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Reviews

  • Excellent read

    5
    By Jaden321
    Great follow up to Tattooist of Auschwitz
  • Amazing!!

    5
    By Teacher2014hb31
    Truly amazing and heartfelt story!! Love the writing by Heather Morris!! Can’t wait to read the next novel!!
  • We must never forget or deny…

    5
    By Grandmother Joyce
    Reading anything about the inhumanity of man/woman to men/women is heartrending, but so important to understand how truly horrific people can be. Cilka is so real, so strong, in the face of unbelievable horrors and choices. I had to take breaks while reading…but the people who suffered could not.
  • Cilkas journey

    4
    By Rio. Rita
    Enjoyable read but Liked the tattooist of auschwitz better
  • Hard to read

    5
    By gidey up
    Good book but hard to read. It’s incredible to me that humans can treat other humans so ruthlessly and still sleep at night. What’s even more amazing is that there were people like Cilka who were strong enough survive the horrible atrocities inside, be released, and have a life on the outside afterwards.
  • Well done

    5
    By horsetoast
    A great book- well written
  • Great read

    4
    By pam801
    Really appreciated this book. Tattooist was also fabulous
  • I can’t express how much I loved this book

    5
    By Jessiep813
    I listened on audio and it was just wonderful. I love Cilka and so wanted to jump into the book to hug her and be her friend. Such an incredible story
  • I fell in love with reading

    5
    By kiugi.
    Cilka’s Journey was the first of Heather Morris’s books that I found and upon finishing it, I rushed back to the book store to find The Tattooist of Auschwitz. The way she tells Cilka’s story is beautiful and detailed. I never wanted to put it down. Keep in mind that I haven’t always been a book worm, but this one? This one is the type of book that will keep me returning to a book store.
  • Unbearably Sloppy

    1
    By ThePatriot
    Dear Editors. She’s Australian, on one page they use kilometers to the Arctic Circle then in the later half say miles to the Arctic Circle. Did anyone read this book for editing? Then there’s the underlying issue of just general writing where it feels unnecessary lacking in situational knowledge. Like... You see nursing and emergency response this way?

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