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HHhH - Read Along Comments for Part 1 (April 2013)
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Daniel
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Apr 01, 2013 04:18AM

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It's such a simple idea, the way he is combining history with his attempts to write it, with the perceptions of readers and those looking back on history.
I particularly like when other characters find it hard to believe that what he's writing isn't taking a degree of authorial license. It's very true: those writing 'historical' treatments, whether novels, films or whatever, rarely seem to care too much about the real accuracy when set against a good story. And in one sense that's fine; many of my favourite novels do this. But he raises interesting questions about what it leads us to believe about history.
I wonder if he'll talk about the fact that Americans who paid more attention to Hollywood than history may believe they cracked the Enigma code...


They would be hilarious if they had been completely impotent.


I'm have an ever-increasing difficult time deciphering when what he's saying is truth, discovered as he's researching, and when he's going to come back six paragraphs later and say "Fooled you!"
This isn't historical fiction. It isn't history. It's more like a memoir with some researched facts thrown in (or created). This is a whole new genre - memoir fiction! (Or is that what James Frey created.)


I figured one of you would get on me for that comment. I haven't actually read Frey, so I won't be able to truly compare. I'm almost finished, realizing this is more fact based than not, but still frustrated with it.


I had the same thought and ended up believing that the narrator was also a hybrid - part fact, part fiction.


Maybe:)

I happened to look up the murder of George Strasser on the Night of the Long Knives (Ch. 39-40). Fabrice thinks the narrator it: "What about Strasser? Heydrich going there in person, giving the order to let him suffer a slow death. that too he though I'd invented. I am mortified and I should 'But no, it's all true!"
So, as best as I can tell, Heydrich was involved in giving the order so is ultimately responsible, but there is no indication taht I was physically present at the time.
Now obviously, I am not an expert on Nazi politics, and even if I were I probably wouldn't know every "fact" listed. I only checked on that one because it was indicated that it was doubted. What am I supposed to get out the book if I don't even know what parts of the alleged history is real and which isn't?

I may not be an expert on Nazi politics, but I know my Disney classics. And the queen from Sleeping Beauty was kind-hearted. If he can't distinguish Sleeping Beauty from Snow White, I've got problems.

If I can't rely on the historical portions without double checking, I'm not sure what the value is.


The more important point, of course, is that he's getting WWII specifics wrong and not noting it. That is troubling.

I guess it depends how you're approaching this and your thoughts on historical novels in general.

I agree. Which makes me wonder what I'm supposed to be getting out of the second part. If the first part is teaching me, "Nothing is reliable," then I'm reading this broadly historical account (it is a fact that Gabcik and Kubis killed Heydrich), and then there are a million details all of which I can only think, "But were they really in a crypt? Did they really try to flood them out?" I don't know, and I don't really have the interest in checking.
If I'm reading a historical Civil War romance, and the hero is killed by General Sherman as his wife leaves him on a rainy day in Georgia, and the historical record tells me it was sunny that day, I can say, "Well, the author chose to make it rainy because that added to the mood. The real story is about the romance, and the historical aspects are there to add flavor." But here the history IS the story -- the only plot is the assassination, and the people involved in the assassination plot. So I can't really say that historical inaccuracies add to the greater purpose, unless the greater purpose is to have me not care about the novel!
I understand we have an "unreliable narrator," but what is gained by having the narrator mis-state and then not correct that Freydrich was present at Strasser's murder? It teaches me to not trust his history, when by Part II all that is left is history!


