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Tamar

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BfK No. 157 - March 2006

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration is from John Burningham’s Edwardo. Edwardo is this issue's Editor’s Choice. Thanks to Random House Children’s Books for their help with this March cover.

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Tamar

Mal Peet
(Walker Books Ltd)
432pp, 978-0744565706, RRP £7.99, Paperback
14+ Secondary/Adult
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Tamar and Dart are the code-names for two Dutch resistance fighters who work as a team behind enemy lines in the final brutal and famine-stricken winter of the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Trained in Britain, they are seen as interlopers by many of the fighters whose disparate struggles they have arrived to co-ordinate. Tamar, the organiser, is on familiar territory, and his work is grounded in a covert relationship with one of the heroic young women of the resistance. Dart, the radio operator, works alone and in terrifying danger, sustained only by amphetamines (then a standard prop for such gruelling intelligence work) and by the hope that he will be able to initiate a romance with the same young woman whom his colleague secretly loves.

Fifty years later, one of these men dies tragically, and the story unfolds from the perspective of his 15-year-old granddaughter, who inherits a box of encrypted messages. In decoding these, she embarks on an historical and geographical journey with her jovial but thoughtful Dutch cousin Johannes, a search which reveals how truly harrowing the wartime struggle was, and how far-reaching its effects.

This is an exceptionally well-written, meticulously researched and moving book. Peet’s use of dialogue and internal speech makes us care deeply about these trapped and troubled characters. His dense but subtle use of simile adds a sensory richness to a cognitively engaging preoccupation with secrecy and encryption. This is reflected in a complex and skilful disclosure of events through multiple personal and temporal perspectives, a process which holds the reader in emotionally committed suspense until the closing pages.

Reviewer: 
George Hunt
5
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