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24 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars
The River Midnight,
By
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
Very enjoyable. Beautiful descriptions, figurative language (but not purple prose), and an array of senses on the page. A lovely culturally rich tale of love, friendship, set in a different time and place (Poland). It touches fairy tale status at times.It's an engaging novel using time as a trickster, reaching far into the past and spinning toward the future. Definitely recommended reading. This is one I've told friends and family they must read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
waiting for the next one!,
By Rebecca of A Better Cause (So. Pasadena, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
This is a book that has haunted me for several years now. I was just checking to see if Lilian Nettel had written another book yet, and am disappointed that I must continue to wait. The River Midnight has a unique set of characters, through whose various eyes we see the story as they see it. It is a reminder that reality is in the eye of the beholder, and that the same events can be seen quite differently by each person. I see one reviewer here didn't like the subtle touches of magic in the book, but I loved them -- The book doesn't become a fantasy, it just weaves in a few touches of the magic that some of us assume is part of life until we "grow out of it." I enjoyed the fact that these tiny tidbits were thrown into what is otherwise a historical novel about serious issues. Stereotypes -- in novels as in life -- are made to be broken! I felt very close to the characters and the writer, by the end of the novel. Ms. Nattel is a wonderful storyteller, and I was sad when this story ended. If anyone knows how to contact her, please tell her I'm anxiously awaiting the next book!
5.0 out of 5 stars
waiting for the next one!,
By Rebecca of A Better Cause (So. Pasadena, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
This is a book that has haunted me for several years now. I was just checking to see if Lilian Nettel had written another book yet, and am disappointed that I must continue to wait. The River Midnight has a unique set of characters, through whose various eyes we see the story as they see it. It is a reminder that reality is in the eye of the beholder, and that the same events can be seen quite differently by each person. I see one reviewer here didn't like the subtle touches of magic in the book, but I loved them -- The book doesn't become a fantasy, it just weaves in a few touches of the magic that some of us assume is part of life until we "grow out of it." I enjoyed the fact that these tiny tidbits were thrown into what is otherwise a historical novel about serious issues. Stereotypes -- in novels as in life -- are made to be broken! I felt very close to the characters and the writer, by the end of the novel. Ms. Nattel is a wonderful storyteller, and I was sad when this story ended. I'm anxiously awaiting the next book!
4.0 out of 5 stars
The lyrical shtetl,
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
I.B.Singer, Peretz, S.Aleichem, D.Bergelson, Mendele all have portrayed shtetl life, with a tragic, comical, historical, or religious perspective. L.Nattel in her debut as a novel writer has given us her lyrical, colorful interpretation of the shtetl life in a fictional village of Blaszka (Russian occupied Poland), at the end of the 19th century. At the core of the story there are four characters (the "vilda Hayas," or "wild creatures), all of them female. The strong, independent Misha, a midwife who challenges traditions but remains much respected and loved by the community; Hanna-Leah the childless butcher's wife; Faygela the dreamer who wishes to become a poet and becomes the mother of many, and Ziza-Sara who emigrates to New York and has an early death. Around this core there is a myriad of remarkable characters: Emma and her revolutionary ideas, the rabbi and his fear of fire, Hayim the water carrier, besides the ever-present angels and demons of Jewish folklore.Nattel has divided her novel by a "mekhitzah" (the walll that divides the men's section from the women's section in a traditional synagogue) and contrary to tradition women's perspective has precedence over the counterpart genre (excuse me, the "mama" comes first and then the "papa"). The final and third section is dedicated to Misha, the strongest character, the keeper of secrets who has become pregnant but who will not reveal who the father is. This structure is responsible for the novel's much criticized flaw: overlapping and repetition. The author integrates her vast knowledge of folklore, traditions, magic, and with an enjoyable sense of humor brings back a community life which is now part of history. Great historical events are not emphasized, there is no drama, it is a reading to be placidly enjoyed, the concern is with daily life, erotism and passions, friendships, understanding and misunderstandings amongst the characters, with some hints of magic realism which somehow seems out of place.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The "Real" Anatevka... through women's eyes,
By
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
The River Midnight is Lilian Nattel's well-researched and honest depiction of women's life in shtetl Europe. From the "zogerin", the women's prayer leader to Misha the midwife dispensing her various potions to induce a pregnancy or get rid of one, the mythical town of Blaszka comes alive through the voices of its women. Although at times the story is a little uneven, with tidbits inserted that seem to have no relation to the plot (one of the women has an affair with a gentleman in Warsaw that seems as though it's excerpted from another book altogether), Nattel draws out her story in a fascinating, almost midrashic way, layering interpretation upon interpretation until, gradually, the whole picture emerges.Perhaps the greatest flaw in this book is Nattel's attempts to weave a magical theme into the book, for example in the characters of "the Traveller" and "the Director" (and with one of the main characters being able to turn herself into a tree frog). These insertions, too, are a little annoying, and overall, they are too subtle to make any meaningful point. Luckily, they manage not to detract from Nattel's lively and evocative shtetl tale, so different from some others we've seen and heard. Let's just say that Blaszka isn't Anatevka, the mythical town seen in the musical "Fiddler on the Roof", with its clean (if slightly dusty) streets and its cheerful, sexless cast. Blaszka's women and men are lusty and three-dimensional; they menstruate, they ejaculate. And Blaszka itself is muddy and strewn with filth and ruins. In her notes at the end of the book, Nattel writes that in her research, she tried to avoid historical records from after WW2 because of the rosy-coloured nostalgia for pre-war Jewish life, and there is certainly no sentimentality here. Yet, with all her honesty and truth to life, a certain beauty emerges in her depiction. Out of the filth and mud and bickering of small-town Poland, Nattel weaves an enduring legacy to the next generations of Jews -- a tapestry-like vision of the world of our grandmothers. The River Midnight is a stunning first novel from an outstanding Canadian writer, but it is something more as well -- a window into a home to which we will never again return. I should also add that this novel made for excellent (lively!) book-group discussion. My mother invited me along to hers, and there were many varied responses (from "I loved it" to "I hated it"), but nobody could remain neutral in the face of this strongly evocative work. It also spurred an interesting discussion of women's prayer in Jewish history, and comparison with other recent Jewish "women's novels".
5.0 out of 5 stars
The shtetl in a different light,
By Jacquie Seemann (SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
Other reviewers have written of this novel's magic, its intricately intertwined stories, its historical accuracy, its strong characters, the beauty of its writing. I agree with their praise. Something else that struck me, and kept me spellbound: Nattel tells the story of a shtetl through the eyes of women, something which I have never before encountered. The midwife, the firzogerin, the stallholder, and others - their shtetl complements the shtetlach of Singer and other male writers, and yet is sometimes quite different. I absolutely love this book.
4.0 out of 5 stars
a magical shtetl comes to life,
By Jill Singer (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
An excellent group of short stories, each told by a different member of a magical polish jewish shtetl in the late 1800's. The key is that the same year is retold by each townsperson, from their point of view. The stories intersect, and also diverge in very interesting ways. There's Hanna-Leah the butcher's wife, Misha the midwife who mysteriously (and without a husband) gets pregnant, Hershel the butcher, Alta-Fruma with her great-niece and nephew from America (their parents died in a new york city workhouse fire), Hayim the water-carrier (and artist), amoung others. It's a beautifully told snapshot of a town from long ago. While well done, near the end it gets a bit tiring, and I did skip one of the stories. But that didn't hurt my enjoyment at all, nor did it disallow me from understanding the final stories in the book.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Facinating Trip To Rural Poland of the 1800's,
This review is from: The River Midnight A Novel (Hardcover)
The author demonstrates brillance by telling a story that makes you really feel and understand how life was lived in this time period. Wonderfully, she tells a story, you think its finished, and later she brings you back to the event with more explanitory facts and emotions through the voice of another character. Her extensive research is apparent and, while not Jewish, I have forebearers from that area and she helped me to see and actually what life was like then under Russian dominance.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not well developed,
By A Customer
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
I think this book does indeed give an overview idea of the life of jewish people in the shtetl. However I think that the characters are not well developed. The stories between the characters are loosly linked. The tittle of the chapters hardly descrive or have anything to do with the plot or the subject. Finally , a lot was repeated more than twice throu the book.
4.0 out of 5 stars
You will love this book from the first story to the last.,
By
This review is from: The River Midnight (Paperback)
Nattel has taken the life in a tiny Polish shtetl before the Holocaust (and one that we come to understand disappeared during that horrendous period) and presents it to the reader through the thoughts and feelings of the villagers, both men and women. In the first half of the book we are introduced to the original four wild girls, Misha, the midwife; Faygela, the mother of many and wife of the village baker; Hannah-Leah, the butcher's wife; and the children of Zisa-Sara who had left the shtetl with her husband, only to die in a sweatshop fire in New York City and leave her orphaned children to return to her native home. The tales told through these women and men of this imaginary town in Poland are sweet, magical, aggravating, heart-wrenching, startling, and just about every other adjective you can imagine. Nattel is a marvelous story-teller and the reader is caught up from the first page in the lives and loves of these simple and wonderful people. Of particular joy to me was the sprinkling of Yiddish that Nattel uses throughout the book - it not only gives the right flavor to the tales, but since many of the words are reminiscent of my childhood in a Jewish-oriented community, they are like old familiar friends. They add a somewhat funny, appropriate, accurate and tasty spice to the stories of the interactions, friendships, secrets and ties that these people have with one and other. This is a wonderful book.
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The River Midnight by Lilian Nattel (Paperback - April 4 2000)
CDN$ 21.00 CDN$ 15.16
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