Wednesday, December 14, 2022

The Book of Lost Names by Kristin Harmel


 

Welcome winter! Thank goodness for Zoom and the ability to join a book club meeting from home when the weather outside is frightful! Thank you to everyone who attended Tuesday's meeting, regardless of where and how, to discuss The Book of Lost Names, by Kristin Harmel. We are so thankful for our members! 

Our January 10th selection is The Ursulina, by Brian Freeman, and as a special treat, we have arranged for Mr. Freeman to join our discussion via Zoom. If at all possible, we'd like to ask our members to hang back a few minutes after Mr. Freeman signs off to cast our votes. Please bring your questions and comments along to the meeting~ it should be a great time!


Without further ado!

Eva Traube Abrams, a semi-retired librarian in Florida, is shelving books one morning when her eyes lock on a photograph in a magazine lying open nearby. She freezes; it’s an image of a book she hasn’t seen in sixty-five years—a book she recognizes as The Book of Lost Names.

The accompanying article discusses the looting of libraries by the Nazis across Europe during World War II—an experience Eva remembers well—and the search to reunite people with the texts taken from them so long ago. The book in the photograph, an eighteenth-century religious text thought to have been taken from France in the waning days of the war, is one of the most fascinating cases. Now housed in Berlin’s Zentral- und Landesbibliothek library, it appears to contain some sort of code, but researchers don’t know where it came from—or what the code means. Only Eva holds the answer—but will she have the strength to revisit old memories and help reunite those lost during the war?

 

I think it's fair to say that the vast majority of attending members really liked the book, with a small sprinkling added in who didn't care for it, on a variety of levels. Fans of the book said they really enjoyed Harmel's writing, noting that they appreciated the supplemental fictional parts about romance and family drama, as a means to take away from the awful reality that was the Holocaust. They felt like they learned a little something more about the different roles and skill sets of the network of activists during World War II.

Those who didn't care for the book felt like the read was predictable in some places and entirely unbelievable in others~ along with holes in the plot here and there along the way. Everyone agreed Eva's mother's angst was over the top and she was a poorly written/conceived character. No one liked or believed the ending~ it was a little too neatly tied up with a pretty bow for us. Eva heinously leaving the four children put in her (and Remy's) personal charge at the last minute at the crossing, to instead indulge in an intimate, overnight stay with Remy was also mentioned as a largely distasteful, if not unbelievable segment as well.

There was an interesting concept illustrated during the meeting regarding historical fiction that bears sharing. Within the really liked and really didn't like book camps, there was another set of opinions that broke down and illustrated how the two sides come at the genre in the first place. One side likes the added in bits that take away from the grit and sting of the painful situation(s), they like that it's a kind of distraction from the heavy content. The other side prefers the real in all it's forms. They like fictional places and/or characters that they can relate to and empathize with, but they must stay relevant, and therefore, believable... maybe sourced from past journals or letters or newspaper articles. Without all the legitimate pieces, they don't feel like we can truly experience, appreciate, and/or grasp circumstances/points of view/conditions. 

As a further example, group one obviously prefers books like The Book of Lost Names. Group two, however, would rather read something like The Four Winds, by Kristin Hannah, or Dead Wake, by Erik Larson. (All previous, and current, book club books!) Make sense?

Which do you prefer? Let us know in the comments below! 👇


 

Did you enjoy The Book of Lost Names? Fans of the book also enjoyed: The Rose Code, by Kate Quinn, The Four Winds, by Kristin Hannah (a previous book club read!) and The Paris Library, by Janet Skeslien Charles. All of these titles are available in Viking~ reserve your copy today!   

 

At the conclusion of every book club discussion we ask three questions and track the average answers:
Would we recommend this to another book club for discussion?
"YES"
Would we recommend this to a friend to read? 
"YES"
Rate the book 1-5 stars, with 1 being the lowest rating: 
 3.5 stars

3 comments:

Tracy said...

I agree that the ending was a little too neatly wrapped up. I also loved The Rose Code and The Four Winds, I think this one was a unique perspective with the story arc related to forgery and all that it entailed.

Betty Z said...

I listened to some of the discussion on zoom. I had to turn down the volume when zoom speakers spoke and turn up the volume with library room speakers spoke. That was distracting, but probably has more to do with me than the system.
Anyway, in December of 1983 we went to Le Chambon to study French and that was one of the villages Hamel sighted in areas where she did research. The book, Lest Innocent Blood be Shed was written about the village's role in taking in Jewish refugees. I had the book at one time but just reordered another copy because I no longer have the original copy. We were told of the book, the home of the Protestant Reformed (Hugenot) pastor who was the "soul" behind the thousands of refugees who lived in Chambon from 1940 - 1944. The Jewish refugees were placed in many of the area farm homes. Hamel named the town Aurignon or something like that and when I saw that name I thought of Le Chambon sur Lignon, the official name of the town.
As you can imagine with our family of 5, not knowing any French, and 3 children (3, 5, 7) placed in a French elementary school and garderie (day care), the cold weather, dislike of the school, colds, ear infections non stop, a husband who didn't like the method they used to teach French, I didn't ask many questions about the 1940's at that time.
I really enjoyed reading the book. I don't have a hard time understanding for example the tension between Eva and her mother. I've never gone hungry, cold because I didn't have a warm home, wondered where my parents were as some of those Jewish children did etc.
Lest Innocent Blood is written by Philip Haille and he interviewed some of the older people in Chambon before they died off and the story of that village would have been lost.

Betty Z said...

For some reason my screen didn't allow me to proofread or continue and it sent as is so my apology for errors. Betty