What is this story about: Survival. It comes in different forms for Adam (scandal), Arkady (Nazi death camps), and Tess (who really, has to survive Adam and his ego).
What else is this about?: Part of Arkady's POV includes his time in the Nazi death camps, which is stark and brutal and hard to read. But, his past made him the man he is today, and without them he doesn't make sense.
Should you read: Yes. Absolutely yes.
The quote from Hannah Kent on the cover encapsulates what this book is about: survival, whether it is a Nazi death camp, a mistake borne out of ego or a crumbling marriage and public humiliation.
This is the story of Arkady Kulakov, his grandson Adam, and Tess, Adam’s wife. It's the story about each's will to survive the events in the book that threaten them and their lives. And, they're the only family that matter to each other and readers, save for Kade, Tess and Adam’s son.
It’s Adam’s mistake that begins this tale – he is a man who expects to get what he wants, never thinking about the consequences. There’s very little about him that is actually decent, besides his love for his grandfather, in the fleeting moments it appears. It’s as if Arkady’s goodness rubs off on him and makes him more palatable in those moments, until his true nature reasserts itself. Adam is removed from Tess and Arkady in this story, wrapped up in manipulating everyone around him to correct his mistakes and save his reputation. And all the while, the grandfather he loves, is in hospital dying.
Arkady is the grandfather any reader would love. Gregarious and adoring of Adam, Kade and Tess, he’s the type of guy that will get on with anyone. He and Tess have a close bond, the both of them building their relationship when Tess first started doing the books for the company. Tess adores him, values him and his expertise, and it is she who is around for him when his dementia results in a hospitalisation and the realisation that he is dying. Most probably, according to the doctors, from his time in the camps. Theirs is relationship that has heart, and will break yours when you read it.
Tess' story is hard to discern, for in the beginning I was sure that the story's focus was Adam and Arkady, more than anything, and her story was to be Arkady's confidant and Adam's long-suffering wife. But, she's much more than that; the book simply builds her story differently, leaving it simmering in the background until the right time. There's something elegant about her storyline, about the way it's built until it's ready to be revealed.
While Adam and Tess’ stories are set in the future, Arkday’s is revealed bit by bit through his time before the war, his relationships and his time in the camps, most importantly how he survived. Pieper walks a fine line with Arkady, managing to evoke sympathy for someone who seemed at times to be a monster, who would do anything to survive. Pieper’s writing is stark, painful at times but never hiding the truth of Arkady – as I mentioned above, the death camps made Arkady who he is.
Twists are the name of the game these days, and the bigger and better they are, the more likely they are to be mentioned in blurbs and publishing materials these days. After reading this book, I was reminded how twists can pale in comparison to writing that's just that good, heartbreaking and you feel like a punch to the gut. That's what this book is and when the "t" word gets pulled out, ignore it. Read this because you want to be enthralled by human nature, by what humans will do to survive no matter what.
Read this book because nothing in it is what it seems, but the desire humans have to survive.