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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Rich Tapestry, 2 Sep 2003
Milan Kundera's latest work adds to his reputation as a haunting philosophical writer with a unique and compelling mastery of language. Taking the themes of ignorance, identity, nostalgia, memory and love, and adding a fresh examination of 'The Odyssey', he weaves a powerful tale of homecoming around three main characters: Irena, who undertakes a 'Great Return' to the Czech Republic; Josef, who, embarking on the same journey, finds himself adrift in his 'homeland' - 'listening to an unknown language whose every word he understood'; and Milada, a lonely woman scarred for life by a traumatic episode in her teens. All three are connected by their memories of who they were and, in the cases of Irena and Josef, by their confusion as to who they have become during the long years of exile. But memories, Kundera stresses, are weak, unreliable and inconsistent with the recollections of others. Yet, as demonstrated by Irena, Josef and Milada, they form a disproportionately large part of our identities. What happens then, when they are revealed as false or misleading? What happens when we are then left effectively ignorant of ourselves? Read it and think.
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