All the Light We Cannot See
discussion
Did anyone else have difficulty connecting with this book.
message 151:
by
Susan
(new)
-
rated it 1 star
Aug 29, 2015 08:53AM

reply
|
flag

binsie, exactly.

Susan, beautifully said. Perhaps Doerr is "speaking in a language I could not understand." I'm always dragging around a copy of James Joyce's "Ulysses". It can't be read as a novel imo, and is one massive poem. So maybe we should indeed look at "All the Light We Cannot See" as a group of short stories, like "Olive Ketteridge" which also won a Pulitzer and isn't a novel, but a set of short stories. Maybe "Light" can't be considered a novel at all

I remember thinking it could have ended sooner than it did. There were a couple good stopping points, but I was fascinated nonetheless with the beautiful prose, and the twisting puzzles mirroring the streets on which they walked, the clever old uncle alone his is rooms with his radio, and how the smallest things done by one person can be picked up by someone far away. It also portrays the Nazis as the devils they were/are, which we must never forget.

Apart from the idea of war being viewed and lived through the eyes of two children, I also appreciated the honesty of a non-completely happy ending. Because that's just how life works. Had Werner and Marie-Laure got together and lived happily ever after would have made the ending puerile and unrealistic.
And I think Doerr was very skillful in describing Marie-Laure's experiences only by means of smells, touch and noises.
What I don't understand is that some people don't get the point of the book. It doesn't take much imagination (for those of us, me included, who are lucky enough not to have lived through WW2 (or any other war)) to picture how an orphan boy would be sucked into the wickedness and ruthlessness of a country like Nazi Germany, even though he didn't fully believe in the ideals, and stand to watch as atrocities happen all around him.
What he did, saving Marie-Laure (twice) and Etienne, was the moment he finally listened to his heart, he followed his ideals, he took responsibilities, he discovered whom he was. All for nothing in exchange, not even freedom. That was the moment he became a man.
I really couldn't fault the book.

Apart from the idea of war being viewed and lived through the eyes of two children, I also appreciated the honesty of a non-comp..."
Perhaps my problem was that I had seen WWII through the eyes of a child in many other books (The Book Thief of course springs instantly to mind)and memoirs, so that viewpoint was not at all new to me. And the idea of how a young boy, especially an orphan boy, could be seduced by a wicked political movement is the very basis of the Hitler Youth Program and is still carried on today among boy soldiers and terrorist initiates. So, none of this was new or impressive to me.

Apart from the idea of war being viewed and lived through the eyes of two children, I also appreciated the hone..."
"The Book Thief" is also from the point of view of a child, yes, but it's a completely different perspective. She's a girl who is relatively well off, even during the war, but her family hides this monstrous secret from the state, but she doesn't fully comprehend why it's a secret at all.
Here instead we see the ruthlessness of the Hitler Youth from the inside. We feel its arrogance, its heartlessness. If one naively reads the synopsis of the book, one would think that Marie-Laure, a blind French girl would live a much more difficult life during the Occupation than Werner's. Werner is the oppressor, Marie-Laure the oppressed.
But peering through the Hitler Youth, we understand how naive that conception would be. For Werner sees tragedies beyond imagining. That's what "THe Book Thief" misses.
I don't pretend to be an expert in WW2 fiction, but having read both this book and "The Book Thief" somewhat recently, I can definitely say that the former had me much more involved. It brings us to the eye of the storm, while "The book thief" limits itself to safe Germany where people were warily looking over their shoulders, careful not to show any opposition to the Fuhrer's ideals.

Agree I think the book is over-rated.

BINGO!

Actually, I think "The Book Thief" was far superior. I liked "All The Light..." but did not love it.




It took me forever to read - I read it over a few months, not weeks. I found it very dark.

It took me forever to read - I ..."
Yes, I just couldn't get into it, and I couldn't finish it.


Yes in one hand the book has been very slow in some parts, but in the other hand the poetry and the characters have saved it, at least for me.

I tried. I tried again, and I tried a third time. This book did not draw me in. I didn't even finish it. Normally, I love books written in this time frame. Books of any type... fiction, non fiction, realistic fiction, memoir, biography, historical, informative.... but not this one.
I'd say I read 1/3 of the book before I just said, "Enough."


No, I listened to the book, and I found it to be just so-so--maybe I've read too many from this period, but there are better books than this one. I can't list it among "best books I've ever read." Too many other books, with less "predictable" plot lines.


Definitely. I thought for sure it was going to be so good when there were 37 holds ahead of me for it at the library, but it was just painful to read. I really didn't want to finish it, but it was the book we were reading for my book club so I had to struggle through it. It was boring, it was confusing at times, it was uninteresting. The only character I cared about was poor Frederick and that was so depressing I just didn't want to read anymore about it.


Yep, I still do not get what all the hoopla surrounding this book was. It was poorly written in terms of characters and just it went no-where.


I always have difficulties putting a book down and getting enough sleep, but every time I read this book, I felt sleepy after a couple of pages. I never felt like that with a book. But at least it allowed for more sleep than usual... :-)
Apart from the pages explaining the 'after-war' I guess it left me feeling quite indifferent, so I was disappointed. Yet the story wasn't that bad, so I still finished it. But I don't agree with the raving reviews.

I a..."
It is hard when everyone is raving and you're there saying "Huh"?

I absolutely agree! I know many people loved it and it was rated well. I barely got through with it and I am a huge reader.





Susan, I listened to the book through Audible. I also did not particularly like it. It seemed like it never reached a climax. A lot of beautiful descriptions but the plot was lacking.

I agree that the ending was dark, and flat. Plus the author killed off my favorite character.

Susan, I listened to the book t..."
I too listened to this book on Audible. My husband loved it - I just never got in to it. It dragged and I never connected with the characters.





I agree, Sabine, it is not the subject or length. I am burnt out on WW2 right now, but if one is recommended to me or catches my attention, I will jump into the fray again. And as for length, I love long books if they have enough good plot and ideas to fill it out. When it just seems to ramble on nonstop, like this one seemed to me to do, I get annoyed with the length.


I think the point was that by helping the girl, the poor little German boy could finally feel like he did..."
I agree with you Tiffany and is was a great read. Almost as good as The Book Thief.

I hope to now find All the Light We Cannot See on Audio. I saw the Movie, read the book and listened to the audio of The Book Thief. The Audio was my favorite, the book 2nd and movie 3rd in my rating.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
All the Light We Cannot See (other topics)
All the Light We Cannot See (other topics)
Books mentioned in this topic
Life After Life (other topics)All the Light We Cannot See (other topics)
All the Light We Cannot See (other topics)