25 The Story Of The Forest - Linda Grant
Linda Grant is a wonderful story teller and this book was no exception I found it completely absorbing. There were strands drawn from her own family history which she has included.
The book begins with a young pre pubescent Mina Mendel wandering into a forest just outside of her home in Riga, Latvia ostensibly to pick mushrooms. There she meets some loud young men who profess to be Bolseheviks waiting for the day when they can overthrow the Tsar. She is inspired by their passion, it's a meeting that stays with her throughout her life. Very soon after that Mina leaves the comfort of the relatively wealthy home of her grain merchant father's house to sail across the Atlantic to the US with her older brother. Left behind are her parents and 3 younger siblings. However, they get no further than Liverpool, her brother having made a hasty marriage with a woman he meets on board the ship and realising that they don't have the funds to make the onward journey. So it's the working class areas of Liverpool such as Penny Lane later to be eulogised by The Beatles, they are to remain. When the Great War breaks out followed by the seismic events such as the Russian Revolution that follow, their remaining family in Riga are swallowed into what became the Soviet Union. Meanwhile Mina and her brother on his return from the war with a comrade and suitor for Mina, eventually are to prosper and settle in the more affluent areas of suburban Liverpool. The book rolls on to the next generation who are anglicized but essentially Jewish to the core and as such still the butt of the intermittent prejudices they sought to escape, but not without flashes of dark Jewish humour. For example when they get a poison pen letter proclaiming how the writer "hates filthy Jews and they are not welcome" the matriarch Mina is heard to observe something along the lines "well at least the writer has exceptionally nice handwriting" As the book goes forward in time, there are glimpses of the remaining three siblings and how their lives pan out under the auspices of Soviet Russia and the WW2, where one sister and her family perish in Treblinka, contrasting their lives with the relative comforts of suburban England.
Mina's daughter, Paula decamps to London post war and with an acquired cut glass English accent becomes involved with a louche BBC announcer and then becomes employed in the burgeoning British film industry of the day before eventually returning to Liverpool to marry a local wheeler dealer from her community. The book takes the reader more or less into recent times, there is mention of the Iraq war. Mina lives to the ripe old age of 102 where her mind often wanders back to her early life in her native Latvia often commiserating that communist Russia didn't deliver the egalitarian society of her youthful idealism shared with the young men she met in the forest.
Not a particularly long book at 270 odd pages but Linda Grant's writing is wonderful, definitely one to join my other 5 star reads this year.