Having answered a Berlin newspaper advertisement for "strong women who
can cook and do farm work," Sophie Charlotte finds herself married with
two sons on an Icelandic sheep farm, trying to sever cords of memory
that lead back to the powerful love she knew in Germany and all that she
lost there. When World War II began, Charlotte was attached to a
supremely talented but politically furious painter in Berlin. But she
would lose him twice: first to the resistance and then to the camps.
More wounding for Charlotte, however, is the unforgiving trace of their
daughter, Lena, who at five years old tragically disappeared into the
chaos of the War.
This is an extraordinarily beautiful saga that links sure-footed
portraits of wartime Berlin and the severity of life in the Icelandic
countryside. Moving and genuinely affirming, Seal Woman is a
many-colored portrayal of a strong woman's life broken in two stark and
unforgiving worlds separated by the North Atlantic.