All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr (3.5)
Reading this book while travelling through Austria was a
unique experience. Hearing lots of German being spoken certainly put me in the
right frame of mind. That being said, I
have mixed feelings about this book. My main complaint is how one of the main
characters, the German boy, Werner, was written to be one of the most
sympathetic Nazi characters I have read.
From his introduction, I felt manipulated into liking him and knew I
would be called on to ignore or at least understand his war actions. The story is told mainly from his point of
view and that of a 16-year-old blind French girl. The author jumps back and
forth from a time shortly after the invasion of Normandy to a time 5-10 years
leading up to it. The point of view at various times comes from a couple of
other characters (a Nazi gemologist, the girl’s father, her uncle, etc.), which
seems a bit disjointed but does work. I
liked the unique qualities of the story, including the plot, but I found the
ending a little unsatisfying. The climax happened quite early (~85%) and the
story dangled on with many more small events. Overall the plot was compelling,
I liked how some of the characters were written, but something was ‘off’.
The Book of Life (All Souls), Deborah Harkness (3.5)
For light, romantic, ‘Twilight’ for adults’ type reading,
this series fits the bill. Sprinkled with interesting historical information
and characters you want to follow, these books have a bit less ‘mooning’ and
more action as the two main characters (a witch and a vampire) fall in love and
try to figure out how witches, vampires and daemons came to be and are supposed
to flourish. As typical with unconventional lovers, most everyone is against
them and many roadblocks thrown in their way.
I found this third book better than the second – it wrapped most
elements up well, leaving a bit open for more, but was generally satisfying in
its closer.
No comments:
Post a Comment