Sophie is a perceptive, audacious heroine, and readers will admire her deep devotion to her family. Her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother’s stories are all woven into Sophie’s, offering a multi-faceted look at the family’s journey to America. Anecdotes about life with her Greek family—visits to Lake Michigan and the Field Museum, road trips to Detroit in her grandparents’ Oldsmobile, family scandals, and funny memories—bring the Poulos clan to life. Although Sophie and her family face outside dangers and challenges, their complex but profound ties are the heart of the novel, and Voss’s writing shines when it focuses on these relationships.
This intergenerational story spans eras and locations, but it transitions between them with smooth clarity. Voss immerses readers in settings from Tripoli, to a WWII women’s army barracks in Virginia, to a Chicago alive with possibility but also where “the numbing cold and steely skies [transform] Sophie’s raw, anger-driven sorrow into a dull ache.” Sophie’s Greek heritage is likewise finely detailed, with Greek food, rituals, and phrases incorporated throughout the story. But while these particulars will transport readers, universal themes of loss, forgiveness, and redemption will speak to their hearts. Voss’s gentle, compelling family drama offers a clear-eyed appreciation for our heritage and how it shapes us.
Takeaway: This uplifting 1950s coming-of-age saga demonstrates how courage, compassion, and faith can overcome emotional adversity.
Great for fans of: Pam Records’s Tied With Twine, Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A