500 words from…is an occasional series in which novelists talk about their latest novels.
Juliet Conlin’s third novel,
The Lives Before Us, is published on March 28. Juliet was born in London and now lives in Berlin. Her earlier novels were
The Fractured Man and
The Uncommon Life of Alfred Warner in Six Days.
The Lives Before Us is set in 1940’s Shanghai. It explores a little-known aspect of the Holocaust and the Jewish diaspora in one of Asia’s most legendary cities, and addresses the struggles surrounding forced emigration, displacement and identity, through the story of two Jewish women, Esther and Kitty.
Esther and Kitty flee Nazi Europe for the relative safety of Shanghai. But instead of finding the safe haven they had hoped for, they encounter desperate living conditions, an almost unbearable climate, shocking crime, and a fierce battle for limited resources. Then, when Japan enters the fray of the Second World War, and violence mounts, Kitty and Esther – along with thousands of other Jewish refugees – are forced into a Japanese-controlled ghetto.
So, over to Juliet...