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The Lotus Eaters
 
 

The Lotus Eaters [Kindle Edition]

Tatjana Soli
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Review

'[A] haunting debut novel…quietly mesmerizing…tough and lyrical book. Its object lessons in how Helen learns to refine her wartime photography are succinct and powerful. By the end of the story – in ways that bring to mind the feverishness of the Iraqi war film “The Hurt Locker”, with its very different locations, job descriptions and wartime imperatives – [Helen] has been utterly transformed. She is no longer a witness to history. As Ms Soli makes her readers understand very viscerally, Helen has become part of the history that she set out to record.’ Janet Maslin, The New York Times

'Tatjana Soli's splendid first novel…Vivid battle scenes, sensual romantic entanglements and elegant writing add to the pleasures of The Lotus Eaters.' The New York Times Book Review (front cover review)

'If it's possible to judge a novel by its first few lines, then The Lotus Eaters, Tatjana Soli's fiction debut, shows great promise right from the start… The author explores Helen's psyche with startling clarity, and portrays the chaotic war raging around her with great attention to seemingly minor details. The real heartbreak in The Lotus Eaters is found in subtle, unexpected moments.' Boston Globe

'As with the Academy Award-winning The Hurt Locker, this novel examines the addiction to that adrenaline rush sometimes experienced by those unlucky enough to fall prey to…"terrible love of war"…"If your pictures aren't good enough, you aren't close enough," photojournalist Robert Capa famously said, and this is the dilemma that Helen faces: How close should she get?.. .The Vietnam conflict has receded into the history books, but The Lotus Eaters feels pulled from today's headlines, full of meaning for readers whose country is once again sending men and women to the battlefields, both to fight and to document that fighting.' Washington Post

'Gorgeous sensory details…[an] entrancing debut' People magazine

Product Description

‘[A] tremendously evocative debut, a love story set in the hallucinatory atmosphere of war, described in translucent, fever-dream prose.’ Janice Y. K. Lee, author of the bestselling THE PIANO TEACHER

Winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction, 2011

As the fall of Saigon begins in 1975, two lovers make their way through the streets, desperately trying to catch one of the last planes out. Helen Adams, a photojournalist, must leave behind a war she has become addicted to and a devastated country she loves. Linh, her lover, must grapple with his own conflicting loyalties to the woman from whom he can’t bear to be parted, and his country.

Betrayal and self-sacrifice follows, echoing the pattern of their relationship over the war-torn years, beginning in the splendour of Angkor Wat, with jaded, cynical, larger-than-life war correspondent Sam Darrow, Helen’s greatest love and fiercest competitor, driven by demons she can only hope to vanquish.

Spurred on by the moral imperative of documenting the horror of war, of getting the truth out to an international audience, and the immense personal cost this carries, Sam and Helen’s passionate and all-consuming love is tested to the limit. This mesmerising novel carries resonance across contemporary wars with questions of love and heart-breaking betrayal interwoven with the conflict.


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 581 KB
  • Print Length: 400 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0312611579
  • Publisher: HarperPress (5 Aug 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B003XMWSOS
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #35,755 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Tatjana Soli
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The Lotus Eaters is a fantastic book that is shockingly misrepresented by its cover picture of a delicate young woman with a red flower in her hair, and especially its summary on the back cover, because it is most certainly not a romantic book.

Like Homer's Lotus Eaters, these soldiers and journalists alike are intoxicated by war and they lose the will to return home. This is the story of how observing death and destruction on a daily basis corrupts and changes the observer. It is the tale of a young woman who changes from an enthusiastic photographer who can't stand the thoughts of *chicken* dying, to a hardened veteran who is numbed even to the death of her own brother.

This book is brilliant and I heartily recommend it. Just don't expect to read much about love and romance.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful
By Red on Black TOP 50 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Let me stress from the outset this is not a book based on a drama about a group of British expatriates living on the island of Crete! Indeed Tatjana Soli's wonderful and evocative debut novel shifts the attention further east to the Vietnam War and the close of one of the most brutal conflicts in modern warfare. The Vietnam conflict stills haunts America and this novel seeks to capture the "the hallucinatory atmosphere of war" but more than this. Ostensibly a love story there are many deeper themes and currents which underpin this work, not least that in terms of "ghosts" the novels main protagonist Helen Adams has lost her father and brother in the conflict. Thus the Lotus Eaters starts at that time when the Vietcong are descending on the city and concluding the process that will lead to the terrible and shameful debacle of the Fall of Saigon. This year is unbelievably the 35th anniversary of the event and yet the images of panic, despair and thunderous Huey helicopters plucking desperate people from the roof of the fortress-like US embassy are indelibly marked on our consciousness.

It is in this context that Helen Adams an ambivalent and inexperienced war photographer operates. Granted she does bear a distant resemblance to Jeremy Renner's character "Sergeant William James" in the Hurt Locker, but this is not whole story. Indeed a novel written from the perspective of a woman in the war zone is one of this novels key USPs and Soli has brought real insights in this regard; not least the condescending attitude to the presence of anyone without at an Adams apple and at least three days worth of stubble. Her character is a willing participant to this conflict and an obsessed interpreter of violence. The sentence which sets the tone for the book comes early when Adams admits that "It had always fascinated her, what happens when things break down, what are the basic units of life"? To her the end of the war amounts to a source of frustration rather than a relief, not least her continued search for that Pulitzer-worthy picture. Her relationship to the Vietnamese assistant Linh is at the core of the book alongside an unusual "Ménage à trois" involving an earlier affair with a celebrated and veteran fellow photographer called Sam Darrow. The key to the book however is Soli's ability to skilfully weave around this complex romance a tale of the Vietnam War evoking in crystal like prose its sights, overbearing heat, pungent smells and the narrative of a thousand small Saigon tragedies.

Neither despite its central theme is this novel simply a romance. The characters are all very human, very flawed and often in very real danger. Linh the main Vietnamese character is a man torn between his country and the woman he loves but more than this his deeper understanding of what is unfolding in front of his eyes. He is character you grow to like and care about. The book also brings in the big themes with the novel populated with vivid battle scenes and you sense "outside" of the novel the geo politics being played and manipulated.

As this book drew to a very satisfying conclusion, and as I devoured it over the past week I have thought about it many times since. (Always a good sign of a great book). Yes there are some weaknesses in the "Lotus Eaters" since along with echoes of the Hurt Locker some of the story seems archetypal and does recall themes from the many Vietnam films over the years not least the Killing Fields (even though that is set in Cambodia). But these are minor qualms, indeed with the presence of a woman as her central character Soli has tapped into a fascinating and unique central theme. As she states in the foreword to the Lotus Eaters the inspiration for this was drawn simply from a picture in a book of war photography which captured Dickey Chapelle the first female war correspondent in Vietnam. Soli admits that the picture literally "stopped me... and I found my subject". One would add in return she has done her subject real justice with debut novel that his handled with deftness and elegant writing. The Lotus Eaters is destined to become a great film and it will "take root" in the best seller lists. It is a very persuasive, tormented and tenacious novel and for a debut it is superbly written and most importantly a mesmerizing read.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By AR VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
American photojournalist Helen Adams attempts to flee the fall of Saigon with her Vietnamese husband Linh, but she is drawn back into the war with her determination to capture history. This is a beautiful novel that tells the story of Helen's years in Vietnam, from naive young woman hoping to make a career as a photographer, to hardened journalist who will risk everything for the perfect shot.

I don't know a lot about Vietnam, but this is a fascinating story that brilliantly captures the claustrophobic atmosphere of a tropical war and the effect it has on those who are caught up in it. Helen has a troubled past, her brother was killed in the war, and that initially drives her to become a photojournalist there. When she arrives she forms a relationship with veteran photographer Sam Darrow, a man obsessed by the war, and she is greatly influenced by him.

Helen's relationship with Darrow actually is a greater focus of the novel than her relationship with Linh, Darrow's assistant, who falls for her quietly and is content to spend his life in the background. Much of the novel explores the dynamic between the three characters, and the different ways they deal with the war. But as Helen and Linh's love affair develops it creates a very intense and moving relationship that spans cultures.

This book is fantastically well written, the language is very poetic and evocative. The descriptions of Vietnam, whether the jungle, a village or the city, and of the Vietnamese people, really bring the story to life, and I was fascinated by a culture I knew little about. If you're a fan of literary fiction, powerful stories of love and/or war, or just love to be transported to another world by a really intelligent book, then I recommend this, it's excellent.
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This is what happened when one left ones homepieces of oneself scattered all over the world, no one place ever completely satisfied, always a nostalgia for the place left behind. &quote;
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