Reviews

Blooms of Darkness by Aharon Appelfeld

lorees_reading_nook's review against another edition

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emotional reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Loveable characters? Yes

3.75

“... Sometimes it seems to me that what once was will never be again, and that when we meet after the war, we'll be different.”

When the Jewish ghetto to which they have been confined continues to be liquidated, eleven year old Hugo is taken by his mother to a local brothel where Mariana, one of the prostitutes, agrees to hide him in her closet. What follows is a relationship that assuages the fears and insecurities of both as the story moves towards its inevitable outcome.

This book is written in a simple, stark and restrained style. There is much that is merely suggested and a lot that is left unsaid. It is repetitive, because so is Hugo's routine, and there is an underlying sense of confusion as he can only surmise the passage of time from the brief glimpses of the outside world that he gets through the cracks in the closet in which he is confined. His past and his dreams merge into his new reality. Afraid and alone, Mariana is his only friend, his whole world, his only explosion of colour in the dark and gloomy world he inhabits.

So, although she is as old as his mother, Hugo starts to love her. Innocently, at first. In turn, she encourages this love, feeds on it even - as if to assuage the hurt and abuse her clients hurl at her. But this is not a mother-son relationship, or even a platonic one, because Mariana eventually seduces Hugo - and although it's referred to in such a subtle way that we almost don't notice it, we know it's happening. Perhaps it was inevitable. Perhaps we are meant to see the loss of Hugo's innocence as just another victim of the war, a small price to pay for his survival.  But I admit that it did make me feel uncomfortable.

Unsurprisingly, the ending is left open. Whereas we are aware of Mariana's fate, we can only imagine what Hugo's will be. 
Poignant, heartbreaking and sad, Blooms Of Darkness dares to explore the often-overlooked consequences of war and persecution.

“Take my love and hide it in your heart, and from time to time say to yourself, Once there was Mariana.”

bookrec's review

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1.0

I really have no feelings about this book at all. There is a lot of other Holocaust literature out there, pick up one of them first.

giulia_c2001's review against another edition

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5.0

Protagonista asoluto di questo romanzo è Hugo, ragazzino ebreo di undici anni. Siamo nel periodo delle deportazioni degli ebrei e Hugo è ebreo. Ha imparato a non fare domande, sa che deve nascondersi, ha visto amici e parenti, tra cui il padre, venir catturati dai nazisti e portati via, chissà dove. Per salvarlo la madre lo affida a Mariana, una prostituta di straordinaria bellezza, che lo nasconde all'interno di uno sgabuzzino da cui Hugo non uscirà per un anno e mezzo e da cui sente e vede cose che un ragazzino della sua età non dovrebbe nemmeno immaginare.
Appelfield descrive la vicenda con semplicità e linearità, quasi una cronaca della vita di Hugo all'interno dello sgabuzzino, la sua vita con Mariana che pian piano lo seduce anche se con ingenuità e delicatezza.
Appelfield descrive la vita di Hugo senza sensazionalismo, ma comunica e trasmette emozioni con semplicità e incisività. Nonostante l'argomento, il libro si legge in maniera piacevole e veloce, ma conquista il cuore. Non mostra le brutture di quel periodo ma le lascia immaginare, attraverso gli occhi di Hugo, cos' pieno di vita da resistere alle difficoltà e uscire indenne dalla sua prigionia ancora integro e pronto a ricominciare, anche senza avere notizie dei genitori e trovandosi solo al mondo

mslaura's review

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4.0

Ratings (1 to 5)
Writing: 3.5
Plot: 4
Characters: 4
Emotional impact: 4
Overall rating: 4
Notes
Favorite character(s): Mariana was a great character; so very broken but complex enough not to become a cliche.
Other notes: There were aspects of this story I was uncomfortable with but overall I enjoyed it.

arirang's review

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2.0

Book 23/24 of my reading of all the past Independent Foreign Fiction Prize / Man Booker International and the 2012 winner, Blooms of Darkness, translated by Jeffrey M. Green from Aharon Appelfeld's Hebrew original.

I have been impressed at the quality of many I have read but this one left me a bit bemused, particularly as it beat off a very strong longlist that included Dag Solstad, Murakami, Knausgaard, Yan Lianke, Péter Nádas, Sjón and Diego Marani.

Set in an unnamed Ukranian town under German occupation in the second world war, it begins evocatively in the Jewish ghetto:

Tomorrow Hugo will be eleven, and Anna and Otto will come for his birthday. Most of Hugo’s friends have already been sent to distant villages, and the few remaining will be sent soon. The tension in the ghetto is great, but no one cries. The children secretly guess what is in store for them. The parents control their feelings so as not to sow fear, but the doors and windows know no restraint. They slam by themselves or are shoved with nervous movements. Winds whip through every alley.

From the Independent review of the book (https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/blooms-of-darkness-by-aharon-appelfeld-trans-jeffrey-m-green-2369974.html) I learned:
Aharon Appelfeld survived the Holocaust as a child, living like a wild boy in the forests of Ukraine. His remarkable memoir, The Story of a Life, tells how he briefly found shelter with a woman called Maria, the village prostitute. Maria drank, and was often despairing, but when she was happy she filled the hut with light. At these times she seemed like the smiling girl in a picture above her bed: perhaps, Appelfeld wrote, that was how she wanted to be remembered.
which perhaps excuses the rather odd story that follows, but ultimately doesn't sufficiently redeem it.

In the novel, when 11 year old Hugo is unable to find a peasant to take him to shelter and relatively safety in the mountains, his mother instead entrusts him to the care of Mariana, who works in a brothel for the German troops. Hugo hides in her closet as the war, and the constant search for hidden Jews, unfolds around them.

I struggled though with two aspects of the resulting story. Firstly, as Hugo is hidden in a closet he sees or hears little of what is going on, and the narrative resorts not only to relayed reports but, rather less convincingly, to dreams.

Secondly, Mariana's relationship to Hugo, and I can't think of a better way to put this, verges on grooming. While the text is decidedly non explicit, she does take the 11 year old boy into her bed and their relationship does seem to get increasingly physical (as shown at one point, when, after they later free the brothel and she tries to pass Hugo off as her son, a family they seek shelter with thrown them out in disgust on the grounds that a mother and son don't sleep together like that).

Mariana also has a rather annoying habit of referring to herself in the third person, which starts to grate.

In the latter part of the novel, the Russians arrive and now Hugo has to try to help Mariana, who knows that she will likely be shot for sleeping with the enemy, although this part of the story doesn't really get anywhere (literally - after fleeing for some time they find themselves still close to the town).

The novel only really comes to life in the closing pages, when Hugo returns to the town and the area where he and his parents lived. He is surprised after he, his compatriots, and Mariana and her colleagues have gone through so much that actually very little has changed in the town itself. Except for one thing - the Jewish families are absent, their houses and business taken over by others, and those that returned clearly unwelcome. But a strong opening and close to the novel doesn't really redeem the 90% in between.

A disappointing choice of winner.



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