- Twin sisters Lotte and Anne grow up very differently after their parents death. Now adults, they want to reunite but World War II and their growing socioeconomic differences complicate things.
- In 1920s Germany, 6-year-old twin sisters no sooner see their remaining parent buried than they are torn apart: Lotte goes to live with her upper-middle-class Dutch aunt in Holland, and Anna is sent to work on her German uncle's farm. The story follows their lives as they try to reconcile their differences while World War II impacts on each one's life. Finally in old age they meet again, hoping that the differences in their youth can finally be reconciled.—Anonymous
- In 1926 Germany, twin sisters Anna and Lotte Bamberg are separated after their parents' deaths. Anna stays in Germany with her ignorant Catholic uncle and aunt on their small property; Lotte contracts tuberculosis and moves to Holland. Anna works on the farm and isn't sent to school; Lotte is raised by an upper-class family who makes sure she gets a good education. The sisters have no contact with each other, but they meet up briefly before the World War II years. Later Anna marries a young SS officer and Lotte gets engaged to a Jewish musician. Their lives follow different and opposite paths with the war, but Anna never gives up hoping that they will be in each other's lives again.—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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