Meg's Reviews > The Civilized World: A Novel in Stories

The Civilized World by Susi Wyss

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3423663
's review
Mar 28, 12

bookshelves: literary-fiction, sent-for-review, short-stories, read-in-2012
Read from March 09 to 16, 2012

Susi Wyss' The Civilized World is everything I love about literary fiction: vivid prose that reads like poetry; memorable, multifaceted characters with whom you cheer and grieve; settings so alive you can feel the grit between your teeth; language that is both accessible and beautiful. A book with words that linger, creating a world marvelously alive to you.

Told through a series of vignettes over many years, each leap finds us visiting Adjoa and Janice at another point in their storied lives. While other characters come and go, these two women — one African; one American — felt like the true main characters. They were the ones to whom I was emotionally bonded, and I couldn’t help but feel Adjoa’s hurts and frustrations. Her twin brother was someone I never “clicked” with, knowing he couldn’t possibly be up to any good, but I cared for him because Adjoa did. She’s a hardworking, tenacious and brave woman — someone you can’t help but like.

The atmosphere of The Civilized World is engrossing, and I’m a bit abashed to note that I knew (and know) little of Africa before reading this book. Though not exactly well-versed now, I’m more on my way — and definitely intrigued. This peek at life in Ghana and Malawi is unvarnished. Wyss’ work is described as “influenced by her twenty-year career managing women’s health programs in Africa, where she lived for more than eight years,” and I felt like the character of Janice — a white American — could be an extension of the author. Janice was broken, a little bit jaded — but ultimately someone I felt for. Her passages with Adjoa were easily my favorites.

At just over 250 pages, The Civilized World was a quick read that really got me thinking. Regardless of the differences that kept Adjoa and Janice separate, their bonds — the need for love; the searching for acceptance; the grief for things that were and are not now — was palpable. Though the extraneous characters didn’t mesh as well for me, I loved Ophelia’s obsession with offbeat, nonsequitor African names (like “Nobody” and “Comfort”). By turns deeply sad and uplifting, the common threads that bind these characters were fascinating.

Fans of literary fiction and those interested in Africa, female relationships, race relations and other dynamics will find a memorable, lyrical story in The Civilized World. I only used the publisher description above because it’s hard to pinpoint, to classify; it is truly a story all its own.

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Reading Progress

03/09/2012 page 2
1.0%
03/09/2012 page 33
13.0% "Already very engrossed in this one -- Wyss' writing is excellent."
03/12/2012 page 104
41.0% "I'm inhaling whole passages without realizing it -- it's just that good."
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