reviews of all the light we cannot see
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The first novel by Anthony Doerr, the highly acclaimed, multiple award-winning author of Cloud Cuckoo Land, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning #1 New York Times bestseller All the Light We Cannot See, one of the most beautiful, wise, and compelling debuts of recent times.
David Winkler begins life in Anchorage, Alaska, a quiet boy drawn to the volatility of weather and obsessed with snow. Sometimes he sees things before they happen—a man carrying a hatbox will be hit by a bus; Winkler will fall in love with a woman in a supermarket. When David dreams that his infant daughter will drown in a flood as he tries to save her, he comes undone. He travels thousands of miles, fleeing family, home, and the future itself, to deny the dream.
On a Caribbean island, destitute, alone, and unsure if his child has survived or his wife can forgive him, David is sheltered by a couple with a daughter of their own. Ultimately it is she who will pull him back into the world, to search for the people he left behind.
Doerr's characters are full of grief and longing, but also replete with grace. His compassion for human frailty is extraordinarily moving. In luminous prose, he writes about the power and beauty of nature and about the tiny miracles that transform our lives. About Grace is heartbreaking, radiant, and astonishingly accomplished.
Publisher : Scribner; Reprint edition (October 6, 2015)
Language : English
Paperback : 432 pages
ISBN-10 : 1476789010
ISBN-13 : 978-1476789019
Item Weight : 12.2 ounces
Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.9 x 8 inches
Reviewer: The Reluctant Psychoanalyst
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Not for everyone, but for those it works for, this book hits home.
Review: In About Grace, we are introduced to David Winkler, a geeky kid who grows up in Anchorage Alaska. His primary interest is in snow flakes and he pursues this interest all the way to a Ph.D. in hydrology â the study of water â which he sees as a living force of nature that gets expressed in a myriad of ways, including in the crystalline form of snowflakes. David also has a special ability. He has premonitory dreams. These detailed dreams foretell calamities â the first is a man being hit and killed by a bus â that he feels unable to alter when they play out before him in real life.David is, throughout the early part of the book, consistently inarticulate about his dreams that predict an event. We think, at first, that this is because of the trauma of seeing his dreams come to life, but later he continues to be inarticulate in puzzling and even maddening ways. I think this plays an important role in making the allegory work. As odd and inarticulate as David is, he is also everyman â or more precisely, everymanâs unconscious â the keeper of dreams â the foreteller of the future â and the part of ourselves that directs our actions in ways that are mystifying to us, precisely because it is an unconscious part of ourselves. This part is unknown to us, but not solely problematic - it can fuel our most human interactions and can become our closest ally.So what is the allegory? Well, David connects, through one of his premonition dreams, with Sandy, a woman who is married to a deadly dull guy named Warren â a banker who is infertile but doesnât know it. David impregnates her â and loves her deeply. They run away together, have a child named Grace, but then, somehow not surprisingly, David has a dream that, in his attempts to save Grace, she will drown. He tries, without describing the dream, to get Sandy to move with him away from the house where the dream takes place in order to prevent the events from happening. Sandy (who also had a premonition dream about meeting David that he knows about â he never tells her his â would be sympathetic, you would think, if he were straightforward with herâ¦) understandably refuses to move for no apparent reason - other than David becoming frantic â so, to save Grace, David runs away.David and Warren together are, I think, an allegory for the traditional western father. We work hard (as the Warren parts of ourselves) at a job that is dull, and retreat from the family (Warren plays hockey, which frees Sandy up to have an affair with David that Warren is unaware of). We do this because we fear the ways in which our closeness might be damaging to our children (and our spouses). David represents the part of us â the weird, wacky, not very traditionally male part that is a bit crazy â that actually deeply desires a connection with our children â that canât believe we have been graced with them, and that wants to spend every waking minute admiring every aspect of them â David notices everything about Grace, just as he did about Sandy. But this closeness feels dangerous â we fear that we will drown our children (the hydrologistâs fear) with our love (I think it is also important that water is frequently used as a symbol of the unconscious). So we run away to the office and leave the parenting to the women. When the kid grows up and lands on the analystâs couch, he will complain about her ruining his life â not me; I did my part; I brought home the bacon and paid for everything; I didnât drown him.I have always had a fear of heights. I have never read this in Freud, but remember being told long before I was an analyst, perhaps by a family member, that Freud said that we donât fear falling, but jumping, and that has always rung true to me. So one evening when my son was small enough to ride on my shoulders, he was doing just that as we walked across a high and wide bridge over a river. I became aware of the sucking feeling â the fear that I would fall â or jump â off the bridge. Well, if itâs just me, the edge of that fear can actually be an interesting, even exciting edge to ride. But when my sonâs life was at stake, I suddenly became terrified. Just because I wanted to kill myself was no reason for him to die (if the impact didn't kill him he would surely drown), and I felt like I could not control myself (objectively a pretty irrational fear), and was flat out terrified. We were walking with a group of people â maybe a festival was going on, and the bridge was closed to traffic. I made my way to the center of the bridge where I felt only marginally safer. I, like David, didnât let anyone know about my inner turmoil. I didnât ask for help. I simply did the best that I could to manage the situation and my terror and got my son safely to the other side â and Iâm almost certain no one noticed anything particularly peculiar about what was going on â other than maybe my breaking out in a sweat that, on a hot summer evening, could be attributed to the stroll and to carrying a child.David runs as far away from Sandy and Grace as he can â he takes a freighter and gets off on a random island â it happens to be the island from which Alexander Hamilton started his rise to fame â and there becomes homeless and destitute. He does not know what has become of Grace. Taken in by the post lady, he cares for her daughter Naaliyah, about whom, when she becomes a teenager, he has a premonitory dream. This time, though, he finally tells someone â the butcher â and the butcher convinces him that â as the butcher presumes was the case for Grace because David ran away (neither David nor the reader know if this is the case), he can do something to prevent the dream about Naaliyah from reaching its awful conclusion (s dream in which Naaliyah will drown). Now David becomes a stalker â following Naaliyah everywhere (without telling her about the specifics of his dream - just asking a budding marine biologist to avoid boats which she, not surprisingly, does not do) and camping out across the street from her apartment. He is joined there by Naaliyahâs mother who joins him in taking shifts to keep an eye on Naaliyah. Creepy.Can we alter fate? Can I keep the world from running out of resources or becoming polluted? (A junior high school science fair project involved engineering solar powered carsâ¦) More realistically, can I avoid visiting the horrors (OK, Iâm being overly dramatic) that my parents visited on me on my children? For instance, my Dad was a travelling salesman who worked for big corporations. He was out of town two or three nights every week and we moved frequently when I was a child. To âfixâ this problem, I made sure to get a secure job (I have tenure) at a University which won't necessitate my being transferred, nor will I be on the road. Youâd think that my child would have a very different experience. But when his mother and I divorced, he was suddenly in one or the other of our homes half of every week. Both of his parents were âawayâ half of the time and, though he has not moved from city to city, he has moved from house to house every week. In some ways this, as profound a re-creation and complication of my childhood as this may be, a very surface difficulty. There are much deeper and more troubling perils that lurk in trying not to visit on our children the terrible things we are capable of visiting.David saved Grace by running away, but this had a terrible impact on her. She became deeply and powerfully angry with him. When he tries to reconnect with her (the book starts with this journey, flashes back to set it up, then resumes the journey 200 pages later), she wants nothing to do with him. Ultimately he makes peace with Warren (a surprisingly easy thing for them to do and, in the allegory, something that makes more sense than in life) and helps Warren care for his grandson â actually takes that over from the guy who couldnât be bothered by kids and connections. In the tremendously powerful conclusion to the story, David is able to use his premonition to prove his steadfastness to Grace and thereby create a new bond with her.I think we all want to be able to be connected with our children. We struggle to do this, however. We fear the ways that the world will harm them, but even more, we fear that our contact will somehow damage them â that they will drown in what we would offer them. So we wall ourselves off from them by walling ourselves from ourselves (Warren and David are depicted as two separate people, disconnected from each other who, when they finally meet up, are friendly enough, but realistically have few shared interests) and more directly from them ( Warren escapes into work, David simply disappears). At some point, if we are lucky (after 200 pages or so), our unconscious wakes up and propels us into connecting with those we love. If we let it, it will be persistent (and erratic â the tale of David searching for Grace Winklers hither, thither and yon is a wonderful and disorienting odyssey that leads him, seemingly quite by accident, to the only logical place to be). We may be old â and we may have lived through a number of near death experiences (our unconscious may, like David, have been all but starved, drowned and lost in the wilderness before being subjected to a deep freeze which finally allows for some clarity), but, should we survive, which, surprisingly we often do, our with to connect will out and it will take our now shaggy selves into the world of connection â which we will still do awkwardly, but lovingly. Or at least Doerr would have us believe that â and I certainly think that we hope this is how things will work out.So, this book works, at least for me, on the level of a case study. David is reminiscent of many, many patients â I have never treated a hydrologist, but he could be a lawyer, physician, research scientist of another stripe, artist, or engineer I have treated. Each of the many Davids that I have worked with has an intense and powerful interest in some aspect of the world. This interest is incredibly compelling to them, but can be dull as dishwater to those around them. Indeed, especially early in the treatment, I sometimes have to fight boredom as I listen to these men. Their outer worlds can be quite circumscribed, but as they open up, I become fascinated â and frankly so do they. And as that happens, interestingly, they also become fascinating to others â at least to some others. Like a snowflake, they are a particular crystalline form of water that is unique and beautiful.This book, on the level of a case study, is not for everyone. There are only so many allusions to water in all its forms â and only so many false starts and periods of deprivation - that some readers will be able to stomach. Many will put this book down, stultified and mystified by this guy who is rendered in such exquisite â though they will experience it as excruciating - detail. If that reader can hang in there, they may (or may not) be rewarded by enjoying the beautiful symmetry that emerges â by seeing the structure of a person, a family, a universe. When I present cases of such men to a professional audience, despite my enthusiasm, many feel it is like watching paint dry and turn away.On the level of allegory, this book is not about one of those guys but about all of us (or maybe I, as the reluctant but obsessed psychoanalyst, am just the quintessential camper). In so far as it focuses, though, on our role as parent, it is parallel to two developments within psychoanalysis. The first is that we have moved from focusing on the childâs role in the family drama â the murderous wishes that arise out of the Oedipal complex as something the child must work to resolve â to the parentâs part in that drama â our wish to murder our child (one way of reading Davidâs premonition dreams â as wishes rather than fears) as something that we must work to resolve. The second is the parallel of moving from focusing only on the patientâs experience of the analysis to recognizing that there are two minds (and two unconscious processes) at work in the psychoanalytic relationship â and we need to understand the psychology of the analyst as well as that of the analysand to understand the interaction between them.So, the central part of the story that is marginalized by the number of pages devoted to it (maybe 4 of 400 pages are devoted to it - OK, maybe 10, but not many) is the story of Davidâs relationship with his own parents â and with his mother in particular. And the larger story hinges â and resolves â in this smaller story â one that could be summed up as the wish to connect â the wish that has driven Davidâs pursuit of Grace â being formed and resolved in the experience of having had his mother connect - or strive to connect - with him â and his desire to recreate that sense of connection â to achieve that sense of connection in his dreams â dreams that can only occur when we have built a basis in reality to support them.To see the entire review Google: The Reluctant Psychoanalyst About Grace
Reviewer: Richard Seltzer
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Brilliant premise
Review: Brilliant premise and, at the beginning, many beautiful. insightful, memorable snippets.A man dreams in detail the moment he will meet the woman he will love. The moment unfolds exactly as he dreamt it. They marry. They have a child -- Grace.He dreams the death of a friend, who then dies exactly as in the dream.Then he has another dream with the same eerie feel to it. Their house is flooded. He struggles to save Grace, but fails. She drowns. Fearing that that dream too is prophetic, he abandons his family, in hopes that by so doing he will break fate and his daughter will be saved.There's lots more story and characters and another incident of a dream that might be prophetic that he struggles against. In that case, he saves a young girl's life, counter to the dream.Finally, after decades of absence, he tries to find out if his daughter survived.This could have been a truly great novel, but it doesn't live up to its potential. Much of it consists of him trying to find her and then trying to get her to forgive him for the abandonment (without him ever explaining to her about the dream).Here are a few of the brilliant passages near the beginning:"The human brain ... is seventy-five percent water. Our cells are little more than sacs in which to carry water. When we die it spills from us into the ground and air and into the stomachs of animals and is contained again in something else. The properties of liquid water are this: it holds its temperature longer than air; it is adhering and elastic; it is perpetually in motion. These are the tenets of hydrology; these are the things one should know if one is to know oneself." p. 3"But even then Winkler guessed it was because she had felt something that noon in the Snow Goose market -- had felt time settle over itself, imbricate and fix into place, the vertigo of future aligning with the present." p. 21"The things we see are only masks for the things we can't see." p. 25"Her eyes were on the window. The space above the city appeared to stretch. The moon stepped lower. Any moment, it seemed, something could tear the sky and whatever was on the other side would push through." p. 51Grace described at birth:"She was beautiful, slick and dark red: tiny lips, tiny toes, splotches of orange on her cheeks, delicate crinkles in her palms as if her hands were bags her metacarpals had yet to grow into. A flower of black hair on her scalp. Tiny exit bruises dotted her forehead." p. 55Infant Grace sleeping:"Lately she slept a subterranean, vacant sleep, as if some invisible huntsman came to put her consciousness in a sack and hold it until morning." p. 58"What is time? he wrote in his pad Must time occur in sequence -- beginning to middle to end -- or is this only one way to perceive it? Mayb time can spill and freeze and retreat; mabye time is like watr, endlessly cycling through its states." p. 81
Reviewer: Global Prof
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Interesting idea, but odd characters hard to relate to
Review: This is a very unusual book. I read it because somebody famous recommended it in The Week (can't remember who). I almost quit midway through, but finished because I wanted to see how it ended -- and ended up being vaguely glad that I did.The viewpoint character in this probably has autism or Asperger's. He is obsessed with snow. He has dreams that foretell terrible things happening in the future. After spending his whole life in Alaska, he ends up in self-imposed exile on St Vincent in the Caribbean, where although he has a PhD, becomes a handyman-gardener. He spends a winter in a tiny cabin in rural Alaska with a woman from the Caribbean, who has gone there to study insects. See what I mean? A very odd plot line.The prose lifts up with beautiful descriptions of scenery and emotions. It sags (I felt) with totally miserable characters. There is little joy in the book, except for some unexpected interpersonal relationships, and observing the beauty of snowflakes.The main character is lovable, in a rather pathetic sort of way. One empathizes with him, even while not fully understanding his eccentricities.The book was an interesting discussion of whether or not events are predetermined. If we dream something horrific, and similar dreams have come true in the past, can we do anything to prevent the evil from occurring? The author keeps you wondering about his answer until near the end of the book. But because I could not easily identify with the viewpoint character, I'm not certain that his answer rang true, or was satisfactory (at least for me).
Reviewer: Lara
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Great book lyrical poignant moving
Reviewer: RL
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: The book had an uneven binding, feels like it was not professionally published. Please advise.
Reviewer: TJ
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Like Anthony Dora's other novels and short stories, About Grace is a beautiful read and a long one taking place over nearly 30 years in locations from the northern Yukon to the Carrier divided into many books each with a dozen or more chapters. There is much soul searching and detail about the lives of the characters as well as fascinating rich descriptions of weather phenomenon and the characteristics of storms. For the naturalist there are many fine details about and the effect of storms on everything from insects to snow flakes as well as the story and it's characters.
Reviewer: cmj
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: David Winkler is a deeply frustrating character and you will want to take him by the shoulders and give him a hearty shake at regular intervals, but the book taken as a whole will make you realise the truth of the saying: Life Is What Happens While You Are Busy Making Other Plans and that, in the end, every last second of it is precious and unique and worthy. It will make you perhaps think twice about what lurks beneath the surface of that taciturn man, the wealth of feeling layered within a single syllable, that our lives are our very own research project and much, much more that defies expression in a lifetime of syllables.
Reviewer: Jonathan wright
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: So everyone who has discovered this genius through 'All The Light' has not necessarily come across this first novel by the same genius author. So good. Persistent, persevering and an unfolding process of a story that rewards the patient and delights the sensitive palate. Want more.
Customers say
Customers praise the writing quality as descriptive, vivid, and poetic. They find the book engaging and satisfying. The story is described as original, powerful, and thought-provoking. However, some readers feel the pacing is slow and the plot lacks excitement. Opinions differ on the character development - some find them engaging and subtle, while others consider them dull or unlovable.
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