Poland (setting)
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Mangled yet eventually made sense {Everything is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer}

Mangled yet eventually made sense.

About Everything is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer: A young man arrives in Ukraine, clutching in his hand a tattered photograph. He is searching for the woman who fifty years ago saved his grandfather from the Nazis. Unfortunately, he is aided in his quest by Alex, a translator with an uncanny ability to mangle English into bizarre new forms; a 'blind' old man haunted by memories of the war; and an undersexed guide dog named Sammy David Jr, Jr. What they are looking for seems elusive - a truth hidden behind veils of time, language and the horrors of war. What they find turns all their worlds upside down...

My two cents

I read this a few years ago and distinctly remember I couldn't get into it because one of the main characters, Alex, tells the story in mangled English. I remember too that I skipped most of these Alex-narrated sections, kept reading, and eventually finished it with a feeling of "I missed something important." I guess that's to be expected when you skip through a book like that, so I was willing to give this book a second chance.

My reread went very well. I was finally able to understand what the storyline is, which consists of two parallel stories (which explains my confusion): that of Alex and his grandfather and that of Jonathan Safran Foer. These two stories converge in an unexpected way which in turn leads to a rather brilliant conclusion. Can you tell that I liked this?

Without any spoilers, I'll go into some of the reasons why I enjoyed this book and you can decide if it's something worth pursuing.

The storytelling is unconventional and affecting. For two storylines to come together like it does in this obviously called for some thought for it to come to fruition, otherwise it could be total mess. I am not going to go into the details of the plot because I know it will spoil things for those who want to read this.

Now, intersperse these two arcs with bits and pieces of anecdotes and folklore, writing culled from old books, and a few more substories. It's distracting, yes, it's enough to make the head spin, but I was ready and willing and I found the experience quite exhilarating.

Then, about the tone, where do I begin? This is alternately funny (butchered English, things lost in translation, a horny dog) and then it's choke-me-up serious. I'm glad I read this slowly because the emotional swings can make one slightly nauseous.

Did I turn you off or on? (mangled English anyone?) I enjoyed it but I think this can be construed as messy and overdone.

Characters to warm up to. This book takes its time letting you get to know the characters. I loved how Foer slowly peeled away the layers of romanticism to reveal such deeply feeling characters. There is more behind Alex's initial bravado, the tough guy exterior of Alex's grandfather, and the aloofness and alienation of Jonathan.

Thought provoking and rather intimate subject matter. I also really enjoyed the fact that this deals with very difficult subject matter in a respectful manner; it's certainly made its mark in the genre of Holocaust literature. But like The Book Thief (probably one of my favourites!), I didn't really give genre a thought as I got lost in the story, because, really, the heart of this book is the family, and beauty and horrors of family histories.

Family histories are a sticky thing to poke one's nose into. On the one hand, one wants to honour the memory of family members by documenting truthfully. But oh the dilemma of finding out that the truth is less than pretty, sordid, or even downright disturbing? How far does one go in presenting one's family members in a truthful light while honouring them? How do we protect our families' reputation blameless when the past itself is tainted? Is this even possible?

There was one specific idea that also resonated with me: memory as a sense. While I immediately saw a similarity to the famous lines in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, I thought it felt oddly similar to the idea of genetic or ancestral memory where people have amazing and inexplicable in-born abilities or predispositions or knowledge at an extremely young age. In other words, memory can be passed on through the generations.

Jews Have Six Senses 
Touch, taste, sight, smell, hearing … memory. While Gentiles experience and process the world through the traditional senses, and use memory only as a second-order means of interpreting events, for Jews memory is no less primary than the prick of a pin, or its silver glimmer, or the taste of the blood it pulls from the finger. The Jew is pricked by a pin and remembers other pins. It is only by tracing the pinprick back to other pinpricks — when his mother tried to fix his sleeve while his arm was still in it, when his grandfather’s fingers fell asleep from stroking his great-grandfather’s damp forehead, when Abraham tested the knife point to be sure Isaac would feel no pain — that the Jew is able to know why it hurts. When a Jew encounters a pin, he asks: What does it remember like?
- pp. 198-199

Verdict: This has the potential to be a powerful read on many levels. It took me a second read for me to appreciate it, to be affected by it. I urge you not to get distracted by all the fireworks or go ballistic with your editing pen. Dig into the heart of story; this is about the family, looking back on the family past, and eventually moving forward with an appreciation of one's personal history.




Swans are Fat Too by Michelle Granas


Romance, history in a very strange title.

About Swans Are Fat Too by Michelle Granas: Natalia Lanska, formidable Polish pianist, is dead. No one is really sorrowing, except maybe her granddaughter Hania, whose own career as a concert artist never took off due to a terrible weight problem. Feeling unwanted, Hania arrives in Warsaw for the funeral hoping for a warm welcome from her relatives. Instead, they saddle her with their appalling children, decamp, and refuse to return.

Hania’s situation is at first improved and then complicated when a neighbor ─ the very correct, very austere descendant of an old Polish family ─ asks her to proofread an amateur history project. Hania sets to work with a will, and Pan Doctor Prince Konstanty Radzimoyski is surprised when his ideas get more editing than he bargained for. Typing pages of the past, rediscovering her native city, and playing the piano all contribute to taking Hania’s mind off her problems, but can’t change her awareness that the children need help and that her growing attachment to her employer will only give her pain. The summer Hania spends between love, hostility, and the weight of history tests her resourcefulness, but her fresh ideas and readiness to carry on brighten the lives of her new acquaintances. Still, no one, least of all Hania herself, expects that her beautiful qualities will make Konstanty forget her figure and other excess baggage.

This book contains a history of Poland in a nutshell and is about seeing beyond the conventions.

My two cents

Let's start with that intriguing title. The heroine is Hania, a gifted pianist but her weight─and also is Hania's huge insecurity─held her back from achieving a renowned concert pianist. The last time I came across an overweight character was Blubber by Judy Blume! That got me thinking about overweight characters in literature in general and I'm at a loss to name even five. On that point, I think this novel scores.

I've had the pleasure of reading Michelle Granas's last novel, Zaremba or Love and the Rule of Law, which too was set in Poland. But while that novel also featured an atypical heroine (Cordelia has polio), the love for Poland and Polish history shines through in both her novels. This novel showcases the sights and history of Poland as Hania travels around Moscow and its countryside. History is also woven into the e-mail exchanges between Hania and Konstanty, making for some insightful observations and commentary on historic moments and people.

Now roll all this up in an unexpected and sweet romance and you've got an unusual love story gilded in Polish history!

Uh-oh: I was much more engrossed in the face-to-face of the romance side and Hania's struggles with the children than with the Polish history that was featured in the e-mail exchanges. I found myself skimming these Polish history portions when they got too long and I found the italicised font difficult to read.

Verdict: A history of Poland interwoven in an enjoyable and sweet romance that blooms between an overweight woman and a doctor, amidst the mayhem of taking care of two problematic children. I recommend this to those interested in Polish history, or someone looking for an unusual romance story.

I received a copy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.

Links:
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Zaremba or Love and the Rule of Law by Michelle Granas


The dirty side of love, politics and business 

Synopsis of Zaremba or the Love and the Rule of Law by Michelle Granas: In Warsaw, a shy and high-minded polio victim lives a life of seclusion caring for her odd family until a chance encounter plunges her into the intrigues of dirty politics. Zaremba, a wealthy businessman, is about to be arrested on trumped-up charges and only she can save him. Swept along by events, Cordelia finds her feelings increasingly involved with a stranger for whom she is both rescuer and victim. When Zaremba disappears, Cordelia is painfully uncertain if she has been abandoned and must overcome surveillance, corruption, the media, and mounting humiliations and difficulties to learn the truth. Although set in Poland, this is a story that could happen anywhere, as young democracies struggle against the temptations of covert operations and older democracies sometimes lead them astray.  

My two cents

This was an intriguing read. It is a fast-paced espionage thriller, set in Poland, with quirky characters and an atypical love story.

Cordelia, a somewhat recluse, leaves for a job interview as a translator, navigating the rather crazy driver-ridden streets of Warsaw. She has a fleeting encounter with a rude and forgettable man. Little does she know that this man will figure in her life!

Cordelia is drawn out her shell and her reclusive life as she (and her family by extension) develops a friendship with Zaremba, a wealthy businessman who is pulled into the dirty, corrupt and dangerous politicking of government and business. What ensues is a an unlikely love story between two polar opposites with lots of thrill-packed action and danger.

What I liked:

This book is full of surprises, a lot of unlikely mixes, and really oddball characters!

I know absolutely nothing about Poland but this book paints quite a grim picture of the dark side of a developing country. I always find it interesting to get an insider's viewpoint of a country as it is often at loggerheads with what is portrayed in the media. As I don't know enough about the country, its form of government or its politics, I found this quite the eye opener. It seems that Michelle Granas had borrowed heavily from reality as she opens each chapter with excerpts and quotations from newspapers and other materials -- this could spark the research juices of someone interested in Polish politics.

Cordelia is also an atypical heroine but she's got spunk and guts that I couldn't help but admire. She's got a withered hand and leg and she needs a cane to get around but it doesn't stop her from getting into (and out of) some dangerous situations. She's a little naive but I found that part of her charm.

Her unlikely friendship, and later romance, with Zaremba was rather sweet (cute, even) though I found Zaremba rather patronizing and annoying at times. Cordelia's family, meanwhile, was such an oddball bunch of characters that I couldn't help but like them: her doting and tongue-in-cheek humor of a father, her mother suffering from dementia, and her spider-photographer  of a brother make also for some unusual side stories.

There are so many unlikely (even improbable) encounters and mind-boggling situations in this book that I kept shaking my head and thinking "what are the chances?" I chalk this up to it being a fictional --- as I found some things a little too far out there and rather simplistic in how everything is resolved so very nicely.

Overall, I enjoyed the book because it tests the limits of what one expects from the espionage mold, making for interesting reading. Michelle Granas's writing has an ease to it with some rather subtle pokes at some language oddities she has undoubtedly encountered in her profession as a translator.

Uh-oh

This is a humungous book! It's so thick (518 pages!) that it initially scared me and I wondered if I would actually get through it. Thankfully the action in the book was more than enough to compel me to keep turning those pages!

I was about halfway through the book when I realized that this is could be split into two books. I would have been perfectly happy for the book to end at Book 1 and I would have looked forward to Book 2. As is the length of this book may turn someone off right away.

I'm on the fence about the cover as it doesn't lend itself as marketing an espionage thriller. The Photoshop job isn't too impressive either (top image very pixelated) with a strange juxtaposition of two unrelated images (sorry, I don't see what the cover supposed to convey).

***
Verdict: A fast paced espionage thriller set in Poland with very unlikely characters.

Read this if:
  • you like page-turning action, unusual situations and an unpredicatable plot 
  • you like your reading to be dirty -- in politics and business that is!
  • you're interested in Polish politics
  • you like unusual characters
See also:
I received a copy of this book from the author for honest review consideration. 



The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne

 
When friendship sprouts up in the most unlikely of places.

Synopsis of The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne: Berlin 1942. When Bruno returns home from school one day, he discovers that his belongings are being packed in crates. His father has received a promotion and the family must move from their home to a new house far far away, where there is no one to play with and nothing to do. A tall fence running alongside stretches as far as the eye can see and cuts him off from the strange people he can see in the distance. But Bruno longs to be an explorer and decides that there must be more to this desolate new place than meets the eye. While exploring his new environment, he meets another boy whose life and circumstances are very different to his own, and their meeting results in a friendship that has devastating consequences.

My thoughts

I picked up The Boy in the Striped Pajamas upon the recommendation of so many readers out there. I loved The Book Thief's unique perspective of storytelling but little did I know that this slim book would pack such a powerful story.

The book in one sentence: Nine-year-old Bruno, son of Nazi commandant, forges an unlikely friendship with a boy in striped pyjamas.

***

Typically, the horrors of the Holocaust are recounted from the point of view of the victim. This story does the exact opposite - it tells it from the viewpoint of the oppressor, or at least a representative from oppressor's group ... as the storyteller is the child of a Nazi commandant. Being such, it is told with such heartbreaking innocence and naivete that led me to wonder: Did Bruno not have an inkling of anything going on?

Bruno, just nine years old, moves with his family to a new home because of his father's promotion. The place is so remote, he has no one to play with but his sister Gretel (who isn't much of a playmate anyway). Peeking through his bedroom window though, he realizes that there are other children in nearby "farm." He finds it strange though that there are no women and all the people on that side of the fence are dressed in blue pyjamas.

He loses interest in the things nearby and being the inquisitive boy he is, he plays explorer. He finally finds his way to the fence of the "farm"and he meets Shmuel, a boy exactly his age. Over time he develops a friendship with Shmuel, finding so much in common between them despite the fence dividing them. Through repeated visits and gifts of food, Bruno learns about Shmuel's life on the other side of the fence.

Boyne euphemizes everything through Bruno's childlike descriptions: of his new home Out-With, of his mother's taking credit for the good deed of their waiter Pavel, of the lessons he and Gretel learn through their private tutor, of what it means to be wearing striped pyjamas. All these have horrific implications which only an adult mind can understand. Only through the voice of a child does Boyne drive home the point that there are more victims than we realize, and the saddest of them is our children's innocence.

The book ends in tragedy. But the friendship of Bruno and Shmuel teaches us friendships can bloom and last in even the most unlikely places.

I also watched the movie and it is every bit as good as the book (the acting is superb!). I wouldn't recommend a child younger than 12 watching it (or reading the book) as although the lead characters are young boys, and there is nothing too graphic or disturbing, the story is difficult to understand without some background of Nazi Germany.

First line: One afternoon, when Bruno came home from school, he was surprised to find Maria, the family's maid - who always kept her head bowed and never looked up from the carpet - standing in his bedroom, pulling all his belongings out of the wardrobe and packing them in four large wooden crates, even the things he had hidden at the back that belonged to him and were nobody else's business.

Last line: Not in this day and age.

Verdict: A must-read, powerful, disturbing. Prepare yourself for the tears, or at least a lump in the throat. While there is some controversy surrounding the factuality of the novel, the message is clear: stories like these need to be told to remind us that
Fences like this exist all over the world. We hope you never have to encounter one.

Night by Elie Wiesel



Back blurb of Night by Elie Wiesel: A terrifying account of the Nazi death camp horror that turns a young boy into an agonized witness to the death of his family … the death of his innocence … and the death of his God. Penetrating and powerful, as personal as The Diary of Anne Frank, Night awakens the shocking memory of evil at its absolute and carries with it the unforgettable message that this horror must never be allowed to happen again.

My reflections

First line: They called him Moshe the Beadle, as though he had never had a surname in his life.

Night by Elie Wiesel (Wiesel is 1986 Nobel Peace Prize Winner) is one of the most powerful pieces I have ever read. I finished with a heavy feeling in my chest, of tears unshed, of anger and hatred for what inhumanity man can stoop to.

"Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky. Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever. Never shall I forget the nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live. Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God himself. Never."

This is a surprisingly thin volume but you will feel drawn into the story. You can’t stop. Beautifully unverbose, it is an unromanticized historical account. It is exhausting to read as you feel the utter exhaustion that Elie went through – horror after horror, pushing one’s body and spirit to the limit. You need to find out what happens to Elie, his family, his father, to the other Jews. I couldn’t put it down. I finished this in a day.

While I cannot begin to imagine what horrors they faced. There is so much to be learned that you can only look at yourself and wonder what you would do in their shoes … and know in your heart of hearts that you too would question yourself, fellow human beings, and your God.

What is terrifying is that this is not merely a novel. Everything in it happened. Elie Wiesel held his silence for 10 years before he decided to to tell the world his story and that of many other Holocaust survivors.

The opposite of love is not hate, but indifference.

That is Wiesel’s message, and it is my sincere hope that I never become indifferent. Please read this book. It has moved me and my husband to tears.

Read more on about this amazing man at:

{Originally here.}
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© guiltless readingMaira Gall