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By Kevin Myers | Thursday,
June 05, 2014
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I started reading and thought, “Grrr. Literature. Me want crazy spy novel. This better be good.” But they say it’s better than the movie, give it a chance. When I got to page seventeen, I thought, “Ooh. I’m into this. I can dig it.” And by the end of Part One, I thought, “Wow! I’m really enjoying this!” I realized I had discovered the sensuality of the book, and I mean that in the original sense of the word. Reading Ondaatje’s work, I could sense the winds that blow through the North African desert; the weight of fabric on Hana’s skin; the dissociated state of the English patient’s mind and body; the effect of a woman’s voice on a man as she reads Herodotus; the visceral reaction to the horrors of war, disease, and death, even as the characters surround themselves with a cocoon of patchwork family.
I’m reminded that part of enjoying a good book is simply allowing it to unfold. We must learn to resist the urge to have everything spelled out or visualized. The immediacy and ubiquity of film and television make any story so easy to absorb. It takes some time and a real desire to let a writer do the work for you as you read. Let him guide you through it—it’s his story. Draw your own conclusions about what’s happening and why, judge the characters if you must, but just let the very sensual nature of this novel flow over you. It’s lovely. And yes—it’s so much better than the movie.
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