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The History of Love [Hardcover]

Nicole Krauss
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Viking (26 May 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0670915548
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670915545
  • Product Dimensions: 22.6 x 15.2 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 70,851 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Nicole Krauss
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Product Description

J.M.Coetzee

'Charming, tender and wholly original'

Publishers Weekly

'Her distinctive voice is both plangent and wry, and her imagination encompasses many worlds'

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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First Sentence
When they write my obituary. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
45 of 46 people found the following review helpful
By S. Barnes TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Intricately woven around the story of a book within the book, are the two worlds' of a fifteen-year-old girl called Alma Singer, and an old man called Leo Gursky, living their separate lives across New York City.

Without giving too much away (I hope!), following a theme of "lost loves" both characters strive to fill a void of emptiness and loneliness left by the departure of a loved one. Leo Gursky, epitomises the endurance of a love so all-encompassing that 60 years on from his adolescent dream a long time ago in Poland at the start of the war, he yet spends his days contemplating his lost love, his childhood sweetheart, and conspicuously drawing attention to himself in public, by knocking over shop displays, to assure himself of his existence.

At the same time, we follow the efforts of Alma Singer, desperate to ease her mother's loneliness, after the death of her father several years previously. Alma sets out to find the author of an old book her mother is translating into English at the request of an unknown stranger...

Beautfully written, there is plenty of earthy humour and sadness to take you on an enchanting and emotional journey, from war-time Poland to present day New York.
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Rarely have I read a book as enchanting and as superbly written as The History of Love. This is a spellbinding book about what it is to be human and what it can be to love. The stories told are as fascinating as the characters within. Be it an old man postponing death or a young girl postponing life the characters in this book weave stories that are achingly human and colossal at the same time. It’s a story within a story within a story that has inevitably become part of my own story and my own history of love. A book like no other.
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38 of 41 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Nicole Krauss' "History Of Love" is one of the most poignant and beautiful novels I have read in many moons - dare I say years? I do not exaggerate. Her prose is pure poetry, and her writing is a wonderful example of literature as an art form. Although this is not a Holocaust novel, per se, the Shoah casts a long shadow over the narrative. "And yet," I think the book is much more a remembrance of those who died, a memorial of sorts, than a book about death. Actually, the themes here are love, survival and loss. I shed many a tear while reading, sometimes because of the author's exquisite use of language, and others because of a character's terrible sadness, but I found myself bursting into laughter more often than not at the wonderful humor. Some of the dialogue is especially witty. Oddly, I was reminded of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's work. Perhaps the sense of wonder Ms. Krauss conveys, along with elements of fantasy which intertwine with reality, form a kind of Jewish magical realism.

"The first woman may have been Eve, but the first girl will always be Alma." So wrote young, aspiring author Leopold Gursky. He actually wrote three books before he was twenty-one, before WWII invaded his hometown of Slonim, which was located "sometimes in Poland, and others in Russia." Now, years later in Brooklyn, NY, Leo has no idea what happened to his manuscript, "The History Of Love," his most important work. He wrote the novel about the only thing he knew, his love for Alma. "Once upon a time there was a boy and a girl, and her laughter was a question he wanted to spend his whole life answering." He continued to write their story long after Alma's father sent her to America, where she would be safe from the Nazis. He even wrote after the Germans pushed East, toward his home.

At age eighty, Leo feels compelled to make himself seen at least once a day. He fears dying alone in his apartment, on a day when no one sees him at all. And he is capable of doing some pretty outrageous things to garner attention, including posing in the nude for a life drawing class. Ever since the war he has felt invisible. He survived by becoming invisible. And now, he needs to be sure he exists. When he came to America, his cousin, a locksmith took him in and taught him the trade. He did so because he knew Leo could not remain invisible forever. "Show me a Jew that survives and I'll show you a magician," he used to say. Leo finds some solace in his work. "In my loneliness it comforts me to think that the world's doors, however closed, are never truly locked to me." Unbeknownst, to Leopold Gursky, his book has survived also, and has inspired others in many ways, especially to love.

Alma Singer is a precocious teenager who lives in New York City. She is named for all the female characters in her father's favorite book, "A History of Love." Singer, an Israeli, bought the only copy in a store in Buenos Aires, while traveling in South America. Alma's mother, Charlotte, is an Englishwoman who met her husband while working on a kibbutz in Israel. He gave her the book, a gift, when he realized how much he cared for her. He died of pancreatic cancer when Alma was seven. Seven years later, his family is still adjusting to their loss. The sensitive girl desperately wants to ease her mother's loneliness. She also wants to learn how to survive in the wilderness, and help her brother, Bird, be a normal boy. Bird believes he may be the Messiah. Charlotte, a translator, receives a request from an anonymous stranger to translate an obscure book by a Polish exile, Zvi Litvinoff, who immigrated to Chile. She accepts the commission. The book, written in Spanish, is titled "The History of Love." Alma reads her mom's English translation and sets out to find her namesake. Her literary detective work is hilarious and her tenacity is admirable.

Ms. Krauss is a master at linking her various storylines seamlessly. Her characters are a delight - all vivid and memorable for their humanity, their eccentricity, and their inner strength. The author brings them to life on the page. They have all experienced sorrow and loss, yet there is not a self-pitying voice among them. And it is impossible not to love Leo Gursky. I hear my grandmother's voice, at times, when he speaks. She died years ago, and was probably a generation older than the author's grandparents, to whom the novel is dedicated. In a way a part of history is being preserved here. The rich Yiddish culture and humor that our grandparents brought to this country are almost gone now. In our rush to become assimilated much has been lost.

I plan to reread "The History of Love" in a few weeks, over a weekend when I won't be disturbed. I made the mistake of taking the book with me to work, and between the train and the office, I felt the numerous interruptions seriously detracted from the glorious flow of the language. This is a novel which is meant to be read more than once, anyway. ENJOY!
JANA

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Moving, quirky but slightly disappointing
This novel attempts to bring together three tales of loss and grief through the interactions of different characters with a book that is also titled The History of Love. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jimbo
not chick lit
this quirky novel is well worth a read, was given to me by m-i-l and was anticipating chick-littery. Absolutely not. Read more
Published 5 months ago by pixie freak
book review
The book arrived safely and in the condition as described.
I started reading it but got 'lost' with the characters and didnt finish this book. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Stace
Convoluted and contrived
I really enjoyed The History of Love so I was looking forward to this. And it's clear from other reviews that other readers have loved it. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Poppy Hall
All in a book
This book is amazing.. I've read it twice, lend it to a friend who then lost it, so I purchased it again. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Zacy Boy
Very interesting but takes a bit of intelligence
Firstly it must be said that those reviewers who did not understand the book, must be possessed of somewhat limited intelligence or no imagination. Read more
Published 9 months ago by PH
Taken in by the hype but completely confused and gave up.
It is very, very rare that I give up on a book. But this one had me beaten. Heard author talking on BBC R4 and book sounded interesting. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Druantia
So confusing!
I was so confused by this book and I'm relieved to see from reading reviews on here that I'm not alone and I'm not going mad. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Madam Butterfly
Good Seller...
Book arrived quickly and in the condition expected. Pleased with that but after reading it I found it disjointed and over-complicated. the four stars are for the seller!
Published 14 months ago by W. P. WRIDE
Excellent, sweet and truly emotive...
An excellently written book which tells three distinct stories of three very different people with three different struggles in life. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Joelle
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