Tuesday, July 25, 2017

2nd book mentioned in previous blog: Review of THE NIGHTINGALE, by Kristin Hannah

THE NIGHTINGALE, by Kristin Hannah, published by St. Martins Press in 2015. The book is set in France during WWII and is the story of two sisters, family, french resistance and German occupation of France. The book encompasses the whole time period of the war from the Germans breaking through the Maginot Line, which had been set in place after the Great Conflict or WWI. The sisters father served in WWI and came home a different man, lost his wife and turned to drink and sent his daughters far away from him. One daughter finds love and the other finds herself rebellious.

This story starts off in 1995 on the Oregon Coast with an older woman about to be moved into a nursing facility as a way to save her son Julien from taking care of her as she is dying. She goes to the attic and goes through an old trunk, which starts her on a journey of remembering the past and how her son really knows nothing about her. We quickly slide over to France 1939 and start the story of the two sisters. Once in awhile we go to the 1990's but for the most part the book is written from the past.

The two sisters are very different, Vianne the older sister, tries to be in control of her emotions, falling in love after being deserted by her father, getting pregnant at a young man and marrying him. Having no time for her baby sister, who handles this abandonment by her father by being rebellious and being sent to a boarding schools, as she keeps being kicked out because of her behavior, this is Isabelle. She has issues not only with her father but with Vianne, because Vianne is the second person to abandon her when she was just a small child.

Then the war presses in around them, Isabelle gets thrown out of another school at 18, goes home to her father who sends her to live with her sister after the Germans have broken through the Maginot Line, he sends her with a family headed that way but they run out of fuel and she has to set off on foot. She decides she need to get away from the mass exodus from Paris to the country and sets off in a different direction, running into a man named Gaeton. Who walks with her to  her sisters house, with a promise that when they see that Vianne is okay, he would take her to the front with him.

While all this is going on Vianne is getting overrun by the people looking for food. She goes into hiding with her daughter locking all the doors, so she does not answer when her sister knocks. Starting off the reunion with bitter emotions from Isabelle the next morning, as she chastises her sister for having the door locked and being mad at Gaeton for abandoning her with a note pinned to her dress.

Okay enough of this or I will tell the whole story and Kristen Hannah does a much better job. This story is well written and it kept me guessing until the end on who the old woman was in the beginning of the book. The end of the book when the Germans realize that they might not win and start getting even more brutal is very graphic, so beware. The book takes its name from two sources on being the name of the person who take fallen air force members from the US and RAF across to safety using the Pyrenees mountains and the last name translated for the two girls. It is not only about relationships between the family and lovers, but relationships between occupied countries with their oppressors.  How a whole country let atrocities happen because of fear and or gain, but not the whole country because there were resistance fighters and people who hid others in the face of danger to their own lives.

This book hits a variety of genres, mystery, history, romance, tragedy and a few more. A well written book, that took four days to read.  I probably could have done it in two but other obligations got in the way and I sat up till 130 AM reading last night as I wanted to find out who was our woman. But as I said before the last chapters are pretty graphic, so reader beware. if I was to rate it with a five star system, it would receive all five stars.

Still reading The Golden Notebook, but....

I am still reading the Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing, but I have also read two book club choices for last month and nest month, so I thought I would review them least I forget.

This month the book was A WRINKLE IN TIME, by Madeleine L'Engle, my copy was printed in 1997 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc for the Quality Paperback Book Club. I read this book when I was not a child, but later on in life, then again when I had children, and now for a third time. When I was younger I did not pick up on some of the religious themes in the book, but concentrated on the fact that there were two children rescuing their dad from an evil entity. I was heavily into science fiction, so this fell into my favorite kind of read. When I read it with my children, we were looking at it through eyes of book reports. In each read I found myself being drawn to the character of Meg. I was a little different from my family, though they loved me they did not understand me. I also had a mass of curly hair in the era of Twiggy and straight hair. This made me the butt of jokes in school. I also had to explain why my father mysteriously disappeared, to people who would come up to a seven year old and say things in a snide tone, "Where's your father?"

It is a cleverly written book that can follow you from childhood to adult and still be able to find different meanings. I believe the author when she was asked who this book was written for and she said people. She did not want it to be a specific age group and I applaud her for making it a book that can be enjoyed on many levels.

At our book club we talked about the time frame this book was written , when the start of cookie cutter houses started showing up, where whole neighborhoods looked exactly the same and if you did not fit the mold you were ostracized. A time when individuality might have been frowned upon. Also discussed were the religious concepts of dark overshadowing the light. Love conquering all. That maybe the Mrs's were also seen as the holy trinity. So many concepts in such a small powerhouse of a book.

I think the only thing we did not like was how the book ended so abruptly, one minute we are in conflict and the next we are back in the garden and the story ends. I felt like she wanted to go on but decided this was a good place to stop, leaving you with the feeling that there should be more. I have not read the other books with these characters so maybe that will be when I finish the rest of my 100.

Also, I think I will end here with this is a good book to read with your children, you may want them to be in 6 grade so that they can understand it a wee bit better. I will do another blog for the next book.