Blending past and present, Africa, America and Europe, and young and old points of view, Anthony Schneider’s Repercussions echoes with the weight of small events that change everything. The journeys from peaceful family to potential terrorist, from America’s cities to small-town Africa, and from love to rejection are all beautifully drawn and described. Meanwhile relationships slip and slide across the grit of human lives.
Old Harry Wegland has a past, but seems so normal in the present, struggling to cope with trials of age and health and his place in the extended family home. Could he really have known Mandela in South Africa? If so, how does a nice Jewish guy get from there to here? Or how does he get back?
Grandson Saul's safe life lifts a mirror to the dangers his grandfather knew. But Saul’s present might soon collide with Harry’s past, while the ever-patient generation in-between looks on without affect. The greatest repercussions, it seems, might come from the smallest seeds.
Accents, Jewish, South African and American, are beautifully woven into rhythm and words in this novel. Well-described scenery of Liverpool’s docklands, America’s cities, or Africa’s dusty roads, offers islands of peace for the coming storm. And characters drift into past and present day scenes, tying it all together. White immigration via war and poverty, lives of sons without mothers, uprooted souls... their repercussions feed this novel, making it a vivid recreation of recent history, a convincing exploration into heart and soul, and a surprisingly gentle reminder of those everflowing consequences of love, hate, and hope.
Disclosure: I was given a free preview edition by the publisher and I offer my honest review.