A Review by Jia Gayles
Acclaimed author Geraldine Brooks fills in the missing pieces of the
The old adage goes, “Truth is stranger than fiction.” Today, the Sarajevo Haggadah, an unusually ornate illuminated Jewish text, is under the protective watch of The National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina; yet its real-life journey from 14th century
Hanna Heath is a renowned book conservationist charged with traveling to embattled mid-1990s
Hanna’s examination of the haggadah reveals several clues: a wine stain, salt crystals, a white hair and the remnants of a butterfly wing. During her quest to reveal the book’s secrets, she asks colleagues to perform tests on the samples. As each clue is solved, at least scientifically through DNA analysis at MIT or favor from Scotland Yard, the next chapter travels back in time to the cities of Venice, Tarragona, Seville and Vienna, giving voice to the individuals who either guarded the book or sought to destroy it during the turbulent Spanish Inquisition or the Nazi regime. Here, Brooks reveals her most treasured skill, breathing life into the distant past by crafting relatable characters for the modern ear. An obnoxious Venetian priest becomes a small parentless child, an astute rabbi wrestles with an unseemly addiction and a syphilitic book binder desperately grasps at the last shreds of his sanity. In a heartbreaking passage, Brooks describes the death of a World War II rebel fighter and his sister who are too sick to keep moving, “Embracing his little sister, he stepped off the bank and onto the ice…They stood there for a moment, as the ice groaned and cracked. Then it gave way.” This riveting image epitomizes the author’s dedication to each character, so lovingly carved out with her pen in life and in death. Brooks’ clear voice and impeccable research also brought the infamous Black Plague to life in Year of Wonders, where she expertly detailed each oozing sore with such delicacy that you were engrossed rather than grossed out.
Also on the menu, is a strained relationship between Hanna and her mother, a neurosurgeon who considers her daughter’s career little more than child’s play as compared to the life-saving work of a doctor. Brooks molds their relationship on an ill-structured house of cards – inevitably it will implode. Through the mother-daughter dynamic, the source of Hanna’s low self-esteem and commitment issues are revealed.
The real haggadah survived centuries of war and displacement. Its keepers outwitted Nazis seeking to eradicate Jewish documents and Spanish inquisitors willing to torture and kill Jews who converted to Catholicism and were found with any physical remnants of their heritage. People of the Book honors their struggle and indomitable spirit. The author is firmly in the driver’s seat of a time machine that propels the plot forward and neatly unfurls it with the gracefulness of a blooming rose.
In the end, Hanna discovers a startling clue that leads to the true haggadah artist, and along the way she learns to believe in her own self-worth and abilities. Geraldine Brooks brings the book full circle and effectively produces a winding narrative that proves, though truth may be stranger than fiction, imagination can produce a pretty amazing story too.
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