Saturday, August 19, 2023

When the Light Comes Up Slowly, Slowly

He says, “You are very brave.”

She lowers the bucket. “What is your name?”

He tells her. She says, “When I lost my sight, Werner, people said I was brave. When my father left, people said I was brave. But it is not bravery; I have no choice. I wake up and live my life. Don’t you do the same?”

He says, “Not in years. But today. Today maybe I did.” 

 Anthony Doerr’s “All the Light We Cannot See,” published in 2014, had been taunting me from my bookshelf for quite a few years and I started it and stopped it and started again more times than I could count. It moves so slowly, so deliberately, with attention to such fine details of sensory perception, and all of it rendered more arduous to navigate (for impatient readers like me) by switches in time, back and forth. The effect approximates what I think it must be like to be blind—to be a blind young girl whose loving father has built a miniature of her town in Nazi-occupied France so she might learn to navigate it safely, a girl who learns to live one step at a time, who wakes each morning and lives her difficult and beautiful life as it is, tap-tap-tapping along the cobblestone streets with her walking stick, counting the sewer drains as she goes as markers of her progress. A fiercely resolute girl who as a young teenager will find herself hiding in the attic of her house alone while a Nazi with no good intent is prowling her house below, and she prepares herself at the entrance to the attic with a knife in her hands and thinks to herself: Come and get me

It pays many times over to persevere with the story of this young girl, Marie Laure, and that of Werner, conscripted as a teenager from a poor, mining town in Germany, gifted at mechanics and physics and telemetry--the science of wireless transmission and tracking of data (Doerr includes in the opening page, this dark quote from Goebbels: "It would not have been possible for us to take power or to use it in the ways we have without the radio."). 

Marie Laure loses sight as age six, and she will have to learn to navigate her blindness and the much darker pitch of the war that envelopes her and everything she loves when the Nazis occupy France and the Allied forces invade. Werner, bright blonde but diminutive for his age, is prized for his genius and, after time at a brutal Nazi youth camp, is attached to a special Army unit assigned to ferret out resistance.

Marie Laure’s father is a locksmith employed by the Museum of Natural History in Paris. They flee the capital when the Nazi occupation is imminent and embark on an arduous journey to the seaside town of Saint Malo, to the home of Marie Laure’s reclusive great-uncle Entienne and his housekeeper. There, the father, surreptitiously aiding the resistance, constructs the miniature of her new town. The chapters are short—one imagines the blind learn to navigate by living more closely to the present moment, one short step at a time, a series of discreet sensory episodes—and these will keep the reader going.

The same attention to detail renders viscerally what it is like to live in the eye of total warfare in a time of siege when the Allied forces invade, the way it consumes everyone and everything in its path, raining destruction on everything. I confess to growing frustrated with this story at times (mustn’t the world be frustrating for the blind, at least when they are young and still learning to navigate?), especially those scenes of war when Allied bombing is turning Saint Malo to rubble—so disorienting when Werner and his comrades are barely staying alive beneath the ruble of a hotel they had been using as a base. So much darkness, so hard to see.

But it is love, war’s opposite, that heralds the light, when Werner, escaped from the rubble, witnesses Marie Laure treading her way perilously through the streets with her cane. He has seen so much death and destruction, has stood by silently in the face of enormous cruelty and crime, a teenager himself still, trapped in a murderous regime. The story begins to fall into place, all the threads coming together, the dawning light illuminating slowly everything we couldn’t see. In time, Marie Laure is left to fend for herself alone in her great uncle’s house, pursued by two German soldiers with very different aims—Werner, who is in love, and a corpulent and cancer-stricken officer in search of a diamond (said to be a blessing or a curse or both) that Marie Laure’s father bequeathed to her. The narrative of this pursuit is a page-turner.

This book is about many things—bravery and its opposite, kindness and its opposite, love and war, the immense and gorgeous intricacy of the natural world and its durability in the face of unnatural forces of destruction. The novel is unsparing in its depiction of the bottomless and savage cruelty of the Nazis, and it does cause one to contemplate what must have happened to German society in the years preceding the war. But this is no polemic about fascism and the story’s German characters are rendered sympathetically; there is not a polemical word in the novel. Still, whether Doerr intended it or not, the story is also, I believe, a powerful anti-war narrative. The beauty of the natural world and of the normal, natural life Doerr depicts before and long after the war seem pitted against its opposite—the war, so deeply and profoundly unnatural, so abnormal, so destructive of normalcy.

Some of us, maybe most, busy ourselves blindly with coping in a world we assume to be fundamentally adversarial, one in which we assume we are fundamentally alone. But this work is also, finally, about the connectedness of all things, of all lives, across time. Like Marie Laure and Werner, our narratives, all of ours, have crossed at some point or will, though we may never know it in this lifetime. This beautiful novel gives us a glimpse of a brilliant light that courses through all of time, through all of our lives, whether we see it or not.  

 

 

 

1 comment:

  1. Is the world adversarial? Good question. Sometimes it does feel that way, but it's probably a built-in bias. Maybe it's easier to cope with this than "an indifferent universe" (attributed to Arthur Clarke).

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