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by Nicole Krauss
In a word (or two or three): this thing just keeps making me think of the moon landing for some reason
From Mr. Hipster:
I had no idea that Nicole Krauss was the
wife of Everything Is Illuminated
author, Jonathan Safran Foer, before purchasing this book. It proved that
I know next to nothing about anything--especially literature and the
community therein. Regardless, I had read good things about her books,
and decided to start with her first and work my way to her second,
more popular, novel afterwards. The premise of this one--a man found
wandering in the desert with no memory of his former life--is certainly
not a new, or particularly original, one. Amnesia is the stuff of
bad soap operas and cheesy Harrison Ford movies. I was curious how
she would class up a dusty gimmick. It turns out she just got deep
with it. And, honestly, it was less about the story, which was good
in and of itself, but the tone and flow with which she writes is the real winner here. Writing
about complex emotional states in relatively simple language can be
a challenge. Too many times, authors go for the SAT words and the
surreal, meandering post-modern explorations that make my head hurt.
Krauss manages to present compelling characters, while driving the
story forward and not letting what is a basic cerebral and emotional
topic bog it down with wackiness. The basic gist of the story is that
our main character loses all memory of his life after age twelve because
of a brain tumor (or, more accurately, the operation to remove that
tumor). The problem is, he had a life, with a wife and everything,
to go back to with no memory of any of it. The book goes through his
struggle to empathize with his wife's loss, and reconnect with his
former life. The problem is that without the memory of that life,
he really has no attachment or desire to live it. Things deteriorate
from there, and eventually lead to some science fiction type stuff
in the Nevada desert that's more metaphorical than anything else.
The overriding themes are experience and loneliness--with a dash of
anger thrown in. In any case, the novel was very well written, and
I enjoyed it well enough to be very much looking forward to reading
her next one.
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The
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