is torn away from her approaching youth group performance as Brunhilde to join her parents, both well known German actors, in occupied Amsterdam. Lonely and full if unwelcome questions, it is the house itself which begins to provide real, if painful. Marlin and mother of six children, wrote and illustrated nearly twenty books for children. Like The Winged Watchman this is an upbeat look at the Dutch Resistance, and the heroine's beginnings as an avid Hitler Youth make less difference than you'd think.
