Wow. Just wow. I will need days, weeks, maybe months for my heart to stop aching after Amanda McCrina’s Traitor. It’s that breathtaking and heartbreaking and brilliant.
Traitor is about a generally little known conflict during World War II between the Ukrainians, Polish, and Soviets. More specifically, it’s about two boys who are thrust into the center of this conflict and the unlikely friendship that grows between them. The main story takes place in late summer 1944, when Tolya, half Ukrainian, half Polish, is taken by a Ukrainian nationalist group. The commander of this group, Solovey, is Ukrainian. His story, happening in summer of 1941, is also told in parallel to the one in 1944. Though they are supposed to be enemies, the two boys bond over a common humanity that is so often found only in such times of war and strife.
This novel is unlike any that I have read. It is a thriller and a war story. A drama and a mystery. An incredible reminder of the tragedy of war, for nations, for nature, for people, for boys and girls who just want to be normal kids. From the first page, the story gripped me with its fast pace, incredibly deep emotion, and thoughtful philosophical questions, and it wouldn’t let go for a second until the last page.
The historical events themselves are flawlessly integrated into the fictional story at the center of the novel. McCrina has a strong command of the historical material. I am proud of this woman who wrote so convincingly about events that are usually relegated to men, about guns and warfare and yes, a couple of ordinary boys thrust into a conflict beyond their years let alone experience.
I loved McCrina’s style. It is sparse and clean and beautiful, reminding me of the literary prose of Hemingway or Cormac McCarthy with the depth of its emotion despite the sparseness. It means more than it says. It says more than it means.
But perhaps it is the characters that really made this a five star read for me. McCrina created incredibly realistic people, ones that I could have known in school, with their flaws, mistakes, and disappointments, but also with a piercing sense of honor, loyalty, and boldness. They constantly question what is right vs what is expected of them, the changing landscape of loyalty from one person and one cause to the next, and, indeed, what and who makes a traitor. Each character had his or her own personality, humor, and way of dealing with these questions that made the events not only entirely believable, but probable.
I would very much like to think Solovey and Tolya existed in some shape or form, somewhere in the past, that they breathed and lived and loved, that they led lives they were proud of in a time when life wasn’t precious or even really life. It was just survival.
Extraordinary book. I cannot wait to read more from this talented up and coming author.