Book Review: Warlight!
Warlight written by Michael Ondaatje.
The term Warlight was used to describe the dimmed
lights that guided emergency traffic during London's wartime blackouts. The a-word aptly describes the atmosphere of this haunting, brilliant and set in
Britain in the decades after WWII, in which many significant facts are
purposely shrouded in the semidarkness of history.
The narrator, Nathaniel
Williams looks back at the year 1945 when he was 14 and "our parents
went away and left us in the care of two men who may have been criminals."
Nathaniel and his older sister, Rachel, are stunned to discover that their
mother's purported reason for leaving them was false. Her betrayal destroys
their innocence; they learn to accept that "nothing was safe
anymore."
To the siblings' surprise, however, their designated guardian,
their upstairs lodger, whom they call the Moth, turns out to be a kind and
protective mentor. His friend, a former boxer nicknamed the Pimlico Darter, is
also, a kindly guide, albeit one engaged in illegal enterprises in which he
enlists Nathaniel's help.
The story reads like a non-traditional and
fascinating coming-of-age saga until a violent event occurs midway through; the
resulting shocking revelations open the novel's second half to more surprises.
The central irony is Nathaniel's eventual realization that his mother's heroic
acts of patriotism during and after the war left lasting repercussions that
fractured their family. Mesmerizing from the first sentence, rife with poignant
insights and satisfying subplots, secrets, and loss may be the best work yet.
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