Thursday, June 12, 2014

Happy Birthday Anne Frank! / Book Review of Margot by Jillian Cantor

Happy Birthday Anne Frank! So many of your birthdays were stolen from you but your story and (what should have been) Margot's will never be forgotten. 

Providence: Today I finished reading Margot by Jillian Cantor and after I finished, I took a few minutes to search the internet for some background information on Anne Frank's family and time in hiding. I quickly realized that today, June 12th, would have been Anne Frank's 85th birthday! It was almost as if I was destined to read this book. 

Premise: It’s 1959 and Margie Franklin is in hiding. She’s good at the covert life because she’s been doing it since 1942. Margie Franklin is actually Margot Frank, sister of Anne Frank. She lives in fear in America, terrified of being made to relive the horrors she experienced during the Holocaust.

Plight of Margot: Margot is a completely fictional "what if" novel telling of what Margot Frank might have become if she had survived the Holocaust. Thus, a good amount of imagination and research were required on Cantor's behalf to make this storyline work and believable. I was definitely hooked. I remember reading about Anne Frank when I was a child but like many others, Margot was such a minor character in my mind that if someone had asked me if Anne had had any siblings, I might have said no. Now, I am hopelessly (and eternally) curious about Margot's own experience in the annex. Anne Frank's own diary tells us that Margot kept a diary, too, but now we know that it was never recovered. In this fictional account of the aftermath of Margot's holocaust experiences, Margot deals with PTSD (although undiagnosed in the 1950s), issues of her religious identity, survivor shame, loss, and so many other harrowing traumas. 

There are many pages in which I could not believe that Margot/Margie had not yet cracked from her tortuous memories which only intensified as she constantly sought to hide her true identity. She encounters painful flashbacks that cause the reader to sympathize and mourn her multitudinous losses. There were a few pages where I teared up, realizing that for the Jews that survived the Holocaust, another journey, a journey of healing and to wholeness, was still ahead of them. 


Praise: When I was not reading this story, I was Googling the lives of the Franks to refresh my mind of their story. A good historical fiction novel should do just that: cause the reader to become newly interested in what actually happened in the time period in which the novel takes place (or what the novel refers back to, as is the pattern of this novel). 

Predicament: I previously mentioned that the author, Jillian Cantor, did an exceptional job researching the Franks and making this unusual storyline work. However, there is one thing that bothered me. Back in the annex, Margot tells us that she and Peter had planned to meet in Philadelphia after the war. However, the way that Margot gets to Philadelphia is too coincidental. After she escapes from Auschwitz, Margot eventually resides with a family friend named Eduard. Eduard has a sister and brother-in-law who live in Philadelphia who agree to take in Margot. It is there upon her arrival that Margot becomes Margie. Perhaps minor to most, but the coincidence of Eduard's sister living in the same city where Margot planned to meet Peter irked me.  


I'm not a huge fan of historical fiction but if I can get my hands on more books like this, I would move historical fiction up on my list of preferred genres to read. If historical fiction is your thing and you have not yet read Margot, I really don't know what you're waiting for. Go get it and leave me a suggestion for another historical fiction book that I should consider reading. 

Friday, June 6, 2014

Review of Life After Life by Kate Atkinson

“What if we had a chance to do it again and again, until we finally did get it right? Wouldn't that be wonderful?” 
- Edward Beresford Todd

The Breakdown: Baby Girl is born. Baby Girl dies. Rewind. Baby Girl is born. Baby Girl lives. She grows. She dies. Rewind.

The Basics: Life After Life is about Ursula, a curious girl born into the Todd family in 1910 England. After a few "rewinds" of her life back to the first breath she does/doesn't take, Ursula realizes that she's different.  On the surface, this novel by Kate Atkinson appears to be a textual (and more serious) version of Groundhog Day or Sliding Doors. Just to jog your memory of the two 1990s movies just mentioned, Bill Murray's character in Groundhog Day becomes fully aware that he is doing the same day repeatedly (sometimes driving him mad, sometimes causing him to seek personal growth) whereas in Sliding Doors we are given the opportunity to see how one choice made by Gwyneth Paltrow's character is played out based on whether she gets on a train or misses the train. Nevertheless, Atkinson's storyline is much deeper and complex than both of those films for a couple of different reasons. One, Ursula merely has feelings that she has "done this before" and two, Ursula learns to identify her déjà vu instincts which communicate to her to act differently, bolder, or more sensitively this time. During certain versions of her life, Ursula, aware of her repeat existence, manages to make life altering decisions or react to life altering events.

The Baffling: On more than one occasion and at various times in Ursula's existence(s), I found myself hoping that Ursula would die so that her life could have chance at betterment next time. These thoughts bothered me once I realized I had them and I couldn't help but wonder if Atkinson was playing with her readers, causing them to look within themselves concerning the value of every single life. I'm eager to see if any other readers felt this way or if I'm the lone morbid reader.

The Bad: I would like to preface this section by saying that just because one person feels like there are holes in a storyline or that there are negatives, that does not mean that the book should be tossed from reading consideration. The story raised a lot of questions within me and after reading it (possibly a spoiler) I questioned, "When does it stop?" That being said, Kate Atkinson, let's do tea. I would love to ask you a few questions about the last fifty or so pages. I have questions that need answering!

Now, if my need to have tea and a chat with the author doesn't scare you off, keep reading.

The Best: Overall, I felt like this novel maintained a strong metaphor for the one life we are given. Despite the fact that Ursula lives a circular existence (although she refers to it as palimpsest), since we are not actually given the opportunity to go back and "fix" things, I believe that this story could persuade a person to be more thoughtful in the decisions that he or she makes.

The Believer: On a spiritual note, Ursula's life was exhausting. It made me grateful that I have only one life to live and that as a Christian, I have Christ Jesus, the surety for all of the many mistakes I make and have made and opportunities I miss and have missed. There's a hymn I love that says, "Love cannot from its post withdraw; nor death, nor hell, nor sin, nor law, can turn the Surety's heart away; He'll love His own to endless day." Ursula's therapist in one part of the novel quotes from 1 Corinthians 13 and I paraphrase: if I have the gift of prophecy, and faith to move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. Ursula somewhat had the gift of prophecy, she maintained faith in what she felt she needed to do, moving metaphorical mountains in her life, and yet was so tightly wound into her perplexing life that true love and her dependence on the Giver of life and love, remained out of her grasp for much of the novel.

Overall, if you can handle joy, sadness, bittersweetness, joy, sadness, and bittersweetness, this might just be the next book for you to read.


Side B - Be on the Lookout: If you do choose to read this novel, pay attention to the motif of foxes. They recur throughout the novel and are subtle yet significant.