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Ash Garden
 
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Ash Garden (Hardcover)

de Dennis Bock (Author)
4.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (7 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 34.00
Price: CDN$ 21.42 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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  • Cet article : Ash Garden de Dennis Bock

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Descriptions du produit

Amazon.ca

2001 Amazon.ca/Books in Canada First Novel Award Shortlist:: The unprecedented impact, ideology, and geographic scope of the Second World War continue to attract new novelists who hammer the history out a little thinner each time, highlighting lesser-known massacres or sifting through minor characters to discover a representative but undiscovered guide. Dennis Bock's poignant book The Ash Garden personalizes the epic bombing of Hiroshima through Anton Böll, a German émigré physicist, and Emiko, a Japanese victim of the bomb. Bombmaker and bombed, they balance this incisive, symmetrical novel and its sustained inquiry into remorse and forgiveness.

One of 25 Hiroshima Maidens relocated from post-war Japan to America for corrective plastic surgery, Emiko remains in the U.S. as a student, then as a filmmaker. The novel is at its best with her, from the heavy losses that surround her recovery in Japan to the awkwardness of immigrating to the nation that is both her tormentor and her savior. Meanwhile, Anton, her opposite number, doesn't just return home from war, he returns having irrevocably changed war. Stubbornly proud of his work and estranged from his isolated, ailing wife, Anton offers no home to remorse, and his conflicted legacy takes a lifetime to heal. Heal it does, though, just as Anton and Emiko meet and begin to discuss their roles in the bombing. The climax may be too much for readers impatient with a Dickensian full-cast ending: like those of John Irving, Bock's symmetries are delightful to discover at the halfway point but disappointingly conspicuous by the novel's close. --Darryl Whetter



Amazon.ca

The unprecedented impact, ideology, and geographic scope of the Second World War continue to attract new novelists who hammer the history out a little thinner each time, highlighting lesser-known massacres or sifting through minor characters to discover a representative but undiscovered guide. Dennis Bock's poignant book The Ash Garden personalizes the epic bombing of Hiroshima through Anton Böll, a German émigré physicist, and Emiko, a Japanese victim of the bomb. Bombmaker and bombed, they balance this incisive, symmetrical novel and its sustained inquiry into remorse and forgiveness.

One of 25 Hiroshima Maidens relocated from post-war Japan to America for corrective plastic surgery, Emiko remains in the U.S. as a student, then as a filmmaker. The novel is at its best with her, from the heavy losses that surround her recovery in Japan to the awkwardness of immigrating to the nation that is both her tormentor and her savior. Meanwhile, Anton, her opposite number, doesn't just return home from war, he returns having irrevocably changed war. Stubbornly proud of his work and estranged from his isolated, ailing wife, Anton offers no home to remorse, and his conflicted legacy takes a lifetime to heal. Heal it does, though, just as Anton and Emiko meet and begin to discuss their roles in the bombing. The climax may be too much for readers impatient with a Dickensian full-cast ending: like those of John Irving, Bock's symmetries are delightful to discover at the halfway point but disappointingly conspicuous by the novel's close. --Darryl Whetter --Ce texte provient de la Paperback édition.


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L'avis des consommateurs

7 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (2)
4 étoiles:
 (3)
3 étoiles:
 (2)
2 étoiles:    (0)
1 étoiles:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 (7 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
5.0étoiles sur 5 Confronting the shadows, Déc 28 2005
Par Friederike Knabe (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Ce commentaire est de: The Ash Garden (Paperback)
Sometimes, chance encounters with books lead to discoveries you wouldn’t want to miss. Finding “The Ash Garden” has been one such experience. It is a superbly written, subtle, yet complex human interest story placed against the backdrop of historical events. Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, the atom bomb’s devastating short term impacts reverberate through the story. The lingering long term effects, politically and emotionally, connect the three protagonists: the German scientist, having left Europe to participate in the bomb’s development, the documentary film journalist who survived the attack as a child, seriously scarred, and the scientist’s wife, a refugee from the Nazi regime. Bock succeeds in creating a deeply moving portrait of the three people whose lives are dramatically connected through these events. They also draw them to each other, almost despite themselves.

Each section is written in the distinct voice of one of the protagonists, thereby allowing each to express his or her perspective on the events over a period of fifty years. The narrative moves between present and past, each episode providing another building block for us to understand their lives’ complexities. We are exposed to their emotional conflicts and follow the often detached scrutiny of their respective behaviours and attitudes. Their recollections of the historical events naturally differ, so do their assessments of their human emotions, whether love, betrayal, guilt, shame, selfishness or atonement. Yet, the story builds gently and none of what is shared overwhelms the reader. Bock writes with great empathy for the characters, exploring their personalities without passing judgement on their action or inaction at the different stages of their lives.

Bock has described his interest in writing fiction as “raising big questions” of human society. Major topics that escape clear black and white answers. For example, the scientist joined the Los Alamos team because building the atom bomb “ was the only way to end the war”. Yet, during his research mission to Hiroshima to “scientifically assess the bomb’s impact”, he is exposed to the human suffering of innocent civilians. In "The Ash Garden", Bock proves himself a master in exploring the grey zones between right and wrong, innocence and responsibility. The narrative moves towards the anticipated and necessary confrontation between the victim and the scientist, in her view co-responsible for her suffering. The outcome is everything but clear-cut or obvious, but consistent within the story and the intentions of the author.

A deeply moving and beautiful novel with important messages for us all. [Friederike Knabe]

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4.0étoiles sur 5 A beautiful book that lingers in the mind, Oct. 14 2002
Par Un client
I read The Ashgarden twice; Dennis Bock has a beautiful style and the storyline flows.
The book is filled with lyrical passages as the one when, after Sophie's death, Anton remembers how 'she had tended her garden like weather massaging the land'. It's interesting too how Bock compares the skins of Emiko and Sophie: Emiko's burns were 'like patterns on the skin ... tattoos of fire, and Sophie's skin, revaged by Erythematosis, was 'like small bits of smouldering fire ... wishing to be released from her body'. It's reinforcing the idea that Sophie, in a mystical way, was connected with the awful happenings in Hiroshima in August 1945.
I agree with previous reviewers that Bock's characterizations have flaws, and that the scene with the children playing in the snow is somewhat distracting from the story. (But the description of the snow landscape reads like a painting!)
Similarly I didn't feel the relationship between Sophie and Stephano, the Italian from Pescara, was convincing enough to be included. However, the deepening relationship between Anton and Sophie is a touching one, and altogether this book is worth to own, to read again and again. Hopefully Bock will bring us more books in the future.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Much to contemplate here, Jui 3 2002
Par J. Fercho (Calgary, AB. Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This will likely be one of my more difficult reviews to write. Usually after finishing a novel I have no trouble knowing what to say about the book, not here. This is a novel of contemplation, it is both lyrical, poetic and at times slow. The story of a Japanese girl disfigured by the atomic bomb and the German/American scientist who helped create it, covers some complex philosophical issues. Is the use of a weapon of mass distruction justifiable if it brings about a perceived greater good? (in this case the end of WW2) The opening scene of Emiko and her brother witnessing the drop of the bomb is truly haunting and brilliantly written. While I had great sympathy for Emiko she was not a particularly empathetic character. I felt much more warmth for Anton the scientist and his long-suffering wife Sophie. My reason for not giving this novel 5 stars was echoed by another reviewer. I never felt like I got to know the characters well enough or understood the motivation for many of their actions. This especially applied to Sophie, who seemed both disillusioned and content with her lot in life.
There is a lot going on in this book, although it is a quick read it is by no means "light" reading. In conclusion, a line from Anton has been staying in my thoughts, he states he is less haunted by the dropping of the bomb, and more haunted by what the world would have become if the bomb had not been dropped. What indeed?
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 It helped me deal with Sept 11th
"The Ash Garden" is a poetic read that helped me cope with the aftermath of Sept 11th. It's a true literary work, one whose examination of the people affected by the... Lisez davantage
Publié le Fév 17 2002

3.0étoiles sur 5 Ash Garden fails to live up to sky-high expectations
I was somewhat disappointed with this novel. After all the press & critical attention it was getting, I expected to be blown away. Lisez davantage
Publié le Fév 16 2002 par Kaelyn

3.0étoiles sur 5 Lyrical yet confusing
Let it be said right now: Dennis Bock's The Ash Garden is a very beautiful book. It is lyrical and has a very powerful poetic quality. Lisez davantage
Publié le Oct. 30 2001 par Sebastien Pharand

4.0étoiles sur 5 A sweet, quiet book
This is a story about memory and what it causes people to do, in an indirect way. The story is quiet, beautifully told, and may make you cry. Lisez davantage
Publié le Oct. 19 2001 par kestrelle

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