April Grunspan
Auteur van The Coat
Werken van April Grunspan
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Statistieken
- Werken
- 1
- Leden
- 11
- Populariteit
- #857,862
- Waardering
- 3.5
- Besprekingen
- 4
- ISBNs
- 2
The Coat is a book about the legacy of the holocaust, focusing on the war and post-war story and how it reflects on the third generation of holocaust survivors. The centrepiece of the novel is the leather coat that the main character receives from his grandparents on the day of his bar mitzvah. It's been in the family since ww2, but we don't know the story of how it ended up in the family.
Instead, we are given pieces of a mosaic, vignettes from the past that include a possible way the coat made its way into the life of the protagonist's grandparents.
That is an interesting narrative approach, even though I found it confusing before I figured out that that's not the one and the same coat and that it will keep appearing for the first time in each vignette.
I've read literally dozens of books on the holocaust, many of which have touched me in a way more profound than this book. The approaches in those books were different. From [b:Fatelessness|318335|Fatelessness|Imre Kertész|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1348898439l/318335._SY75_.jpg|309125] to [b:The World That We Knew|43822062|The World That We Knew|Alice Hoffman|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1567346309l/43822062._SY75_.jpg|68193271] there is a world of possibilities how to treat this topic. Regardless of the literary treatment of the topic, it is impossible to read any book about the holocaust and not feel anything. But, I felt something lacking with this book. I didn't like Seth. He was a walking cliche.
Predictably, the coat is just a symbol, and by the end of the novel Seth will come to terms with his own role in keeping the Jewish identity, as an atheist Jew.
I guess the audience of this novel is the third/fourth generation of the holocaust survivors who feel disconnected from their family's past. It reads like simple YA literature. The novel is loaded with Yiddish/Hebrew terms and references.
My biggest criticism of this book is that it feels very one-sided. It talks a lot about Israel, but it never mentions anything about the Arab Palestinians who had lived there before the Jewish refugees started arriving in post-war Israel. Even in the "modern era" part of the novel, there is only one episode with a shawarma shop that put out the caricature of Netanyahu and Seth swore never to enter there again. But even then the author managed to avoid mentioning Palestinians and focused only and exclusively on the Jewish side of the story.
The Poles are also pretty demonized, even though Seth's father survived thanks to a Polish man who hid him in the basement. Seth's girlfriend is Polish, too and at one point he even attacked her for not knowing whether her ancestors were Nazi collaborators. While there were some collaborators during the war in every country, Polish people were also considered Untermensch, many were killed, many risking their lives as a part of Żegota.
I understand that this story focuses on Jewish history and identity. Still, I feel very strongly that while we keep telling only one side of the story and ignore the others, while we keep focusing on the legacy and identity instead of humanity and hope, things are never going to improve.
In that sense, this book holds little value, hence the 2 stars from me.… (meer)