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"The wall facing the bed does not exist, only gaps in the charred timbers, the havoc wrought by the fire of two weeks ago. Beyond this space, the purple, resinous flesh of the stormy sky swells heavily. The first and last May storm of their shared life."
As the novel progresses, the feeling that one is disturbing the characters, eavesdropping on their private dramas, doesn't diminish. In part, this is the story of the couple in the first scene: a French pilot, Jacques Dorme, who somehow wound up flying planes for the Soviet air force, and a Russified Frenchwoman, Sasha, who somehow got stuck in the Russian interior and could not leave. But it is also the story of the narrator, a child of parents murdered by Stalin. After their deaths, he lived in a Russian orphanage but was occasionally allowed out to visit the elderly Sasha, a friend of his parents, who taught him to speak and read French. The plot revolves around the narrator's trip back to Russia as an adult, and his search for the site in northern Siberia where Jacques Dorme's plane finally crashed.
All of these places -- whether the interior of a storage closet at the orphanage long ago, the muddy fairgrounds of a provincial city in post-communist Russia, or the primitive lives of the pilots in the far north -- are evoked with an unusual precision. Indeed, because the narrator is, like the real Andrei Makine, the author of a first novel, Dreams of My Russian Summers, which was hugely successful in France, I kept assuming that the "narrator" was an autobiographical character. Only when I put the book down did I remember that I had no idea whether Makine really was an orphan at all.
Makine did grow up in Russia, however, although he writes in French. Not surprisingly, one of the book's themes is language, and in particular what one can know in a foreign language that one cannot know in one's native tongue. He describes, for example, one evening in the narrator's childhood, when Sasha read to him from an old-fashioned French book by a forgotten author, a "collection of short tales, interesting only for their elegant construction." In the story, a man's cruel fiancée demands that he bring her his mother's heart. While running to deliver it, he stumbles and falls, and the heart of his murdered mother speaks to him: "You're not hurt, are you, my son." The orphan boy listening to the story runs from the room. Makine describes this scene, and then reflects:
"Many years later, the difference between one's mother tongue and an acquired language was to become a fashionable topic. I would often hear it said that only the former could evoke the deepest and most subtle -- the most untranslatable -- ties that bind our souls. Then I would think of maternal love, which I had first discovered and experienced in French, in a very simple little book, its pages tarnished by the fire."
Makine's other theme is the war itself, or more precisely the vanishing memory of the war. His narrator's search for the remains of Jacques Dorme leads him to Siberia, but it also leads him to a rundown French suburb, where Dorme's brother, "the Captain," still lives. By accident, he first glimpses the Captain inside a car that is being attacked by young hoodlums, outside a cemetery whose tombstones are covered in graffiti. Later, while drinking tea in the man's formal, old-fashioned sitting room, he proposes to bring his brother's body back to France for burial. The Captain shouts at him: "What for? To bury him in that cemetery that's become a garbage dump? In this town where people don't dare leave their homes anymore?" Not only is the memory of the war disappearing, the narrator realizes, but so is a certain kind of France, a certain era of French culture: "This house, surrounded by bare trees and the foliage of a few yew bushes, dark green, almost black, is evocative of the last rock of a submerged archipelago."
It's not by accident that I'm using so many direct quotations: Simply retelling the plot or reciting the author's biography would reveal nothing of what it is actually like to read The Earth and Sky of Jacques Dorme. Nor is there anything to which this novel can be easily compared: This isn't a book that will remind you of any other book. Its charm lies precisely in its originality, in Makine's unexpected metaphors, and in his unusual prose, which -- even in English translation -- beautifully illuminates his deep, intuitive knowledge of two very different, very ancient, very damaged cultures.
Reviewed by Anne Applebaum
Copyright 2005, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. In present-day France a Russian writer recalls his harsh childhood at a Stalingrad orphanage in the 1960s and the old Frenchwoman, a family friend, whose tales fed his dreams of a better world. One story in particular has stayed with him: that of her brief, passionate affair, during World War II, with the French fighter pilot Jacques Dorme, who subsequently died in a plane crash in the Siberian mountains. So the narrator decides to retrace Jacques Dorme's steps, beginning a journey which leads him not only to revisit the land of his birth but also to see his adopted homeland in an unflattering new light. A profound and moving novel about the dangers of ideology and of war, delivered with humour, sensuousness and great lyricism. An astounding novel that penetrates the 20th-century experience, from one of Europe's most feted authors Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780340831267
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Book Description Condition: New. An astounding novel that penetrates the 20th-century experience, from one of Europe's most feted authors Translator(s): Strachan, Geoffrey. Num Pages: 192 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 198 x 131 x 13. Weight in Grams: 136. . 2006. New Ed. Paperback. . . . . Seller Inventory # V9780340831267
Book Description Condition: New. An astounding novel that penetrates the 20th-century experience, from one of Europe's most feted authors Translator(s): Strachan, Geoffrey. Num Pages: 192 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 198 x 131 x 13. Weight in Grams: 136. . 2006. New Ed. Paperback. . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland. Seller Inventory # V9780340831267
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. In present-day France a Russian writer recalls his harsh childhood at a Stalingrad orphanage in the 1960s and the old Frenchwoman, a family friend, whose tales fed his dreams of a better world. One story in particular has stayed with him: that of her brief, passionate affair, during World War II, with the French fighter pilot Jacques Dorme, who subsequently died in a plane crash in the Siberian mountains. So the narrator decides to retrace Jacques Dorme's steps, beginning a journey which leads him not only to revisit the land of his birth but also to see his adopted homeland in an unflattering new light. A profound and moving novel about the dangers of ideology and of war, delivered with humour, sensuousness and great lyricism. An astounding novel that penetrates the 20th-century experience, from one of Europe's most feted authors Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780340831267
Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. In present-day France a Russian writer recalls his harsh childhood at a Stalingrad orphanage in the 1960s and the old Frenchwoman, a family friend, whose tales fed his dreams of a better world. One story in particular has stayed with him: that of her brief, passionate affair, during World War II, with the French fighter pilot Jacques Dorme, who subsequently died in a plane crash in the Siberian mountains. So the narrator decides to retrace Jacques Dorme's steps, beginning a journey which leads him not only to revisit the land of his birth but also to see his adopted homeland in an unflattering new light. A profound and moving novel about the dangers of ideology and of war, delivered with humour, sensuousness and great lyricism. An astounding novel that penetrates the 20th-century experience, from one of Europe's most feted authors Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780340831267