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Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout
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Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout

Elizabeth Strout is a wise and talented writer. This truth is reinforced in Olive, Again, her seventh novel. In these thirteen interconnected stories, Strout reveals a keen insight into the human condition. These stories are a meditation about people who are unclear about who they are and why they made the choices they did.

This book is a sequel to Strout’s 2008 Pulitzer-Prize winning novel Olive Kittredge. In that novel, Olive was stubborn, bossy and not the least bit reflective. Like a kaleidoscope, the book showed readers Olive’s many selves. We saw Olive’s shifting emotions and actions in her role as mother, wife, teacher and neighbor. And though we didn’t always like what we saw, Strout highlighted the many selves that dwell in a person. Twenty years later, Olive is still cantankerous, opinionated, and self-involved, but she has softened. Her narcissism has given way to humility as she begins to question what it might feel like - to be another person. In her eighth decade, Olive’s revelation is poignant because she knows her time on earth is coming to an end.

Olive still resides in the small town of Crosby, Maine. After her husband Henry died, she married Jack Kennison, a former Harvard professor who also harbors regret about several of his decisions. Olive and Jack wrestle with their diminishing physical capabilities and imminent decline. They struggle to make sense of the relationships in their lives. Olive wonders why she was mean to her first husband Henry and why she feels such distance from her son Christopher. Jack wonders why he had an affair when he loved his wife, Betsy. He, too, is estranged from his only child, Cassie, who lives in San Francisco.

When Olive’s son Christopher, his wife Ann and their four children visit Olive, their time together is not easy. There is misunderstandings and miscommunication. Belatedly, Olive has begun to contemplate the small choices and big decisions that shaped her life. She realizes her frayed relationships might derive from her actions and not solely the deficiencies in Christopher and Ann. “She could not understand what it was about her, but it was about her that had caused this to happen. And it had to have been there for years, maybe all of her life, how would she know. As she sat across from Jack -stunned – she felt as though she had lived her life as though blind.”

One night, Jack and Olive are at a restaurant and the woman with whom Jack had an affair walks by their table. They speak and Jack is shaken. “What frightened him was how much of his life he had lived without knowing who he was or what he was doing. … He senses that he had lived his life in a way that he had not known. This meant there had been a large blindspot directly in front of his eyes. It meant that he did not understand, not really at all, how others had perceived him. And it meant that he did not know how to perceive himself.”

Olive and Jack seem to lack an understanding of their current selves or the factors that shaped their personalities. Olive does know that her father’s suicide affected her, but that tragedy was never processed. Now as they reach the end of their lives, Olive and Jack feel distressed about what their lives meant and how they chose to live. Could they have changed themselves in a significant way? Maybe. Maybe not. But awareness might have led to them to more intentional lives.

Melancholy hovers around the characters. Loneliness haunts every story Some readers might say the novel is dark. It is hard to read about regret and remorse. But I believe Elizabeth Strout’s beautiful book is a gift, a wake-up call to us all. She is warning readers that even though self-awareness is hard, we don’t have to live with so little understanding of ourselves. We can reflect on how our behavior affects not just those who we love, but everyone we encounter.

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Suddenly, Love by Aharon Appelfeld
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Suddenly, Love by Aharon Appelfeld

In this beautiful novel by Israeli novelist Aharon Appelfeld, we experience the pain, suffering and hopefully calm that can come with self-discovery. Apppelfeld’s wisdom permeates this story as we witness the psychological shifts that can occur in a person whose early life choice inflicted suffering on those he loved. Appelfeld’s sparse and elegant prose gives us a window into the hearts of two tormented souls.

Ernst is a seventy-year-old Red Army veteran who was born in Ukraine and now lives in Israel. A former investment advisor, he spends his days writing unpublished novels. Ernst searches for words that will explain to himself his youthful choices that caused his parents, wife and daughter pain. While he was betraying his fellow Jews and fighting for the communists in Russia, his family perished in the Holocaust. When he was a young man, “The thought that he was freeing people from the prison of religion-inspired him to act.”

Each day he writes and each day, he throws work in the garbage.

But since Ernst’s operation two years ago, Irena, his 32- year old caretaker, comes to his small apartment every day. Initially, she assists him with his physical needs, but as time passes, she becomes his confidant and confessor. The ghosts of WWII haunt her life too. Her parents were in concentration camps and Irena was born in a German displaced person camp. She and her parents immigrated to Israel, where Irena still lives in her family’s apartment. Since her parents passed away, Irena continues to set the table for three on the Sabbath and other Jewish Holidays. In dreams and memories, she talks with her parents and they communicate with her. Though uneducated, Irena draws on a well of deep spirituality and believes that “life is a continuum that extends into the unknown.”

But Ernst’s family has no presence in his life. He has not been able to dream or even remember them. He has repressed his early years. Due to Irena’s love and loyalty, Ernst’s parents and grandparents return to Ernst’s memory. He stops throwing his writing in the trash. “Irena’s presence, her closeness, opens corridors for him to worlds he never knew.” Soon, he remembers tender times he spent as a young boy in the Caspian mountains with his wise and devout grandparents. He remembers how his grandfather, an observant Jew, taught him to appreciate the rituals and reverence for G-d. All of which he forgot or repressed when he became a Communist.

Though I believe therapy might have been more productive for Ernst than the slow, plodding process of writing, especially at the dawn of his life. However, Appelfeld’s, Suddenly Love, celebrates the power of human connection and the power of writing to heal.

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The Train to Warsaw by Gwen Edelman
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The Train to Warsaw by Gwen Edelman

Gwen Edelman’s 2014 novel The Train to Warsaw is a compelling story about a couple who physically escaped the horrors of the Holocaust but still carry the trauma of being imprisoned in the Jewish Ghetto. The novel is an elegy to Warsaw, their once beloved city. A city whose citizens inexplicably betrayed their Jewish neighbors.

Jascha and Lilka are returning to Warsaw forty years after the end of WWII. It is December, the dead of winter. Jascha has been invited to speak about his acclaimed wartime novel, The Way Down. He mocks the invitation, “First, they want me dead. Now I’m a native son, an esteemed Polish writer.” His lover, Lilka, pleads with him to accept the invitation. She wants to return to the beloved Warsaw of her childhood. As Jascha predicted, they arrive in a Warsaw that no longer resembles the pre-War city from which they escaped. The War ravaged the town, and the Communists are now in charge.

The novel takes place over three days. When they arrive in Warsaw, they are on edge. They flinch when they see a dog. They recoil when they see the police. They wince when people ask them their background. They can’t forget the savagery perpetrated against Jews after Germany invaded Poland in September of 1939. While in the ghetto, Jascha and Lilka had begun a romance. In the chaos, they each escaped separately by taking on non-Jewish identities. Seven years after the War, they reunite by chance in London. And though they find each other, they are hardened, distant and damaged. Why wouldn’t they be? They lost so much and feel guilty for surviving.

During their brief stay in Warsaw, they share previously unshared stories about their lives before the War and the gruesome tales of their parents’ deaths. At the literary event when Jascha begins reading from his novel, something surprising occurs. It seems the Poles do not want to hear about their disloyalty to their Jewish neighbors.

Gwen Edelman’s sparse and haunting prose powers this novel. Through the use of compelling dialogue, she captures the complicated nuances of memory, betrayal and the complexity of moving forward after trauma. Her gripping novel succinctly depicts the confusion, rage and existential pain that Jascha and Lilka felt upon their return to Warsaw. And due to Edelman’s impressive skills, we feel that anguish as well.

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