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The Siege: A Novel by Helen Dunmore
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The Siege: A Novel (original 2001; edition 2002)

by Helen Dunmore

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
1,0035120,528 (3.92)1 / 527
Leningrad, September 1941. German tanks surround the city, imprisoning those who live there. The besieged people of Leningrad face shells, starvation and the Russian winter. Interweaving two love affairs in two generations, this novel draws us into the Levin's family struggle to stay alive.
Member:BlackSheepDances
Title:The Siege: A Novel
Authors:Helen Dunmore
Info:Grove Press (2002), Paperback, 304 pages
Collections:Your library
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Work Information

The Siege by Helen Dunmore (2001)

  1. 30
    The Madonnas of Leningrad by Debra Dean (Imprinted)
  2. 30
    The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway (gennyt)
    gennyt: Both are stories of cities under siege, and the struggles of ordinary people for survival in dangerous and extreme conditions.
  3. 10
    The Noise of Time by Julian Barnes (charl08)
    charl08: Linked by the experience of 'the terror'.
  4. 00
    The Life of an Unknown Man by Andreï Makine (GoST)
    GoST: Another historical novel about starvation and survival during the Siege of Leningrad.
  5. 00
    The Conductor by Sarah Quigley (avatiakh)
  6. 00
    The 900 Days: The Siege of Leningrad by Harrison E. Salisbury (Imprinted)
  7. 00
    Through the Burning Steppe: A Wartime Memoir by Elena Kozhina (Imprinted)
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 Orange January/July: The Siege by Helen Dunmore8 unread / 8lauralkeet, January 2012

» See also 527 mentions

English (49)  Italian (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (51)
Showing 1-5 of 49 (next | show all)
If there is one word that describes this novel, it is "cold". Not only because of the harsh realities of the Russian winter in the midst of the German occupation of Leningrad. Cold here comes from the lack of emotion in a novel that is set up for much more.

As it is to be expected, there are some great depictions of hunger, sickness and struggle. Some of the descriptions are really beautiful and the language is nice.
But, this book fails in character development. For a background story of such epic magnitude, there is remarkably little emotion here. I was so disappointed in this respect.
There is also an attempt to expand the plot with a family story before the war, but it never comes alive for me.

One other detail I didn't like was that the city never felt like St. Petersburg. It could've been any other city. It really doesn't do it justice.

The thing is, I feel bad to give this book a low rating cause it's honourable to write books that give a name to all the brave people who went through such horrors. But, in a literary sense, this book doesn't come even close to the snippets of praise on its blurb.

2.5 stars ( )
  ZeljanaMaricFerli | Mar 4, 2024 |
A well-written story of the first months of the seige of Leningrad from August 1941 and finishing in May 1942. The seige continues for more years but the winter of 1941/42 is the worst period for the city and this is Helen Dunmore's focus. We live through the seige with one family. Anna and her young brother Kolya. Their mother died giving birth to Kolya and Anna looks after him. Their father is a novelist who is out of favour with the authorities. Marina, an actress, comes to live with them as the Germans advance. Anna's partner, Andrei, a young doctor, also comes to live in their small apartment. Food is an obsession as the city starves and wood for heating and Helen Dunmore's words bring this to life. I could taste the homemade jam they found at the point when they were at their lowest. They ate spoonfuls fo the sweet jam straight from the jar. Helen Dunmore describes the exhaustion of not having enough food and the lack of energy. When Anna takes the sledge to look for wood for the stove the reader is walking every difficult step with her. ( )
  CarolKub | Oct 4, 2023 |
I didn't understand until now. My eyes fill with tears, and I don't know why. But I know that it's by these things, and nothing else, that we survive. Poetry doesn't exist to make life beautiful. Poetry is life itself.

The Siege is the story of a Russian family trapped in Leningrad in the long siege by Nazi troops that took place between September 8, 1941 and January 27, 1944. The book covers the first year of the siege, including the first relentless winter. I knew, of course, that the Germans had attacked Russia and that German soldiers paid a huge price for that error, but I had no idea that it lasted for over two years and had truly given no thought to what it was like for those being blockaded behind the line.

The story revolves around Anna, a young woman in her early twenties, who is already raising her younger brother because her mother has died giving him life. Her father is a writer, who is out of favor in Stalin’s Russia. An actress, also out-of-favor, a tough red-head who becomes Anna’s friend, and a young doctor named Andrei round out the cast of characters. The details we are given regarding the effects of the winter and the absence of food make the suffering palpable.

It is hard, indeed, to imagine how anyone endures the hardships and keeps their sanity.

Anna doesn't like going past the park anymore. There are people sitting on benches, swathed in snow, planted like bulbs to wait for spring. They stay there day after day. No one comes to take them away.

One of the things history does is inform us. The past can be a warning to the future, for it has that uncanny way of repeating itself if you dare to forget the lesson it has offered you. The moment you say, “this cannot happen to us”, it might.

Pre-Covid, this might have just read like a World War II history, but post-Covid, when I got to the section where Dunmore began to talk about the city, the danger, the complacency of the people, who had always been supplied and believed they could not be completely without, I shivered with a sense that history was talking to me, directly.

Suddenly and sharply, it's obvious that cities only exist because everyone agrees to let them exist. It's crazy, when you think of it, for millions of mouths to pack themselves into a couple of hundred square kilometers, without a pig or a potato patch between them.

I fear cities are even less self-sufficient these days.

For city people it is hard to grasp that the supply chain is broken. It’s kept them going all their lives, even though the system sometimes dissolves into chaos, and prices go up and down like an undertaker's hat.

I think about how crazy people went when they thought there was going to be a shortage of toilet paper. Imagine being rationed to two pieces of bread a day—total.

This book is as tactile as a book can get. I smelled the stale breath, felt the cold, tasted the jars of jam and wedges of honey they so carefully hoarded, heard the cries of the hungry babies, and saw the hanging flesh and gaunt faces. It is a story of hardship, but it is also a story of sacrifice and survival and transcendent love.

What a remarkable way to begin a new year of reading.

( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
The Levin family battle against starvation in this novel set during the German siege of Leningrad. Anna digs tank traps and dodges patrols as she scavenges for wood, but the hand of history is hard to escape.
  lubaba.hashmi | Oct 18, 2021 |
Showing 1-5 of 49 (next | show all)
The Siege is an agonising read, but also a numbing one. The novel, which narrates the first and worst winter of a siege that lasted from 1941 until 1944, animates the senses in order to feel them shutting down.
added by kake | editThe Guardian, John Mullan (Feb 5, 2011)
 
[L]anguage that is elegantly, starkly beautiful. . . quieter and more powerful than her earlier work.
 
In limpid and careful prose, with an intermittently choric narrator, Dunmore presents a community in travail.
added by kake | editThe Independent (Jun 16, 2001)
 
Admirers of Dunmore's thrillers such as Talking to the Dead and With Your Crooked Heart may be disappointed by her decision to wrestle with the raw materials of history. Nevertheless, it is the lasting achievement of The Siege convincingly to narrate a horrifying war story from the point of view of the hearth, not the trenches.
added by kake | editThe Observer, Michael Williams (Jun 10, 2001)
 

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Re: The future of Leningrad

...The Fuehrer has decided to have Leningrad wiped from the face of the earth.
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Leningrad, September 1941. German tanks surround the city, imprisoning those who live there. The besieged people of Leningrad face shells, starvation and the Russian winter. Interweaving two love affairs in two generations, this novel draws us into the Levin's family struggle to stay alive.

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