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“A family memoir written with a grace and modesty that almost belie the sweep of its contents: Proust, Rilke, Japanese art, the rue de Monceau, Vienna during the Second World War. The most enchanting history lesson imaginable.” —The New Yorker
“An extraordinary history...A wondrous book, as lustrous and exquisitely crafted as the netsuke at its heart.” —The Christian Science Monitor
“A lovely, gripping book.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Enthralling . . . [de Waal’s] essayistic exploration of his family’s past pointedly avoids any sentimentality . . . The Hare with Amber Eyes belongs on the same shelf with Vladimir Nabokov’s Speak, Memory.” —Michael Dirda, The Washington Post Book World
“At one level [Edmund de Waal] writes in vivid detail of how the fortunes were used to establish the Ephrussis’ lavish lives and high positions in Paris and Vienna society. And, as Jews, of their vulnerability: the Paris family shaken by turn-of-the century anti-Semitism surging out of the Dreyfus affair; the Vienna branch utterly destroyed in Hitler’s 1937 Anschluss . . . At a deeper level, though, Hare is about something more, just as Marcel Proust’s masterpiece was about something more than the trappings of high society. As with Remembrance of Things Past, it uses the grandeur to light up interior matters: aspirations, passions, their passing; all in a duel, and a duet, of elegy and irony.” —Richard Eder, The Boston Globe
“Absorbing . . . In this book about people who defined themselves by the objects they owned, de Waal demonstrates that human stories are more powerful than even the greatest works of art.” —Adam Kirsch, The New Republic
“Delicately constructed and wonderfully nuanced . . . There are many family memoirs whose stories are as enticing as Edmund de Waal’s. There are few, though, whose raw material has been crafted into quite such an engrossing and exquisitely written book as The Hare with Amber Eyes . . . One of the great triumphs of The Hare with Amber Eyes . . . is not just the assiduous way in which de Waal interrogates his raw evidence—scattered articles and newspaper cuttings, old paintings, forgotten buildings—but the way he summons up different eras so evocatively . . . [De Waal] is, too, as you would expect of a potter, wonderfully tactile in his investigations, interrogating the physical feel of the Ephrussis’ different buildings, touching surfaces, assessing materials. This sensuality transmits itself also to his prose, which is beautiful to read—lithe and precise, crisp and delicate. The result is a memoir of the very first rank, one full of grace, economy, and extraordinary emotion.” —Andrew Holgate, The Barnes & Noble Review
“Remarkable . . . To be handed a story as durable and exquisitely crafted as this is a rare pleasure . . . Like the netsuke themselves, this book is impossible to put down. You have in your hands a masterpiece.” —Frances Wilson, The Sunday Times (London)
“From a hard and vast archival mass of journals, memoirs, newspaper clippings and art-history books, Mr. de Waal has fashioned, stroke by minuscule stroke, a book as fresh with detail as if it had been written from life, and as full of beauty and whimsy as a netsuke from the hands of a master carver. Buy two copies of his book; keep one and give the other to your closest bookish friend.” —The Economist
“What a treat of a book! It projects an iridescent mirage that once was real, a pageant of exquisite fragility, an aesthetic passion somehow surviving the brutalities of history. Mr. de Waal’s nostalgia is tart, tactile, marvelously nuanced.”—Frederic Morton, author of A Nervous Splendor: Vienna, 1888/1889 and The Rothschilds: Portrait of a Dynasty
“A self-questioning, witty, sharply perceptive book . . . The Hare with Amber Eyes is rich in epiphanic moments . . . By writing objects into his family story [de Waal] has achieved something remarkable.” —Tanya Harrod, The Times Literary Supplement
“A beautiful and unusual book . . . [A] unique memoir of [de Waal’s] family . . . De Waal has a mystical ability to so inhabit the long-gone moment as to seem to suspend inexorable history, personal and impersonal . . . A work that succeeds in several known genres: as family memoir, travel literature (de Waal’s Japan is the nearest thing to being there, and over decades), essays on migration and exile, on cultural misperceptions, and on de Waal's attempt to define his relationship with his own kaolin creations. His book is also a new genre, unnamed and maybe unnameable.” —Veronica Horwell, The Guardian
“Part family memoir, part Proustian confession, subtle, spare and elegant.” —Hilary Spurling, The Independent
“A marvelously absorbing synthesis of art history, detective story and memoir . . . A nimble history of one of the richest European families at the turn of the century . . . Remarkable.” —Kirkus Reviews
An Economist Book of the Year
Costa Book Award Winner for Biography
Galaxy National Book Award Winner (New Writer of the Year Award)
Edmund de Waal is a world-famous ceramicist. Having spent thirty years making beautiful pots—which are then sold, collected, and handed on—he has a particular sense of the secret lives of objects. When he inherited a collection of 264 tiny Japanese wood and ivory carvings, called netsuke, he wanted to know who had touched and held them, and how the collection had managed to survive.
And so begins this extraordinarily moving memoir and detective story as de Waal discovers both the story of the netsuke and of his family, the Ephrussis, over five generations. A nineteenth-century banking dynasty in Paris and Vienna, the Ephrussis were as rich and respected as the Rothchilds. Yet by the end of the World War II, when the netsuke were hidden from the Nazis in Vienna, this collection of very small carvings was all that remained of their vast empire.
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Most helpful customer reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Masterpiece indeed - all about a a collection of connections,
By
This review is from: The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance (Paperback)
I read it myself, loved it, lived in it and couldn't put it down - so sent it as a birthday present to my 'daughter-out-law in Toronto. Haven't heard yet whether she is as enthralled by it as I was - and still am. But she darn well should be!I bought my first copy in a a London (UK) book shop offering a 2-for-1. Made my first choice and scanned the rows for my 'bargain'. I spotted The Hare with Amber Eyes and remembered I'd read something about it, couldn't remember the review and short of time, picked it up. What happenstance! This eloquently written, absorbing and unique family history with its complex relationships combines an eye-opening account of the horrors and dreadful depredations of the Jewish people by the Nazis. But it takes no shortcuts on the structuring of a Jewish family rising from not-quite rags to unimaginable wealth - and the means by which this is achieved. This is a book written with considerable charm, insight and more than anything else, absolute truth. I gave my first copy to a friend and now have another - read it and reread it again and again. A masterpiece like no other.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best book i have read in ages,
By
This review is from: The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance (Paperback)
This book has it all:history, scenery, art, emotions, subtlety, great writing, and all this from a man who is a well known potter but not a writer.I highly recommand it; you are in for a treat!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars
bitter disappointment,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance (Paperback)
The Hare With Amber Eyes begins so well and promises so much that when it fails, it leaves the reader feeling rather queasy. The problem is so obvious, and so easily fixed, that you wonder why some strong-willed editor didn't tell Edmund De Waal that he was systematically wrecking his own book and that by changing his approach, he might have produced an enduring classic.The problem is De Waal himself: he is everywhere, in what is a remarkable account of 264 Japanese netsuke on their winding, sometimes tragic path from Japan to a niche in De Waal's own home in England. A world-famous ceramicist, De Waal is too precious by half and he can't stop pausing, often at length, to analyze his own reactions to everything he sees. That tendency, combined with his grating use of the present tense, will have readers gritting their teeth and wanting to re-edit it for themselves. The book begins with its strongest section, on the Paris of Marcel Proust, Edgar Degas and De Waal's own ancestor, the fabulously wealthy collector Charles Ephrussi. It is strong again on the horrors inflicted on other members of the extended family in Vienna during both world wars. De Waal offers a real, horrid sense of what it was like when the Nazis first took over Vienna in 1938: no one in the Jewish Ephrussi family is sent to the camps, and yet we have a stronger sense of the fear and chaos of the time than we get from more graphic descriptions of the holocaust. Unfortunately, De Waal just can't stop himself. He has to repeatedly stop and ask himself how he is reacting to his own discoveries, to the point that where you begin by liking him as a narrator, by the end of the book, you want to ask him to please just shut up. This is especially true in the last, brief section, set in Odessa, by which point you'll likely be skimming along and trying to resist the temptation to toss the book in the fire. After recommending the book to several friends while still reading the first section, I had to get in touch with all of them again to suggest, in the strongest possible manner, that they avoid the temptation to read a book that should have been so very much better than it is.
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