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japple

(10,394 posts)
5. Thank you for the thread, hermetic (and your cute little green seasheep!)
Sun Jan 10, 2016, 05:40 PM
Jan 2016

I am still on Church of Marvels, but expect to finish it tonight and will be happy to go on to something different. For some reason, this book hasn't really held my interest like I thought it would. I wish the author had just written the story without trying to make it into a mystery. It would have been much more interesting. She is certainly a good writer and has done the research; the characters are well-developed and the storyline is compelling, but for some reason, I got impatient with book.

Got a notice from the library that a book I have been waiting for (for a long time) is available for download, so I put it on my e-reader and will start tonight: Jim Shepard's The Book of Aron

The acclaimed National Book Award finalist--"one of the United States' finest writers," according to Joshua Ferris, "full of wit, humanity, and fearless curiosity"--now gives us a novel that will join the short list of classics about children caught up in the Holocaust.

Aron, the narrator, is an engaging if peculiar and unhappy young boy whose family is driven by the German onslaught from the Polish countryside into Warsaw and slowly battered by deprivation, disease, and persecution. He and a handful of boys and girls risk their lives by scuttling around the ghetto to smuggle and trade contraband through the quarantine walls in hopes of keeping their fathers, mothers, brothers, and sisters alive, hunted all the while by blackmailers and by Jewish, Polish, and German police, not to mention the Gestapo.

When his family is finally stripped away from him, Aron is rescued by Janusz Korczak, a doctor renowned throughout prewar Europe as an advocate of children's rights who, once the Nazis swept in, was put in charge of the Warsaw orphanage. Treblinka awaits them all, but does Aron manage to escape--as his mentor suspected he could--to spread word about the atrocities?
Jim Shepard has masterfully made this child's-eye view of the darkest history mesmerizing, sometimes comic despite all odds, truly heartbreaking, and even inspiring. Anyone who hears Aron's voice will remember it forever.

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