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Loading... People of the Bookby Geraldine Brooks
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. "People of the Book" is an enjoyable read for several reasons. Initially, it is quite obvious that the author is a talented writer. Her characters are easy to empathize with, even if their experiences are not the same as our own. The plot is unusual in that it is based on a historical truth, a book called a haggadah, that actually existed. The story revolves around a Sarajevo haggadah, one of the earliest examples of a book illuminated with images, in this case, a Jewish volume. The book is saved from being burnt in one of history's uglier moments, times that are repeated throughout the past of many countries political and religious disputes. The reader follows the journey of the haggadah as it passes through the hands of the many people who protect it, recognizing its value, or use it for their own purposes. In this way, the author tells the story of the book and the people involved with its creation and its continued existence. In addition, the reader learns of Hanna, who is the present-day rare book expert who is affected by the book's past and its future, which she becomes responsible for, changing her life forever. Brooks' artfully weaves the stories together, causing the reader to become emotionally involved with the book as the vehicle moving the characters along the path of their lives, and the fates which befall them. Each person is faced with a moral dilemma, and has to dig deeply within themselves to find the person they truly wish to be, in order to protect the book, or to use it for nefarious reasons that they must admit to, sooner or later. The book becomes a moral compass, as it passes through each of their hands, and ultimately Hanna is faced with the same challenges when she is the recipient of the book. A well-told story, "People of the Book" had me eagerly opening its covers every night to move forward with each individual story outlining its progress through history and locations until it makes its way to Hanna, in the present day. I would recommend this book to other readers, and will look for more of Brooks' books in the future. A really good read A compelling read, but still, many of the plot twists and developments were such cliches that I was a little disappointed. Great reader - Edwina Wren.
While peering through a microscope at a rime of salt crystals on the manuscript of the Haggadah, Hanna reflects that “the gold beaters, the stone grinders, the scribes, the binders” are “the people I feel most comfortable with. Sometimes in the quiet these people speak to me.” Though the reader’s sense of Hanna’s relationship with the Haggadah rarely deepens to such a level, Geraldine Brooks’s certainly has. Brooks' novel meticulously, lovingly amalgamates mystery and history with the personal story of its heroine, rare-book expert and conservator Hanna Heath. If Brooks becomes the new patron saint of booksellers, she deserves it. The stories of the Sarajevo Haggadah, both factual and fictional, are stirring testaments to the people of many faiths who risked all to save this priceless work.
References to this work on external resources.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)
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I found myself frustrated by how much of the book's story Hanna will never know, but that is the way it is with history. I was relieved at her last discovery, however, and hope it will lead her to more insight into the history of the book. The afterword, with it's details about Brooks's research and the story of the real Haggadah, was interesting as well.
Another good one from Geraldine Brooks. (