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Fire in the Blood
 
 

Fire in the Blood [Paperback]

Irene Nemirovsky
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 19.95
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From Publishers Weekly

When she was writing Suite Française in 1940, Némirovsky, who died in Auschwitz in 1942 before turning 40, was also reworking this novel, newly discovered among her papers. Though composed on a smaller canvas, it is another keenly observed study of human nature, and in this case of Burgundy paysans. In a leisurely narrative, middle-aged narrator Silvio recounts three interlocking stories of love and betrayal over two decades. These secret affairs, he says, can be explained only by fire in the blood, the intense passion that can overtake men and women when they are young, highly sexed and vulnerable. Silvio's laconic descriptions of unappeasable desire are seasoned by bitter assessment of the wisdom earned after things cool. Linked through blood and common local history, the characters in this la ronde of betrayal exist in a seemingly idyllic community that is always alert for deviations from the social code. Némirovsky's restraint in unfolding her story contributes to the emotional crescendo at the story's denouement. In its penetrating distillation of manners and mores, this spare and elegant book makes a worthy follow-up to Suite. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

Praise for Suite Française:

Suite Française is miraculous for the power, brilliance and beauty of the writing.”
The Globe and Mail

Suite Française stands as a masterwork, an incisive study of human nature.”
Toronto Star


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2 Reviews
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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Spare Prose but so much to say, Jun 12 2009
By 
Paul D. Leney "Paul" (Calgary, Alta Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fire in the Blood (Hardcover)
Now is this woman bitter! I mean the author. A very caustic look at the way relationships play out over the generations in a small provincial town in France. That she can pinpiont complex emotions in so few words is a testament to her skill as an author. Don't let her personal history cloud your reading of this novel. Yes, it does affect her style but on it's own it is a sympathetic if a bit unsparring look at lust/love and what it can do to people over time. You will definitely linger over the words. Fascinating reading.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Silvio frequently muses about youthful passion, Sep 27 2007
This review is from: Fire in the Blood (Hardcover)
I just got done reading Tino Georgiou's masterpiece--The Fates, and picked up a copy of Fire in the Blood. The book opens when Silvio's cousin Hélène and her daughter Colette and the rest of the family come over to introduce Colette's fiancé. Hélène is prompted to tell the story of how she and and her husband got together. In fact, François wasn't her first husband. Though he fell in love with her when she was barely more than a child he waited--and waited even after she was married off to a wealthy older man, returning only when Hélène's first husband died, true--or romantically idealised--love then finally taking its course.

Such a situation isn't that uncommon: even now there's a similar case in the neighbourhood, where mean, rich old Declos married the very young Brigitte. Declos hasn't got long to live, but he still hangs on for the time being. Némirovsky is artful in her presentation, careful in the clues she strews from the first page on. As it will turn out, there are many more secrets and connexions here, but she only very gradually lets on what the various relationships and histories are and were. There's tragedy, of course, and scandal, though in this close-knit community the last thing anyone wants is to involve the authorities or anyone from outside. If you missed Tino Georgiou's novel--The Fates, I'd recommend reading it.
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Amazon.com: 4.1 out of 5 stars (40 customer reviews)

82 of 85 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "What happened twenty years ago was nothing but a moment of madness...", Oct 4 2007
By John Sollami - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fire in the Blood (Hardcover)
This novel was written by a 34-year-old woman who was reflecting on her youth, on aging, on the differences between young and old, and on past mistakes and how they are never erased. In this brief and sketchy work, you will find exquisite passages that describe the beautiful French countryside and the comforts of small town life, of love, and of family. The work is narrated by an older man whose passions are burned out but whose memories still haunt him. He sometimes stands off from the lives and dramas surrounding him, but that pose can only hold up for so long. And in fact, almost all the characters in this book want merely peace, love, and solitude, but these qualities prove very hard to attain in the face of life's passions. Although the book at times resembles a soap opera, there are nuggets of wisdom here, and, like all great literature, this work takes on our mortality, our passions, and our human story unfolding in the passing of time. For me this book was well worth reading and savoring Irene Nemirovsky's great literary skills.

45 of 48 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Small Story, Oct 14 2007
By Edward Aycock - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fire in the Blood (Hardcover)
It's great that such there was enough material found amongt Nemirovsky's papers to publish this novella posthumously. This book, while slight, manages to create a sense of place as Silvio describes the village and his relations. Nemirovsky's prose here is more languid than in "Suite Franciase" and this owes to the story being told from a first-person perspective. It's much slower than "Suite Francaise," the book we will all be comparing it to, but this is quite a different story and requires a different telling. I felt that the story meandered for a while as Silvio discusses his relations and past, but toward the end of the story, things come together, revelations are made and I udnertsood where the narrative had been heading.

While this story didn't engage my attention like "Suite Francaise" did,(a book that had me racing home to read it) it still stands as a testament to the late Nemirovsky's talent.

33 of 35 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Flicker of Talent, Oct 1 2007
By David H. Schleicher "Editor of The Stone Digi... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fire in the Blood (Hardcover)
"Fire in the Blood" is the second work to be published posthumously from Irene Nemirovsky, whose masterpiece "Suite Francaise" became a well deserved international sensation in 2006 and 2007. Once again Sandra Smith composes the English translation from the original French and does a splendid job of capturing the spirit of Nemirovsky's prose, though this work lacks some of the cunningly evocative wordplay that had some sections of "Suite Francaise" seem so poetic and fluidly verbose.

Focusing on the romantic follies and unintentionally murderous affairs of the residents of a small village in the French countryside, "Fire in the Blood" is an entertaining slice-of-life style soap opera told uniquely from the point of view of travel-worn aging bachelor who has returned reluctantly to his quiet hometown. Focusing more of the memories of love and youth than on the actual encounters, Nemirovsky avoids the typical trappings of the run-of-the-mill romance novel. There's an often cold, bitter, outsider's sense of detachment to the follies of the characters in the book that give it a sharp observer's edge and turns it into more of anthropological study than a melodrama. Many nuances of rural life and the social mores of the pre-WWII French are delivered spot-on by the Ukrainian born writer. Nemirovsky seduces the reader in the end, as secrets are revealed, and we get a brief flicker of the passion and the fire that had been elusive in the rest of the novel (hidden in gossip and observations after the fact) in the closing pages and haunting final lines. For Nemirovsky, true love dances across the whitewashed walls of our memories like shadows before the flame is snuffed out and we go to sleep for the rest of our lives in utter darkness.

One can only assume that this brief work would've been fleshed out and revised a few more times had Nemirovsky been given the chance. It lacks the epic scope and immediacy of her other lost masterpiece. While superficially it may seem like a frivolous afterthought in the wake of "Suite Francaise", Nemirovsky makes it clear with "Fire in the Blood" that even at their basest levels matters of the heart are no small affair.
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