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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/all/20060325184407/http://www.whatbooks.com/2005/history_love.php
The History of Love: A Novel
by Authors:
Nicole Krauss
Hardcover Description:
Nicole Krauss's The History of Love is a hauntingly beautiful novel about two characters whose lives are woven together in such complex ways that even after the last page is turned, the reader is left to wonder what really happened. In the hands of a less gifted writer, unraveling this tangled web could easily give way to complete chaos. However, under Krauss's watchful eye, these twists and turns only strengthen the impact of this enchanting book.
The History of Love spans of period of over 60 years and takes readers from Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe to present day Brighton Beach. At the center of each main character's psyche is the issue of loneliness, and the need to fill a void left empty by lost love. Leo Gursky is a retired locksmith who immigrates to New York after escaping SS officers in his native Poland, only to spend the last stage of his life terrified that no one will notice when he dies. ("I try to make a point of being seen. Sometimes when I'm out, I'll buy a juice even though I'm not thirsty.") Fourteen-year-old Alma Singer vacillates between wanting to memorialize her dead father and finding a way to lift her mother's veil of depression. At the same time, she's trying to save her brother Bird, who is convinced he may be the Messiah, from becoming a 10-year-old social pariah. As the connection between Leo and Alma is slowly unmasked, the desperation, along with the potential for salvation, of this unique pair is also revealed.
The poetry of her prose, along with an uncanny ability to embody two completely original characters, is what makes Krauss an expert at her craft. But in the end, it's the absolute belief in the uninteruption of love that makes this novel a pleasure, and a wonder to behold. --Gisele Toueg
Average Customer Rating:
Safran Foer's Wife Can Hold Her Own
With The History of Love, Nicole Krauss proves she is as fine a writer as her husband, Jonathan Safran Foer. Writen from the perspective of multiple characters, Krauss delves into (all too familiar) histories of love and loss. The novel is emotionally captivating, down to the last sentence. The only disappoinment lies in the narrative voice, which is stikingly similar to her husband's work.
A Convoluted Mess
This reads like a graduate student's MFA thesis. Krauss bites off way more than she can chew, creating a too-clever-by-half pastiche that includes a Bellow-lite character, Leo Gursky, and two characters - the teen Alma (as opposed to the original Alma and the fictional (sort of) Alma (blah, blah, blah) - and her brother, Bird, both of whom are blatant rip-offs from her own husband, Jonathan Safran Foer. (Leo is a mysterious locksmith; Foer's "Incredibly Loud" narrator goes on a quest with a mysterious key. Jeez.) Except even living with Foer, Krauss can't muster more than a wan, second-rate imitation of him. Surely Krauss feels some affinity with her character Zvi Litvinoff; both are unduly celebrated copyists.
Midway through this disappointing, self-satisfied and ultimately pretentious literary-who-done-it, I stopped trying to follow Krauss' implausible trail of breadcrumbs and could care less about who wrote what for whom, when or why. Although "WHY?" hangs over this whole misguided enterprise.
Would this book have gotten the play it did if Krauss wasn't married to an excellent writer? What a letdown. Heavy boots.
An amazing surprise!
I walked in Border's and randomly picked out this novel by a new writer. I took it home and couldn't put it down. I told me friends that i cried it was so good. Intricate characters with real souls, and empathetic voices. A weaving story of true love and loss. Just brilliant. Please read and pass along.
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