Fans of The Tattooist of Auschwitz will be fascinated by Scotts portrayal of post-war Germany. * Woman * FINDING CLARA is the kind of novel we need now more than ever. Set in Germany, eighteen months after the war, reckonings of every sort are playing out and Anika Scott deftly builds a world in which all the shades of gray--Nazi collaboration and complicity among civilians--are brought to life. FINDING CLARA achieves what the best historical fiction can, asking us to see the past, and then pushing us to see ourselves in that past, demanding: Who would you have been then? What would you have done? Unflinching and absorbing, FINDING CLARA does not let you look away. Meticulously researched and plotted like a noir thriller, Finding Clara tells a different story of WWII of characters grappling with their own guilt and driven by the question of what they could have done to change the past. Anika Scotts epic novel offers a captivating tour through the reckoning years that followed WWII when clarifying identities, unearthing truths, and facing judgements was the only way to rebuild a life. The novels heroine marches along the razors edge between the leviathan of the past and a future full of mine shafts. I will never forget her unending struggle to rise above the dark lineage thrust upon her and her battle to stay connected to the deep binds of love, responsibility, and compassion. Anika Scotts finely drawn characters in FINDING CLARA bring to life not only the struggle to rise from the ashes of war, but also the depth of resolve often required to gain redemption. Illuminating and beautifully rendered. Anika Scotts riveting novel compellingly explores the nature of innocence and guilt, and the human desire for redemption. A terrific book with historical detail skillfully woven into the fabric of the story. An absolute must-read for all fans of World War II fiction! What a great debut! It still haunts me, days after finishing it. I felt as though I was walking through the rubble of Essen and shivering in the bitter cold right alongside Clara Falkenberg. In this haunting and atmospheric novel, Anika Scott delivers a nuanced and emotional look at the often un-talked about side of WWII the devastation of German towns and cities and the weight of conscience on those who remain. [ It's] is a powerful reminder that no one gets out unscathed. Scotts magnetic debut follows one womans quest for survival amid the devastation of post-WWII Germany . . . Fans of WWII fiction will be intrigued by Scotts exploration of how war changes the moral compass of its victims. * Publishers Weekly * [ An] extraordinary novel * Woman & Home *