Saturday, March 1, 2014

Gretel and the Dark - Eliza Granville

I was offered a review copy of 'Gretel and the Dark' and said yes because of the fairy tale connection (an easy sell with me). It came with a black and white lollipop that looked like it had been pinched
from Tim Burton's personal stash which further endeared me towards the book, but even so when I started reading I was a little ambivalent about it. Granville touches on the reason for my ambivalence in the last few pages when she has her heroine acknowledge that the world grows weary of others pain and grief. It's a sad truth but there does come a point when compassion and outrage dwindle into something like weariness with the whole awfulness of something you can't actually do anything about. In the end Granville put paid to my cynicism and won me over completely, which I honestly didn't expect to happen when I started the book.

Initially there are two stories being told, one is set in Vienna in 1899 and centres around a young woman called Lilie, she's been found naked and battered on some wasteland, claims to have no name, no memory, no feelings - she is a machine (Granville references Hoffman's "Der Sandmann" early in Lilie's story, it's a while since I read it but I remember it being terrifying, mention of it sets a definite tone for the book that follows). Lilie has been taken to the home of Dr Josef Breuer; Breuer was an early mentor of Freud (although the two later fell out and Freud did his best to discredit the older man) much of what Granville writes about Breuer is based on his actual life and this too is an interesting decision for the book. Fictional is Breuer's young servant Benjamin, it's Benjamin who brings Lilie into the house and Benjamin who is sent out to learn more about the mysterious girl despite an ever growing danger to his person. Vienna it seems is undergoing one of it's anti-Semitic convulsions.

Inbetween the story of Lilie, Josef, and Benjamin there is the story of Krysta. Krysta is a young girl who's father works in the infirmary with 'animal people'. Krysta isn't a particularly likable child, her mother has died, she's horribly spoilt, both she and her father clearly have issues to deal with, and before long things are about to get worse for her. Krysta's father dies and it seems a concentration camp is no place to expect compassion for a difficult child so she ends up on the inside.

The housekeeper in Krysta's childhood home was a teller of fairy tales. Dark un-bowdlerised versions of the brothers Grimm, or at least Grimm like tales. Krysta is damaged, first by her mother's suicide, then by the odd life she's living on the edge of the camp and a growing awareness of what's going on around her, and finally by all the things that happen when she's on the other side of the fence. She's a deeply flawed character, extremely hard to like. To deal with her surroundings she tells stories over and over again, they change a little with each telling. Hansel and Gretel is a favourite, with hindsight it took me longer than I would have thought to get the whole point of that story and to question why Krysta keeps telling it - there's a different reason every time but after a few telling's it made me question how much she knows of the nature of the place from the very beginning, but then there's a lot about Krysta which is unclear.

It's clear from the beginning that there must be a link between the two narratives and slowly Granville reveals what it is. It's not entirely what I was expecting but it is the point where I was completely sold on the book. I've seen it reviewed as a children's/young adult read which surprised me a bit, it didn't feel like a book for younger readers despite the youngish protagonists (although Krysta's age is never made especially clear, and neither is the time span of the action, I'm assuming she's no older than 12 or 13 by the end, if as much). I can't quite put my finger on why it seems like an adult book, I want to say it's because of the way story telling and fairy tales are used, as well perhaps as the factual elements from Breuer's life, I also want to say it's to subtle but in the end the more people who read it the better. It's a great book so why worry about those kinds of labels.

It was the fairy tale element that attracted me in the first place, and it's the use of fairy tales that make this something special. Granville takes her stories and repeats them, twisting them each time in a way that pulled me further into to her world. Each repetition adds another layer of meaning and throws up a new set of questions. The fairy tales are organic here, even written down they don't feel pinned down which in turn is absolutely in tune with their origins.  There's so much good stuff going on in this book but I don't want to litter this piece with to many spoilers so I'm just going to say again that I loved it and that it's absolutely worth a read.




8 comments:

  1. I find that what I once would have classed as Young Adult is often now what I would class (for myself - I suspect I am quite a childish adult!) as Really Quite Adult. I'm still getting over discovering that Code Name Verity is YA. A book like Gretel and the Dark sounds like it could have gone either way: I wonder if there's some sort of publishing science about how it ends up that way? (Anyway, fascinating book - I'm sure I would like it and be puzzled by it in equal measure - which is good!).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's a really good book Vicki, I'm never sure what young adult really means but then I'm not over inclined to pay to much attention to those kinds of labels. It did occur to me that it was a book that could be read on different levels - there are times when it would be good to have a tame teenager on call!

      Delete
  2. I bought this a couple of weeks ago - couldn't resist! I'm finding that nowadays there is such a huge crossover between adult and YA fiction - it is harder and harder to draw a line - not that there needs to be one of course.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love fairy tales, though I like them not to be so grim :) .... And I have undergone a similar confusion to yours in regard to the classification of books as children's/young adult...I will look out for the book... wonder if I will get a lollipop with it though :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Likely no lollipop but if it makes you feel better mine was soon pinched by a visiting child . Hope you find a copy and enjoy it!

      Delete
  4. I'll be interested to see what you make of it Annabel. I don't read much YA - actually it would be more accurate to say that I don't really read enough contemporary fiction to be sure about what YA is... I just thought this was a brilliant read with all manner of interesting observations about how we use stories and what damage people can do to each other. There are some Granville's available as ebooks but I think this might be her first traditionally published book (assuming it's thee same Eliza Granville). The ebooks didn't tempt me but I'll be interested to see what she does next. This one had a very assured feel, I thought it was clever but not overly flashy, and there were bits that had me in tears.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I finished reading this a few weeks ago and am still mulling it over. It reminded me a lot of the film Pan's Labyrinth - so dark and terrifying and I wasn't sure how it was going to end. But I loved it too.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The comparison with Pan's Labyrinth is a good one, I didn't see the twist with either until they (the film and the book) were ready to let me, partly because I was so absorbed that I wasn't thinking about how it would turn out.

    ReplyDelete