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Like Ants Under the Door is a gripping novel set on the Russian Front during World War II. It is the heart-wrenching story of Johann Finke's journey from Hitler's invasion of Russia to the fall of the Third Reich. In 1941, the Wehrmacht forces Johann, a virtuoso musician, to trade his violin for a machine gun, and he must battle an enemy fighting for its very existence. As the war rages, the tide turns-the Russian juggernaut grinds toward Germany, and Johann becomes desperate to save his loved ones from the Russian horde. This powerful and emotional tale of love, battle and sacrifice will…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Like Ants Under the Door is a gripping novel set on the Russian Front during World War II. It is the heart-wrenching story of Johann Finke's journey from Hitler's invasion of Russia to the fall of the Third Reich. In 1941, the Wehrmacht forces Johann, a virtuoso musician, to trade his violin for a machine gun, and he must battle an enemy fighting for its very existence. As the war rages, the tide turns-the Russian juggernaut grinds toward Germany, and Johann becomes desperate to save his loved ones from the Russian horde. This powerful and emotional tale of love, battle and sacrifice will leave you on the edge of your seat. If you enjoyed All the Light We Cannot See, you'll love Like Ants Under the Door. Both novels capture the realities of World War II and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of unimaginable hardship.
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Autorenporträt
Robert Faulk, a Canadian born on a farm and educated in a small rural school, grew up in a world of hard workers-men and women who farmed the land and harvested the forests and the sea with their hands. He studied engineering at university and worked in construction before taking his family to Germany to pursue a career as an opera singer. Over the next ten years, Robert met many Europeans willing to share still-fresh memories of the Second World War. He used their stories, often traumatic and deeply personal, to write a series of five books of historical fiction, "The Songs of War." The books expose the most contemptible cost of any war-the human cost.