Now they were starting. Finality ran through the train, an exhalation. There were thuds, hoots, whistles, and the shrieks of late arrivals. From a megaphone, announcements were incomprehensible in American and Japanese. Before the train had moved at all, the platform faces receded into the expression of those who remain. -From The Great Fire, page 1-
Shirley Hazzard’s award winning novel, The Great Fire, follows the parallel lives of two men at the end of World War II – Peter Exley, an Australian living in China to investigate war crimes; and Aldred Leith, a Brit who has traveled to Japan near Hiroshima to record the effects of war on the survivors. Both men struggle to come to terms with life after war … and the novel explores their psyches through flashbacks of memory interspersed with their adjustment back to civilian life. Of the two, Peter is the least developed character – but nonetheless, the reader empathizes with his struggle over whether to pursue a life in music or return to toil in his father’s law firm.
Hazzard spends more time refining the character of Aldred Leith who arrives in Japan to stay with an Australian Brigadier and his family. Brigadier Driscoll and his wife are unlikeable people who have two children – Ben and Helen. Ben, at age 20, is dying from Friedreich’s Ataxia. His sister, Helen at age 17, provides the love interest for the adult Leith. The difference in their ages lends a subtle conflict to the novel. Leith’s former preoccupation with his work is gradually replaced by his obsession with Helen … and it is through this love, that he begins to understand how he will recover from the psychological effects of the war.
Hazzard’s writing is beautiful and hypnotic, yet at times ambiguous. Entering the world of her novel feels a bit like plunging into a vast and complicated art museum where everything must be slowly considered and the meaning is not always clear. At times I felt tranquilized by Hazzard’s descriptions, such as when Leith has a memory from childhood:
This is a slowly unfolding novel – quite literary in style and phrasing. It is a novel about love and recovery from war, about friendships and the complications of family. For those readers who enjoy a gently paced story and want to be enveloped and lost in words, this one is for you.
Recommended.
thank you for this review. i am WAY WAY WAY terribly behind on reading this book. MAybe this is the kick in the pants I need.
I think you will enjoy this book, Dana – it is really stunning in its use of language.
Hey Wendy…wonderful review; I have this book sitting in one of many piles around the house. I’m intrigued now and it may just be the next one!!! Thanks. Linda
Thanks for visiting, Linda! Glad you enjoyed the review…let me know how you liked the book after you read it 🙂