"Inspired by true events, a thought-provoking work of historical fiction and a great family saga. A literary masterpiece". ★★★★★ Reedsy Discovery
"The story is unflinching in its subject matter and rich in sensory detail, and its roots in lived experience lend it undeniable emotional weight". ★★★★ The Coffee Pot Book Club
A Top Pick for Danish Libraries, now available in English.
Kirsten Marie Pedersen wants more from life than the narrow prospects offered in 1940s Copenhagen.
She grows up in a small house outside Copenhagen, shaped by scarcity, silence, and fear. Her father's alcoholism and her mother's quiet exhaustion leave little room for tenderness, while the German occupation presses in on every part of daily life. Alongside her sisters, Kirsten comes of age in a world where endurance is expected, and ambition is dangerous.
When the war ends and Europe's borders reopen, Kirsten refuses to return to the life she barely survived. She follows her sister to Germany and secures work as a translator at the Fürstenfeldbruck Air Base, assisting American forces in their pursuit of Nazi fugitives. The war is over; the world lies open; her body awakens. In the charged uncertainty of the postwar years, she encounters freedom, desire, and a cross-cultural love that offers both promise and risk.
But when tragedy fractures the Pedersen family, Kirsten is forced to choose between loyalty to the past and the possibility of a different future. Drawn by love and the fragile promise of the American Dream, she faces a decision that will carry her across the Atlantic-and forever alter the course of her life.
Inspired by more than 100 real letters written by the author's grandmother after the war, The Scandinavian War Bride weaves the lives of three sisters into a raw and intimate mosaic of wartime fragments. While a love story runs through the novel, it favors emotional realism over romantic idealism, offering a gritty portrait of women who must twist and turn to reach their dreams-and face the price of choosing their own path.
Originally published to critical acclaim in Denmark and selected by over 80% of the Danish public library system, this historically grounded novel will appeal to readers of literary historical fiction, family sagas, and women's stories rooted in truth, resilience, and moral complexity.