A review by lawbooks600
Beyond belief by Dee White

dark emotional medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75

Representation: Asian characters
Score: Seven points out of ten.

I wanted to read this for a while but after I found it in one of the two libraries I go to I finally picked it up and read it. When I finished it I had so many thoughts going on inside my head, for starters it's what would be best described as emotionally impactful but at the same time the characters weren't the best. That doesn't take away from the fact that the story was enjoyable. It starts with the main character Ruben whose last name I don't even know living in Paris during the 1940s, that's a terrible time to live in. Even more so because of his religion (and especially all the antisemitism going on) he is forced to hide in a building for now and pretend to be a different religion; he even got fake papers to hide his identity so no one would notice it. In the opening pages the scheme works at first until the Germans come in, stop the charade and forced Ruben to escape to somewhere else. I know Ruben's sister is gone for now and the book said someone called the Fox was going to rescue him but they never came for some reason. All Ruben has for company are some other characters who share the same mission which takes place throughout the middle section of the novel. The ending was bittersweet when Ruben reunited with his sister Rosa but unfortunately their parents didn't make it. It was nice to get some semblance of closure there but it would've been more impactful if it didn't feel like the author was rushing to finish the story off and if the characters were more well written.

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