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Loading... Fugitive Piecesby Anne Michaels
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An achingly beautiful book. Michaels' prose is poetry, and she writes about both the mundane and the awesome with the same reverence. ( )Jakob, as a small boy, escapes death by soldiers in 1940s Poland, the sole survivor of his Jewish family. He is rescued by a Greek man, himself the only survivor of a group of archaeologists working on the Biskupin dig. Both are haunted by the dead and are trying to deal with their own survival. Jakob turns to poetry and Athos to his histories. They move from Athos' home in Greece to Canada with Athos' work, but for Jakob, the dreams of his family won't leave him. He meets Alex, a vibrant Canadian, who tries to draw him out of the past, but Jakob seems to retreat further away from her. The book talks of loss, the guilts of survival, the repercussions of the past on those who didn't live through it, but are no less affected by it. The fear that seems to be passed down through a mother's milk, also the loss. Many books dealing with the Holocaust end after the liberation of the camps, but this book takes us further, reminding us of the effects that can still be felt today. I usually read books very quickly, but this one that I had to slow down with, read it in parts, to be able to take it all in. I am sure it is one of those books that will remain with me for a long time. Stunningly poetic and moving. "Time is a blind guide." I'll get right to the point: I was disappointed with Fugitive Pieces. Most of the book is the story of Jakob, who is orphaned during the holocaust, and taken in by a Greek scholar named Athos. After the war they move to Canada, and Jakob grows up to become a poet. Then, about 2/3 of the way through the book, the narrative shifts to Ben, a young professor whose life briefly intersects with Jakob's. I had high expectations for this Orange Prize winner written by a well-known poet. The language was, indeed, lovely. Jakob's story in particular was well told and poignant in parts. But that wasn't enough for me. By and large, I failed to identify with the characters, and didn't care much about the outcome of their lives and relationships. no reviews | add a review
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Fugitive Pieces is a book about memory and forgetting. How is it possible to love the living when our hearts are still with the dead? What is the difference between what historical fact tells us and what we remember? More than that, the novel is a meditation on the power of language to free our souls and allow us to find our own destinies.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:20 -0400)
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