All the Light We Cannot See
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Did anyone else have difficulty connecting with this book.

I couldn't get involved either. I tried longer than I should have..LOL






I completely agree, I read such great reviews and kept seeing it one very bookstore shelf so I had high expectations and it left me wondering if I completley missed the whole point. I just didn't get the book, I didn't get the story and I didn't find the story powerful or compelling in any way shape or form. When I finished it, I just kind of thought...so what? what exactly was I reading? I can't even begin to explain the story because it was just confusing to me.
Also, I agree with another poster below about when the two character meet, I figured that was going to happen but when it did it was so pointless and so brief I failed to see any reason why it even mattered.

Agreed. What was the point, I expected it to have bigger impact or for them to have had a story together not just a random encounter one time.


This is the only book I have not finished since I became an avid reader. I understand in his life these "times" went on and on, but as the reader I kept feeling like I wanted to push forward with the story. I finally gave up.

I found the book engaging from the beginning. I liked that the encounter between Marie and Werner was treated realistically ~ no "Hollywood ending" for this pair!


Yes. I did not like it at all and am surprised by the rave reviews.
The book's length did cause some concern for me ~ at first. But, the fact that the chapters were short and had titles gave it the structure I needed to keep me in the hunt!
It is long, but I loved Doerr's language ~ gorgeous metaphors that, for me, "nailed" the scene he was trying to describe.



I prefer non-fiction, and tire of reading the same story over and over again (same with movies and television). This tale was fresh, and I don't think the average reader will be disappointed, unless there's a compulsion to have the story follow the paved road to "happily ever after."



Did not enjoy this book at all. I can usually start and finish a book in about 2-3 days and more importantly I enjoy reading books. This one was PAINFUL! I am afraid that we may be a club of a who feel this way. Sooo glad I am finished with it so I can move on.





I will say this: the author's descriptive talents and attention to detail are amazing - lyrical and eloquent without compromising purpose or pace.

I agree the mythical diamond was an unnecessary distraction that was just trying to up the element of danger. The ending was very anticlimactic, even the meeting of the 2 main characters, which only takes about a page or two. And Werner's ending is just so offhand.
I should have listened to my inner voice that has been telling me "I just CANNOT read any more books about Nazis!" I felt the same way about Life after Life which I think should be called Death after Death.

I also had a difficult time getting into it. It started getting interesting at about page 68 then I don't know what happened. I pretty much forced myself to finish it; I felt betrayed by what happened after they finally met! I think it would make a better movie than read.

Werner did not have the jewel. He threw it back into the sea out of respect to Marie Laure. He'd seen her drop it in the sea. But he wanted to keep something of her so he kept the little house and the key which she had given him.

Totally agree about the diamond. It seemed to be a plot device to show how the Nazis plundered.

Exactly


gertt wrote: "Pearl wrote: " Werner did not have the jewel. He threw it back into the sea out of respect to Marie Laure. He'd seen her drop it in the sea. But he wanted to keep something of her so he kept the li..."
@Gert, When Marie Laure receives the model house from Jutta she wonders if Werner put the jewel among the snails or put it back into the house or put it into his pocket. She opens the house and finds the key, not the diamond. So what happened to the diamond? We know that Werner did not have it in his possession when he was killed a few minutes after he retrieved the model. Something surely would have been made of that, if he had. Now Marie Laure remembers the words of the Dr. Gefard "That something so small could be so beautiful. Worth so much. Only the strongest people can turn away from feelings like that." I believe her bringing these words to mind it the author's intent to show us that Werner was, in the end, one of the strong. Then in almost the final chapter entitled "Sea of Flames" Doerr describes the resting place of the diamond. He closes with "Mantled with algae, bedecked with barnacles. Crawled over by snails. It stirs among the pebbles." That's pretty definitive to me. The only thing I speculated about is the reason for Werner's not keeping the diamond. But I think my speculation that his respect for Marie Laure's wishes is sound. He would know that she wanted to throw it away. Why else would she have tossed out something so valuable?

But I have to say, from the very start I felt totally submerged in a very realistic world of life in WWII.
I thought that life perceived by a blind girl was extremely moving in parts. And little Werner was just a cog in a wheel of something that deep down he new was wrong.
I liked the subplot of the sick German officer in his desperate search for the diamond.
The flash forward to what the remaining characters lives were like in the 1970s was a surprise and made for a satisfying end.
I'm glad I read it, but it won't stay with me like last years Pulitzer Prize winner, The Goldfinch did.

Read wrote: "I was dubious to start with as war fiction doesn't really interest me and I have to say I really only read it because it won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
But I have to say, from the very st..."



I enjoyed your review, and agreed with it.

I felt a little let down by the end; I expected a better resolution and a meet up in the old ages of the two. Also, I felt like the characters could have been more fully developed; and the plot a little more fleshed out..I was left wanting more by the end of the book. Not to say I didn't enjoy reading it.

I just found it boring. The actual meeting was so disappointing. I wasn't expecting a happily ever after but a little more interaction might have been better. I don't know I just found it boring and not compelling.
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So sorry to disagree, but that's what discussions are for, each of us with our own opinion but oh, we did need that magical diamond, whether those that had it believed it to be magical or not. I can't imagine the book without it. Not only did it cast a magical spell on the book (will it protect the one who had it?) but it was Von Rumpel's pursuit of the diamond (not for its value but because he thought it would save his life) that lent such suspense to the story.
I cared about these characters as if I had always known them in my life and loved this book so much - one of my favorites of 2014. I usually don't see what the hype is about with many much-publicized books and picked this one up not expecting much but soon felt the hype was definitely worth it. A book I will always remember and treasure.