BOOK DISCUSSION DATE AND TIME:
MONDAY, MAY 18, 2015, AT 1:00 PM.
Miller's
affecting debut, about a cantankerous Jewish widower transplanted
to Norway who becomes party to a hate crime, is an unusual
hybrid: part memory novel, part police procedural, part
sociopolitical tract and part existential meditation. Native New
Yorker Sheldon "Donny" Horowitz, 82, is a retired watch repairman
living in Oslo with his granddaughter Rhea, an architect, and her
new Norwegian husband, Lars. She thinks her grandfather is
slipping into dementia. Haunted by his experiences as a Marine
sniper in the Korean War and by his son Saul's death in Vietnam,
Sheldon sometimes has trouble distinguishing between fantasy and
reality. He thinks the Koreans are still after him. But he is
more strong-willed, decisive and wily than his granddaughter
thinks. When a stranger murders the immigrant woman who lives
upstairs, Sheldon shelters and then escapes with her young son,
fearing the boy is in danger, too. Hovering
over the narrative is Norway's roundup of its Jewish population
during the Nazi occupation--for which, the author points out, the
nation didn't formally apologize until 2012. This novel, first
published in Norway, was worth the wait.(Kirkus Reviews)
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