For Kerza Freiborne, the war began with fire and ended in ice. But British bombs and a march through frozen fields did not come first: the war had a precursor that brought to her doorstep in the shape of hunched shoulders, dirt-smudged cheeks and a gold star sewn to the breast of a sweater. A fugitive Jew in the heart of Nazi Germany is not a thing that can be simply swept beneath a rug, and thusly, it is the attic of Kerza’s family in which the traumatized, stammering boy must take shelter. With the battlefield drawing closer and a country’s old prejudice reaching a boiling point, the line between fiction and reality is blurred and the duplicity of human nature becomes clearer every day. But for better or worse, this Jew and German are the most important people in each others lives, and everything they thought they understood of their world will soon change forever.