The After Effects of World War II

The Great Fire     Shirley Hazzard     (2003)  In 1947, the post-war world is an unsettled place, with bombed cites not yet rebuilt and countless humans left wounded, in body and in spirit. Aldred Leith, a British war hero still in uniform, is traveling in Asia, compiling information for a book about the effects of the global conflict. In occupied Japan, he meets two extraordinarily bright young Australian siblings, Benedict and Helen Driscoll. Benedict is slowly dying from a rare disease, and Helen tends to him. Meanwhile, a friend of Leith’s, military lawyer Peter Exley, is in Hong Kong, prosecuting war crimes. The novelist follows these characters, and many lesser characters whom they interact with, over an eventful and fateful year. Be warned: the prose here is dense, with many multisyllabic abstract nouns to make you stop to reread. But the slog will be well worth your time. Shirley Hazzard vividly illuminates the period and the people, while skewering some Australians for their brashness and some New Zealanders for their provinciality. What of the “great fire” of the title, which recurs in sentences throughout the book? I took it mainly as referring to the cruel destructiveness of war, particularly the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

A God in Ruins     Kate Atkinson     (2015)  In Atkinson’s expansive Life After Life (reviewed here), the novelist plays out the many possible life choices of Ursula Todd, with speculative scenarios that are set against the tumultuous history of the twentieth century in Europe. The sequel to Life After Life is A God in Ruins, a novel in much more conventional form but no less mesmerizing, telling the story of Teddy Todd, Ursula’s beloved younger brother. Teddy is a gifted man and a steadying presence to his family. As an RAF pilot during World War II, he fully expects to die on one of his many air raids on the European continent. When, miraculously, he survives being shot down and being imprisoned in Germany, he has to confront the rest of his life. Atkinson reveals the brutal impact of war on one person’s psyche, as well as the wide repercussions of war on his family and friends.

Back in 2017, I posted about The Women in the Castle by Jessica Shattuck. This is another powerful novel, about three German widows in the time right after World War II. Read my full review here.

Reads for a Waning Pandemic

Not by design, I’ve been reading quite a few novels about family dynamics. Here are some mini-reviews.

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The Last Hundred Years Trilogy:  Some Luck, Early Warning, Golden Age Jane Smiley (2014, 2015) Hang in for more than 1300 pages in three volumes, to follow an Iowa farm family, the Langdons, through an American century, from 1920 to 2020. As you proceed at one year per chapter, refer to the family tree that’s included whenever you need to. Savor the Langdons’ good years, because Smiley’s political predictions for the years 2015 to 2020 are eerily accurate and pretty distressing. I’ve read this entire trilogy twice. If you don’t have time for all three books, at least read Some Luck, which is my favorite segment. 

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Perfect Life Jessica Shattuck (2009) The lives of four friends intersect in the Boston area fifteen years after they met in college, with a plot that revolves around the question of what it means to be a family, biological and non-biological. This contemporary novel is good, but I like Shattuck’s historical novel, The Women in the Castle, better. See my review here.  

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A Lie Someone Told You About Yourself Peter Ho Davies (2021) Ho Davies doesn’t pull any punches as he explores dark truths about fatherhood, marriage, abortion, and the raising of a high-needs child. The book might be autobiographical or it might be totally fiction—doesn’t really matter when the writing is this good.

 

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Good Company     Cynthia d’Aprix Sweeney  (2020) The plot here is a little thin (woman finds evidence of husband’s affair and struggles with the knowledge), but the character development is excellent. The setting toggles between the New York theater world and the Los Angeles world of TV and movies.   

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Mary Jane Jessica Anya Blau (2021) Take an absolutely hilarious look at 1975:  the music, the food, the clothing, the Zeitgeist.  A sweet, sheltered 14-year-old girl becomes a summer nanny in the unusual household of a psychiatrist who is treating a rock star recovering from addiction.

Reviews of some nonfiction titles are coming!