Martin Amis's "The Zone of Interest" - 24 views
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recent novels by Susanna Moore and Ayelet Waldman achieve their emotional power by focussing upon characters peripheral to the terrible European history that has nonetheless altered their lives.
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aieshah_t on 05 Oct 14Their writing proves that even if someone wasn't directly apart of or in the middle of an event like this doesn't mean they weren't changed by it. -AIeshah Thomas
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risky Nazi novel
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“the man who controls the appointment book of the Deliverer.” (For some reason, no one in “The Zone of Interest” calls Adolf Hitler by his name; elevated circumlocutions are used.)
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He sits through Nazi concerts calculating “how long it would take . . . to gas the audience.”
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One could argue, just as plausibly, that Hitler and his henchmen were not at all “exceptional” in a human history that has always included warfare, unspeakable cruelty, and attempted genocide; what set the Nazis apart from less efficient predecessors was their twentieth-century access to the instruments of industrialized warfare and annihilation, and a propaganda machine that excluded all other avenues of information for an essentially captive German population.
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I think this is extremely significant because the Hitler people and followers were very well organized and horrifyingly thorough which is why the writer quotes earlier "the exceptionalism of the Third Reich". They got their message across through their infamous propaganda, murdered millions of people (not just Jews but the disabled, blacks, and some religious groups), and seriously utilized the technology of the time. -Aieshah Thomas
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“The Sonders have suffered Seelenmord—death of the soul,” as if a German-speaking character would translate his thoughts in this way. The author of the novel, not the narrator of the chapter, wants to highlight certain phrases for the benefit of the reader, but the mannerism is as distracting as a nudge in the ribs.
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“I used to be numb; now I’m raw.”