Saturday, December 11, 2010

Great House by Nicole Krauss


Unquestionably, Great House is the best book I read in 2010. I simultaneously devoured and savored every piece of the novel. I hated when I had to put it down, which Lucy demanded be frequently, and physically dreaded coming to the end. I have loved Nicole ever since reading The History of Love and when I listened to her at a book reading at Powell's Books I became smitten with the woman. She is as eloquent and graceful in real life as the presence her novels also possess. Just listen to the voice Arthur who has always known, even celebrated until the resentment takes form, that his wife would always be a mystery to him:
"Our lives ran like clockwork, you see. Every morning we walked on the Heath. We took the same path in and the same path out. I accompanied Lotte to the swimming hole where she never missed a day. There are three ponds, one for men, one for women, and one mixed, and it was there, in the last, that she swam when I was with her so that I could sit on the bench nearby. In the winter, the men came to smash a hole in the ice. They must have worked in the dark because by the time we arrived the ice was already broken. Lotte would peel off her clothes; first her coat and then her pullover, her boots and trousers, the heavy wool ones she favored, and then her body would at last appear, pale and shot through with blue veins. I knew every inch of her body, but the sight of it in the morning against the wet, black trees almost always aroused me. She'd approach the water's edge. For a moment she would stand completely still. God knows what she thought about. Up until the last she was a mystery to me. At times the snow would fall around her. The snow or the leaves, though most often it was rain. Sometimes I wanted to cry out, to disturb the stillness that in that moment seemed to be hers alone. And then, in a flash, she'd disappear into the blackness. There would be a small splash, or the sound of splash, followed by silence. How terrible those seconds were, and how they seemed to last forever! As if she would never come up again. How deep does it go? I once asked her, but she claimed not to know. On many occasions I would even leap up off the bench, ready to dive in after her, despite my fear of the water. But just then her head would break the surface like the smooth head of a seal or an otter, and she would swim to the ladder where I would be waiting to fling the towel over her."


1 comment:

Savannah said...

Oh I'm so excited to read another book by her! I loved the History of Love! Thanks for the heads up!