Welcome to Read This Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!
Today, I am throwing it back with a book that was a Big Deal ten years ago when it came out because there’s a new Netflix adaptation. I was a bookseller when this book was released, and I sold so many copies. I bought a copy way back then, intending to read it, and never got around to it…until this past weekend when I was sick and scrolling through Netflix and spotted the adaptation. I turned off the TV, dusted off my copy off the shelf, and read it in a day. So, if you have somehow been living under a rock or just missed this book, consider this your nudge to give it a read!
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
In Paris, a girl named Marie-Laure loses her sight as a young child. Her father, who works for the Natural History Museum, spends hours building her a scale replica of their arrondissement so that she can learn how to navigate her way through the world. But as war with Germany looms, Marie-Laure and her father flee to Saint Malo with the museum’s most precious artifact. Meanwhile, in Germany, a young orphan named Werner and his sister tune into radio programs from France and envision a better future for themselves. At first, the war seems to offer opportunities…but at what cost?
The writing in this book is masterful. The chapters at the beginning appear at first like vignettes, giving us glimpses into the parallel lives of Marie-Laure and Werner and the very different and tragic directions that war takes them. It becomes evident that their paths will cross, and you just have to sit back and trust that you are in good hands with Doerr’s storytelling. The prose is lyrical and spare at times, but it conveys such tremendous emotion and the feeling of utter helplessness as everyone, no matter their nationality, is swept up in the madness of WWII. Doerr also creates tension by inserting interludes that tell of the destruction of Saint Malo in 1944, coaxing readers along on a suspenseful ride to the fateful day that Marie and Werner will finally meet. This book doesn’t have plot twists or gimmicks, but the characters are all richly portrayed, and the emotions are deeply felt, and you’ll find yourself racing to the end to see how it all comes together. I inhaled this book and found myself a captive audience as I waited to see how it would all turn out. This is a book that reminds us of humanity’s capacity for violence and hatred but also the capacity for love and goodness.
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Happy reading!
Tirzah
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