Review Detail

Young Adult Fiction 681
What the Night Sings
(Updated: June 12, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
5.0
Greta used to play the viola every day and dreamed of being an opera singer. Her dreams were all shattered when she and her father were taken by the Germans and placed in concentration camps. Greta never knew she was, in fact, Jewish, and that her father never told her to protect her. Later, after the war, Greta goes to a Displacement Camp. She fears her voice is lost. Then she meets another Holocaust survivor, Lev, whose stories stir something deep within her. Can Greta move forward after all the horrors of the war? She needs to find the faith in herself, and her musical talent is one step on this journey.

What worked: Wowza, wow. This is such a powerful, unflinching story of the Holocaust and the Displacement Camps. It's also a story of survival and faith in moving forward after everything has been taken from you.

Readers follow Greta as a child being trained to not only play the viola but to become a future opera singer. Greta lives with her father and stepmother. She is also unaware that she is Jewish. Then the Gestapo seizes her and her father, sending them to Theresienstadt, which is a propaganda camp to show the world that Hitler isn't killing the Jewish people. All of it is lies. Then, Greta is sent to Auschwitz, where she loses her only family member to the crematoriums. What adds to this story is the equally powerful illustrations. Each one not only shows the hints of cruelty, but there's also hope. The butterflies, for example, symbolize hope. A hope that Greta loses and takes time to regain.

The author also shows the Displacement Camps, which emerged after the war. Many survivors, including Greta, ended up there after being freed from the concentration camps. This is where Greta meets Lev, who will play a big part in her life.

The relationship between Greta and Lev starts as a friendship. They share one commonality of being survivors of the Holocaust. Lev is a devout Jew, while Greta never knew she was Jewish. It's the devotion Lev has when he nurses her back to health, and a string of letters that touches her. There's also mention of Palestine and how many resettle there.

It's been over eighty years since the Holocaust, and with it, more of the survivors are no longer with us. I remember while in college, a Holocaust survivor visiting my college and sharing her story. She told us that she did this in the hopes that what she lost during that horrific time would never happen again. The saying that those who forget history are bound to repeat it is very true. This story needs to be told.

Stirring powerful historical of loss, love, and survival. A must-read for any high school classroom. Also, I highly recommend for any school library. This story will stay with readers long after they finish the last page.
Good Points
1. Powerful, unflinching story of the Holocaust and Displacement Camps
2. Important story that needs to be told
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