Rating: Not rated
Tags: Lang:en
Publisher: Scribner
Added: May 15, 2018
Modified: March 28, 2020
Summary
From the highly acclaimed, multiple award-winning Anthony
Doerr, a stunningly ambitious and beautiful novel about a
blind French girl and a German boy whose paths collide in
occupied France as both try to survive the devastation of
World War II. Marie-Laure lives with her father in Paris near the Museum
of Natural History, where he works as the master of its
thousands of locks. When she is six, Marie-Laure goes blind
and her father builds a perfect miniature of their
neighborhood so she can memorize it by touch and navigate her
way home. When she is twelve, the Nazis occupy Paris and
father and daughter flee to the walled citadel of Saint-Malo,
where Marie-Laure’s reclusive great-uncle lives in a
tall house by the sea. With them they carry what might be the
museum’s most valuable and dangerous jewel. In a mining town in Germany, the orphan Werner grows up
with his younger sister, enchanted by a crude radio they
find. Werner becomes an expert at building and fixing these
crucial new instruments, a talent that wins him a place at a
brutal academy for Hitler Youth, then a special assignment to
track the resistance. More and more aware of the human cost
of his intelligence, Werner travels through the heart of the
war and, finally, into Saint-Malo, where his story and
Marie-Laure’s converge.
Doerr’s “stunning sense of physical detail and
gorgeous metaphors” (
San Francisco Chronicle) are dazzling. Deftly
interweaving the lives of Marie-Laure and Werner, he
illuminates the ways, against all odds, people try to be good
to one another. Ten years in the writing,
All the Light We Cannot See is a magnificent, deeply
moving novel from a writer “whose sentences never fail
to thrill” (
Los Angeles Times).
**
An Amazon Best Book of the Month, May 2014:
Does the world need yet another novel about WWII? It does
when the novel is as inventive and beautiful as this one by
Anthony Doerr. In fact,
All the Light We Cannot See--while set mostly in
Germany and France before and during the war--is not really a
“war novel”. Yes, there is fear and fighting and
disappearance and death, but the author’s focus is on
the interior lives of his two characters. Marie Laure is a
blind 14-year-old French girl who flees to the countryside
when her father disappears from Nazi-occupied Paris. Werner
is a gadget-obsessed German orphan whose skills admit him to
a brutal branch of Hitler Youth. Never mind that their paths
don’t cross until very late in the novel, this is not a
book you read for plot (although there is a wonderful,
mysterious subplot about a stolen gem). This is a book you
read for the beauty of Doerr’s writing-- “Abyss
in her gut, desert in her throat, Marie-Laure takes one of
the cans of food…”--and for the way he
understands and cherishes the magical obsessions of
childhood. Marie Laure and Werner are never quaint or twee.
Instead they are powerful examples of the way average people
in trying times must decide daily between morality and
survival.
--Sara Nelson
“Exquisite…
All the Light We Cannot See, 10 years under
construction, is the written equivalent of a Botticelli
painting or a Michelangelo sculpture—as filled with
light and beauty as the landscapes, museums, and
cathedrals…in Rome…Meticulously researched and
chock full of beautiful imagery…Nothing short of
brilliant,
All the Light We Cannot See gives off the kind of
mesmerizing and legend-making light as that of the mysterious
diamond that sits in the center of the story.” (Alice
Evans
Portland Oregonian)
“Boy meets girl in Anthony Doerr’s hauntingly
beautiful new book, but the circumstances are as elegantly
circuitous as they can be.…Werner’s experience at
the school is only one of the many trials through which Mr.
Doerr puts his characters in this surprisingly fresh and
enveloping book. What’s unexpected about its impact is
that the novel does not regard Europeans’ wartime
experience in a new way. Instead, Mr. Doerr’s nuanced
approach concentrates on the choices his characters make and
on the souls that have been lost, both living and
dead.” (Janet Maslin
The New York Times)
“Doerr, a fabulous writer, pens an epic novel about
a blind French girl and a German boy in occupied France and
their struggles to survive World War II.” (Mary Ann
Gwinn
Seattle Times)
“Anthony Doerr again takes language beyond mortal
limits.” (Elissa Schappell
Vanity Fair)
“The whole shebang enthralls.” (
Good Housekeeping)
“Incandescent…Mellifluous and
unhurried…Characters as noble as they are enthralling.
Doerr looms myriad strains into a luminous work of strife and
transcendence.” (Hamilton Cain
O, the Oprah magazine)
“History intertwines with irresistible
fiction—secret radio broadcasts, a cursed diamond, a
soldier’s deepest doubts—into a richly
compelling, bittersweet package. After you wipe away those
stray tears, you’ll be casting the movie in your head;
this carefully crafted novel fairly begs for a lush Hollywood
conversion.” (Mary Pols
People (3 1/2 stars))
“Intricately structured…
All the Light We Cannot See is a work of art and of
preservation.” (Jane Ciabattari
BBC)
“Endlessly bold and equally delicate…An
intricate miracle of invention, narrative verve, and deep
research lightly held, but above all a miracle of
humanity….Anthony Doerr’s novel
celebrates—and also accomplishes—what only the
finest art can: the power to create, reveal, and augment
experience in all its horror and wonder, heartbreak and
rapture.” (
Shelf Awareness)
“A novel to live in, learn from, and feel bereft
over when the last page is turned, Doerr’s
magnificently drawn story seems at once spacious and tightly
composed. . . . Doerr masterfully and knowledgeably recreates
the deprived civilian conditions of war-torn France and the
strictly controlled lives of the military occupiers.” (
Booklist (starred review))
“Doerr captures the sights and sounds of wartime and
focuses, refreshingly, on the innate goodness of his major
characters.” (
Kirkus Reviews (starred review))
“If a book’s success can be measured by its
ability to move readers and the number of memorable
characters it has, Story Prize-winner Doerr’s novel
triumphs on both counts. Along the way, he convinces readers
that new stories can still be told about this well-trod
period, and that war—despite its desperation, cruelty,
and harrowing moral choices—cannot negate the pleasures
of the world.” (
Publishers Weekly (starred review))
“This novel has the physical and emotional heft of a
masterpiece…[All the Light We Cannot See] presents two
characters so interesting and sympathetic that readers will
keep turning the pages hoping for an impossibly happy
ending…Highly recommended for fans of Michael
Ondaatje’s The English Patient.” (Evelyn Beck
Library Journal (starred review))
"What a delight! This novel has exquisite writing and a
wonderfully suspenseful story. A book you'll tell your
friends about..." (Frances Itani, author of Deafening) “This jewel of a story is put together like a
vintage timepiece, its many threads coming together so
perfectly. Doerr’s writing and imagery are stunning.
It’s been a while since a novel had me under its spell
in this fashion. The story still lives on in my head.”
(Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone)
“
All the Light We Cannot See is a dazzling, epic work
of fiction. Anthony Doerr writes beautifully about the mythic
and the intimate, about snails on beaches and armies on the
move, about fate and love and history and those breathless,
unbearable moments when they all come crashing
together.” (Jess Walter, author of Beautiful Ruins)
“Doerr sees the world as a scientist, but feels it
as a poet. He knows about
everything—radios, diamonds, mollusks, birds,
flowers, locks, guns—but he also writes a line so
beautiful, creates an image or scene so haunting, it makes
you think forever differently about the big
things—love, fear, cruelty, kindness, the countless
facets of the human heart. Wildly suspenseful, structurally
daring, rich in detail and soul, Doerr’s new novel is
that novel, the one you savor, and ponder, and
happily lose sleep over, then go around urging all your
friends to read—now.” (J.R. Moehringer, author of
Sutton and The Tender Bar)
“A tender exploration of this world's paradoxes; the
beauty of the laws of nature and the terrible ends to which
war subverts them; the frailty and the resilience of the
human heart; the immutability of a moment and the healing
power of time. The language is as expertly crafted as the
master locksmith's models in the story, and the settings as
intricately evoked. A compelling and uplifting novel.”
(M.L. Stedman, author of The Light Between Oceans)Amazon.com Review
Review