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Het Interessegebied (2014)

by Martin Amis(Favorite Author)
3.76 of 5 Votes: 4
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English
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review 1: That the new Martin Amis novel, The Zone of Interest, is set in a World War II German concentration camp likely reduces the size of the book’s potential audience because many readers are simply not willing to peer very closely into that degree of darkness and depravity. In fact, publishers in France and Germany have been reluctant to even take on the book – although, finally, a small French publisher has decided to release it in late 2015. (The Germans apparently believe that the novel places some of the Nazi administrators in too positive a light.)It is more than the subject matter, however, that will make it difficult for some readers to finish the novel, it is also the general approach that Amis takes in telling his story – he uses satire and, of all things, hum... moreor, to portray how a culture as sophisticated and “civilized” as Germany’s allowed something like the Holocaust happen. Throw in a somewhat twisted love story, and you have the makings of an off-putting novel, one to which some will be reluctant to give a chance.This, for instance, is typical of the humor Amis sometimes uses in the novel’s dialogue. In conversation with another officer, one camp officer justifies inclusion of Jewish women and children in the overall slaughter this way:“Those babes in arms will grow up and want revenge on the Nazis in about 1963. I suppose the rationale for the women under forty-five is that they might be pregnant. And the rationale for the older women is while we’re at it.”Amis uses three very different narrators in The Zone of Interest: Golo Thompsen, Paul Doll, and a man called Szmul. Thompsen, a German officer and the nephew of Hitler’s private secretary, Martin Bormann, plays a minor role in the camp’s day-to-day activities. Doll is the camp’s mentally unstable commandant who is slowly breaking under pressure from Berlin to dispose of the camp’s inmates at what seems to him an impossible rate. Szmul is one of Doll’s Jewish inmates, a man who has stayed alive only by working hard at “salvaging” the valuables of those designated for extermination – even down to the gold in their teeth and the hair on their heads. The Zone of Interest is part love story, part horror novel. One of the most telling aspects of the effectiveness of Martin Amis’s approach is that, as I read the story, I was more shocked by the casualness with which the Nazis killed than by the actual details of what went on inside the camp. I was appalled by the thought that the whole thing, for camp administrators, became more of an engineering problem than a realization that they were murdering human beings. It was all about the process: how to dispose of the leftover bodies of thousands upon thousands of people, and how to kill more of them in the most efficient manner possible. It was all about processing “material.”The Zone of Interest is not a novel I will soon forget.
review 2: Uneven. I spent the first half of the book wondering what the Baron from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was doing buffooning his way around a concentration camp and some of the scenes at the parties in camp HQ seemed cinematically lifted wholesale from Schindler's List. At times in the first half, the voice of Thomson resembles the much-interviewed Martin Amis's own voice in a way that takes one out of the story. But the penetrating second half more than rescues the first. In various ways the three desensitized narrators are, despite themselves and despite everything, re-sensitized, resulting variously in destruction, redemption or utter annihilation of self. The skillfully-drawn character of Szmul will be difficult to forget. His pitiless clarity of understanding about his own condition and actions is devastating. There are some memorable, percipient passages, particularly towards the end of the book so perhaps 3 stars is too niggardly for "The Zone of Interest." For one thing, I read this book right after reading W G Sebald's indelible "Austerlitz", a novel not directly to do with the well-documented events of the Holocaust itself but the long shadow it cast on the decades following and to the present day; its ability to cut out the core of a man before he even became a man, and before he even knew himself, in a Welsh boyhood far from the battle and horror. The first half of Amis's novel to my mind suffered in comparison, seeming to try to accomplish with bright lights and multiple camera angles, with full on "presence" so to say, what Sebald accomplished in absences, his brooding discourses on architecture, his game of solitaire with permanences and impermanences, and his intense regard for mood, above all. Having said all that, comparison of these two books is, of course, ultimately pointless and unfair and The Zone of Interest is in the final analysis a good book that stands on its own considerable merits, even if Amis makes us wait for them. Fair or unfair, I can no longer tell, but I can't quite give it 4 stars. Man, think I might give up attempting to rate things as complex as books with stars. less
Reviews (see all)
talee
A dark comedy about the Holocaust? What's not to like?
Emerald10
The Holocaust as a bureaucracy - crazy.
myrandamichelle
New twist on WWII/Holocaust fiction.
Rvera
Disturbing and brilliant.
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