13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A complex and captivating story about loss, power, honor and hope, April 3 2008
By Peter H. Schweitzer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 1940 (Paperback)
1940, first and foremost, is a beautifully crafted book. It captures a time-period and portrays a cast of characters with eloquence and realism. With varying tempos and scenes, it often feels fugue-like as its several parallel stories intertwine and play off each other, building to a crescendo at the end. Despite an aversion to the book's premise, or perhaps because of its taboo nature - does one really dare to humanize Hitler in a portrayal of his youth? - readers will be drawn in and challenged to travel along with its narrator (Dr. Bloch) and, ultimately, his creator, Jay Neugeboren, as they courageously face this topic and others without flinching. Can we say the same for ourselves?
Neugeboren has written a complex, deeply analytic book about memory, attachment and loss, about mental health and mental illness, about power and impotency, about honor and responsibility, and, ultimately, about hope. Most poignantly and not least of all, this is also a love story, written from the heart, between two separate souls, an older man and a younger woman, who discover a comfort, a connection, and a caring that will make them cherished soul-mates.
Rabbi Peter H. Schweitzer
The City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism
New York City
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Still Waiting, Aug 15 2008
By Cary B. Barad - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 1940 (Paperback)
Several subplots of moderate interest are presented, but not enough emphasis is given to the most intriguing story behind the story--Dr. Bloch's realtionship with Adolf and the rest of the Hitler family in pre-World War II Germany. I see great potential in a fictionalized account of that realtionship. And I'm still searching for it.
5 of 8 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars
Maybe It's Because I Don't Think in German, Sep 5 2008
By Peggy Stone - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 1940 (Paperback)
I had this on my library queue for months, and then found I could not make it more than halfway through the book before losing all patience with the bloodless characters and unconvincing dialogue, the over-analysis of every character's thought and movement, and its strained academic naval gazing. I could not believe that these characters were supposed to represent living, breathing people, as not one conversation had the cadences of normal human speech. Thoughts, conversations and narrative were equally loaded with dependent clauses and stultifying qualifications. There was no humor, no warmth and ultimately, no reason to continue reading as I absolutely didn't care what became of anyone.