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The Siege

The Siege

List Price: $13.00
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "The Siege" is Dunmore's masterpiece
Review: "The Siege" is absolutely brilliant and Helen's Dunmore's masterpiece. How such a luminously crafted and finely imagined work of historical fiction can be overlooked in the annual book award stakes in favour of showier but less deserving titles is something presumably only those familiar with the internal politics of book critic awards can understand.

"The Siege" is a story about a family who endured and partially survived the extremities of cold, hunger and other devastating hardships inflicted on the people of Leningrad when their city came under siege by the Germans in 1941. The horror of the opening transcript of German intent prepares us for what follows. The opening chapters describe the buzz of ordinary lives albeit under the tyranny of the country's own leadership. Nobody trusts anyone. Even neighbours stay away from those in suspect professions (eg, artists and journalists). But life was still good, you can smell the scent of flowers in the air and the natural aroma of fresh fruit and vegetables from the ground. All this will disappear when the Germans suddenly attack, supplies are cut off , the city is frozen solid, stocks run down and people are reduced to starvation and using their furniture and books as fuel for heating as winter encroaches. Scenes of how healthy adults and bonny children turn into emaciated skeletons, scrabble around for broken bits of wood, boil their leather belts for nutrients, etc will guarantee that you will never again leave any morsel of food uneatened on your dinner plate.

We experience the siege of Leningrad through the lives of Anna and her family (her doctor lover Andrei, invalid writer father, his actress mistress Marina and baby brother Kolya). Dunmore's touch of feminism shows through in her vivid characterisation. The womenfolk are warriors compared to the men. Anna's courage and fortitude, Marina's quiet strength and compatriot Evgenia's irrepressable will to live make them unforgettable characters. They tower above the rest. Anna's feelings towards her father (she knows she's the defacto head of the family after her mother's death), her continuing ambivalence towards Marina, etc are all beautifully nuanced, reflecting Dunmore's uncommon grasp of the politics of human relationship.

"The Siege" is a faultless, hugely powerful and emotionally resonant piece of work. Quite simply, it is contemporary literature at its finest and one of the best novels I have read in the past year.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Take nothing for granted.
Review: A novel about the siege of Leningrad by the Nazis in 1941. Between Stalin's "big brother" society where every move and word is monitored and the Nazis death-grip of the city, the citizens of Leningrad are suffocating and starving to death. They are blockaded in through the long, perpetually dark, subfreezing winter with no heat or food.

Anna is raising her young brother, Kolya, after her mother dies during his birth. They and their father are lucky to have a small apartment to themselves in their communal society due to his higher status as a writer. As the siege begins, they are joined by Marina, a former actress (and their father's former lover), and Andrei, a medical student who Anna loves.

After the stores of food meant to feed the millions of residents through the winter are burned by Nazis, Anna and the others are forced to boil leather and wallpaper paste for nutrition since their rations of 1 slice of bread per day are barely keeping them alive. Not all of them will survive, but you will be rooting for all of them in this poetic, sad story that will make you feel very fortunate to have what you have.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Powerful but problematic
Review: Dunmore does manage to powerfully recount the lives of ordinary people during one of history's lesser known tragedies, as well as encompass some of the vast nature of the siege, and does a good job of fleshing out her characters. However the book relies too much on the drama of the events themselves to provide conflict and dramatic weight rather than the moral choices of the characters themselves.

The Siege itself, and the struggles of ordinary people, are important to remember and to recount, and more than a non-fiction book might, this book does give readers a window into a remarkable time - for this I do recommend it. But in the end, it's not as compelling, nor does it has as much depth, as I had hoped. I kept expecting something more to occur - some sort of story above and beyond the struggle for survival - but was disappointed.

If readers wish to know more about the Siege of Leningrad from an ordinary person's point of view, I highly recommend "Siege and Survival" by Elena Skrjabina, a survivor. This powerful and affecting diary is out of print, but should be in libraries or used.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dark and Powerful
Review: Helen Dunmore is better known for her intense, claustrophobic novels of family life in England, but I think THE SIEGE is definitely her masterpiece. I am so happy I read this book, though, as other reviewers have already pointed out, it is both harrowing and depressing.

THE SIEGE takes place in Leningrad during the winter of 1941, and opens before Russia has become involved in the war, and, despite the fact that the book centers on one very ordinary family, this is in no way a family novel. THE SIEGE is the story of Anna Levin, her father (who is a writer), her young brother, Kolya, her father's mistress, Marina and Anna's own lover Andrei. Although the love stories between Marina and Anna's father and Anna and Andrei are definitely subplots, there really isn't a lot of romance in this bleak book and one should not go looking for that in the pages of THE SIEGE. Dunmore gives great priority to the siege, itself, and, in doing so, she has chosen not to develop her characters and their interwoven relationships to the fullest.

When I first began reading the book, I was a little shocked at how the residents of Leningrad simply ignored the "political disappearances" that were so clearly murders. But it didn't take long to realize that they were ignoring them because the had to ignore them, because to do more would only put their own lives in jeopardy.

As time advances, however, so do the Nazis and Leningrad is finally surrounded and cut off from the outside world. Despite the book's romantic subplots, this is primarily a novel of survival. How do people survive, not just day by day, but hour by hour, when their own existence is dependent on a ration of one slice of bread per day? What happens to these people before they starve to death? How are the dynamics of family and love changed due to the enormous stresses they must face? Hunger, cold, deprivation...these are the subjects explored by Dunmore in THE SIEGE and, even more than the characters, these grim subjects are the stars of this book.

I think Dunmore made an excellent choice when she relegated her romantic subplots to the very back burner. People who can barely put one foot in front of the other are not going to be overly concerned with finding love. While DOCTOR ZHIVAGO remains my all time favorite film, I do realize the romance between Yuri and Lara was a bit unrealistic and that both characters looked remarkably well-fed, despite the lack of anything even remotely nourishing.

Food, of course, is something of primary importance in THE SIEGE and Dunmore's descriptions of food, even in this harrowing book, are almost poetic and lyrical. There are red cabbages, cucumbers, jam, lime trees, cloudberries and warm, dark honey. Food is described in such great detail in this book, not because of its bounty, but because of its dearth and thus, its importance. Food, in THE SIEGE, has long since ceased to be a source of enjoyment and has become, instead, the very means by which one can live...for at least one more day.

Juxtaposed against the lyrical passages centering on food, are the harrowing passages that detail the siege itself: The claustrophobia of being in a city cut off from the rest of the world; the lack of hygiene; the advancing German army; the lack of heat; the seemingly endless snowstorms; the corpses frozen in the ice; and, of course, the hunger, the starvation, the fight just to survive. Not to live, "life" was given up long ago; survival is all the residents of Leningrad can think of, or hope for, now. These are people whose lives are shattered beyond belief; these are people who have, literally, nothing.

THE SIEGE is one of the darkest books I've ever read, but, at the same time, it's one of the most beautiful. Dunmore's prose is perfect; it's harrowing where it should be harrowing and poetic where it should be poetic. It's not too spare and it's never overblown. It's perfect.

I would recommend this book to anyone who loves extremely well-written, literary fiction and who can tolerate a book of unrelieved bleakness and power.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Painful to read
Review: I can't give it five stars, because while I very much enjoyed the book while reading it, whenever I stopped, I didn't want to start again. Probably that has something to do with the hopeless and depressing tone of most of the novel, and is therefore not a fair reason, but I like books that grab and won't let me go until I turn the last page. This one grabbed me, but I kept wanting to put it down anyway.

About the depression: don't let it put you off too much. THE SIEGE is extremely well written, and it's amazing power lies mainly in Dunmore's uncanny ability to detail the harsh effects of war (namely hunger and desperation) on ordinary people. There are small overtures to hope, especially near the end, but for the most part, Dunmore has set out to overwhelm and horrify and possibly frighten us, and she has succeeded, painfully. She even managed to make me feel guilty for having more than a piece of bread to eat every day, for never having known the desperation of boiling wallpaper paste and chewing on leather to extract what few nutrients it might yield. This is stark, almost hurtful, and amazingly good writing.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Lots of Problems
Review: I can't understand why other reviewers gave "The Siege" by Helen Dunmore such good ratings. I was very disappointed in this book. The first thing that really bug me was I don't think that Ms. Dunmore has ever been to Leningrad (now St. Petersburg). When I read a book I like to be able to picture myself right the middle of the action and with this book I just couldn't. The second that I didn't like was the fact that I couldn't connect with any of the characters. I believe that this is very important as a reader.
Overall, "The Siege" is a bad book. If you are looking for a book set in the period read "The Bronze Horseman" it is 100 precent better than the "The Siege."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "The Siege" is Dunmore's masterpiece
Review: This book is very well written, characters are well-developed, historical context is well-integrated. Other reviewers have described the story line - I just want to say this book transported me to a time and place that I felt with characters that I cared about. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Captivated by THE SIEGE
Review: This is a very dramatic and emotional story. The reader really cares about Anna, little Kolya, and the rest of her family as they struggle to survive this horrific ordeal. I was particularly moved by the way Anna reflects on the things that she once took for granted - her father reading poetry, cloudberry jam, bread that is fresh and plentiful. The author presents the unspeakable conditions of the siege of Leningrad while always holding out the thin breath of survival in the characters and makes us count our blessings in the bargain.
I highly recommend this to any historical fiction reader.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Leningrad as Literature
Review: This is a very powerful novel with striking, deeply affecting prose descriptions of the suffering of the people of Leningrad during the two and a half year siege they underwent at the hands of the Germans in WWII. Most of the focus is on the love and sacrifices of a mother for her son. I was a bit surprised that there seemed to be little actual fighting depicted here but in reality it was mostly a long seige with much bombing. The will to live becomes a noble pursuit in itself, the decision that death will not be on the Germans terms. Of course, much of the plot of the novel is about situations that are forced on people by the enemy and also by their own totalitarian government---but the small, tragic, and occasionally triumphant choices that people do make give the novel added meaning and power--they are not merely swept up in the tide of events--what Anatoli Rybakov called the Heavy Sand of 20th Century Russian history. This is recommended reading as is the long section on the siege of Leningrad in Alexander Werth's great WWII history, Russia at War.


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