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From the celebrated author of the international bestseller Suite Française, a newly discovered novel, a story of passion and long-kept secrets, set against the background of a rural French village in the years before World War II.
Written in 1941, Fire in the Blood — only now assembled in its entirety — teems with the intertwined lives of an insular French village in the years before the war, when "peace" was less important as a political state than as a coveted personal condition: the untroubled pinnacle of happiness. At the center of the novel is Silvio, who has returned to this small town after years away. As his narration unfolds, we are given an intimate picture of the loves and infidelities, the scandals, the youthful ardor and regrets of age that tie Silvio to the long-guarded secrets of the past.
Review:
"When she was writing Suite Francaise in 1940, Némirovsky, who died in Auschwitz in 1942 before turning 40, was also reworking this novel, newly discovered among her papers. Though composed on a smaller canvas, it is another keenly observed study of human nature, and in this case of Burgundy paysans. In a leisurely narrative, middle-aged narrator Silvio recounts three interlocking stories of love and betrayal over two decades. These secret affairs, he says, can be explained only by 'fire in the blood,' the intense passion that can overtake men and women when they are young, highly sexed and vulnerable. Silvio's laconic descriptions of unappeasable desire are seasoned by bitter assessment of the wisdom earned after things cool. Linked through blood and common local history, the characters in this la ronde of betrayal exist in a seemingly idyllic community that is always alert for deviations from the social code. Némirovsky's restraint in unfolding her story contributes to the emotional crescendo at the story's denouement. In its penetrating distillation of manners and mores, this spare and elegant book makes a worthy follow-up to Suite." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
Review:
"Irene Nemirovsky surprised readers when her unfinished novel 'Suite Francaise' was posthumously published in French in 2004 and in English a year ago, decades after the author had died at Auschwitz. The subtlety of her observation of a nation at war and under occupation gave us a new perspective on France in the '40s. Now another hitherto unknown novel, which the author completed in her last years,... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review) has been discovered. 'Fire in the Blood' is set between the two world wars — the story is undated, but the hostilities of 1914 are mentioned as an important milestone — in a village almost identical to the one where Nemirovsky sought refuge before the Nazis deported her. It deals with two young women who don't love their husbands and who take lovers. The husbands die, one in a mysterious accident. In the course of pursuing the cause of this unnatural death, members of the parent generation, including the narrator, are confronted with elements in their own lives that they had forgotten or conveniently hidden away. Interlocking stories of love, death and nostalgia are embedded in a richly textured French countryside with its farmers and farmworkers, large houses and chilly woods, heavy furniture and an equally heavy consciousness of money and ownership. Nemirovsky casts a cold eye on this society with its lack of inner and outer comfort. 'No matter how rich they are,' she writes, 'they refuse pleasure, even happiness, with implacable determination.' Marriages are arranged at hard-to-digest dinners with 'soup thick enough for a spoon to stand in, enormous pike from the lake on someone's estate,' followed by two meat dishes and 'cheese, which everyone eats from the end of their knives.' The common meal does not serve the purpose of conviviality, for 'no one says a word.' Passion flourishes precisely because it is frowned upon and suppressed. The book also gives us a portrait of a happy marriage and the virtues of tranquility and empathy between partners who deeply care for one another. But the narrator is skeptical of the 'arrogant confidence that comes with happiness.' This narrator is one of the natives and yet an outsider, an old man who has traveled the world and returned home to his village, disillusioned and wanting only to be left alone with his wine and a pack of solitaire cards. Sometimes even his dog is too much company. He has squandered his fortune but enjoys his solitude, now that the 'fire in the blood' has burned itself out. He ruminates: 'Who hasn't had his life strangely warped and distorted by that fire so opposite to his true nature? Are we not all somewhat like these branches burning in my fireplace, buckling beneath the power of the flames?' At first, his main function in the novel is to observe his neighbors and relatives; his ambivalent voice allows for the right mixture of detachment and sympathy. Then the story takes an unexpected turn, and we find that our narrator was himself a significant actor in a past of which the present appears to be a replay. The core of this short novel is the unbridgeable abyss between the old and the young, between those who are still in the throes of passion and those who have passed that stage. Two generations think they know each other but don't. They make egregious mistakes in judgment because they don't recognize each others' emotions, the fire in the young and its absence in the old. To be sure, the old aren't old by today's standards, but they are the parents of grown children, and they have forgotten what the fire was like, especially the fire of erotic love. When something enters to disturb the status quo they have trouble coping: 'The smoothness and decorum of their features had vanished and you could see their sad, anxious souls peering through the surface.' The episodes mesh and the characters reveal themselves by and by in a narrative sequence that appears perfectly logical, though not perfectly convincing. We must take it on faith that certain people sometimes do and at other times don't act responsibly, that they fall in love with likely and unlikely partners, that they are faithful or not, without a deeper or subtler exploration of the whys and wherefores. Moreover, there are some loose ends, either by design, to leave open some moral problems that don't allow for easy solutions, or because the author wasn't quite finished revising the book, as the postscript suggests. 'Fire in the Blood' will not evoke the same level of interest as the masterful 'Suite Francaise,' but it is a beautifully constructed story in the tradition of the novel of adultery and an enjoyable, if somewhat chilling, portrait of manners from the first half of the last century." Reviewed by Ruth Kluger, author of the memoir 'Still Alive: A Holocaust Girlhood Remembered', Washington Post Book World (Copyright 2006 Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group) (hide most of this review)
Review:
"[Némirovsky] coolly explores the heat of passions old and new...leav[ing] readers profoundly satisfied with this portrait of la vieille France...so manifestly dear to her." San Francisco Chronicle
Review:
"Courageous, uncompromising....An entire world, vividly rendered, emerges from [these] pages....Némirovsky sets the tragedies of the plot in motion so unobtrusively, yet so surely, that when they come together the book has the inevitability — and yet the shock — that characterizes the books that mark us." Charles Taylor, Newsday
Review:
"With startling economy, Némirovsky telegraphs the prejudices, passions and taboos that govern life in this isolated community....Translator Sandra Smith deftly renders its noirish bite into English, giving us a taste of what Némirovsky the writer was like before history handed her the subject matter that killed her." Seattle Times
Review:
"[T]here's enough of Némirovsky's intelligence and caustic powers of observation to make Fire in the Blood more than a mere curiosity. For those who loved Suite Française, the existence of this quiet, melancholy story is good news." The Christian Science Monitor
Review:
"[A] short elegiac novel about the brief yet passionate loves and infidelities of youth....Neither a masterpiece nor a curiosity but an elegant expression of universal longings rooted in a specific milieu, provincial France, that's observed with a caustic brilliance." Kirkus Reviews
Review:
"Fire in the Blood is short, at only 126 pages, but it is finished and polished, expressing more than many 500-page novels....So rarely can readers find such theme-rich prose. Every page, every sentence is a treasure." San Antonio Express-News
Review:
"Although it is hard to match the power of Suite Française, Fire in the Blood is strangely engaging despite its overheated prose. Némirovsky again excavates the hypocrisy and self-serving impulses embedded in French culture — and, perhaps, all human nature." Los Angeles Times
Synopsis:
From the author of the universally acclaimed and best-selling Suite Française, a newly discovered novel, a story of passion and long-kept secrets, set against the background of a rural French village in the years before World War II.
Synopsis:
Written in 1941, the manuscript of Fire in the Blood was entrusted in pieces to family when the author was sent to her death at Auschwitz. The novel — only now assembled in its entirety — teems with the intertwined lives of an insular French village in the years before the war.
Irène Némirovsky was born in Kiev in 1903 into a wealthy banking family and emigrated to France during the Russian Revolution. After attending the Sorbonne, she began to write and swiftly achieved success with an early novel, David Golder, which was followed by The Ball, Snow in Autumn, Dogs and Wolves, and The Courilof Affair, among others. She died in Auschwitz in 1942.
We first meet fiftyish Silvio living in rural France around 1940 in what his more prosperous, land-holding relatives refer to as a “rat hole” of a house. His own profligacy has reduced him to a simple existence of sitting by his fire, stroking his dog, and drinking a daily bottle of wine. He has just hosted a small gathering celebrating the pending marriage of his cousin Helene’s daughter, Collette, to a mill owner’s son. Lives led among these isolated people seem traditional, placid, and relatively uneventful.
However, in this short novel it becomes evident that beneath this serenity, lives of passion and desire simmer, in some cases with severe consequences. As Silvio recounts, it is the fire in the blood of those first becoming adults that drives all manner of madness – temporary insanity. But passion quickly recedes, leaving a lifetime to suppress the memories both to one’s self and to the community. It is interesting to see normally taciturn people subtly let it be known that nothing goes unnoticed, though usually tolerated, if for no reason other than to maintain the integrity of the community.
This little book is tightly constructed, slowly drawing in the reader as the hinted at connections and secrets are dramatically revealed. The melancholy is palpable as the trade-offs and compromises that last a lifetime must be made. And Silvio, at first a wise observer, is far more implicated than his quiet existence suggests.
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Fire in the Blood (Vintage International)
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Irene Nemirovsky
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160 pages
Vintage Books USA -
English9780307388001
Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review"
by Publishers Weekly,
"When she was writing Suite Francaise in 1940, Némirovsky, who died in Auschwitz in 1942 before turning 40, was also reworking this novel, newly discovered among her papers. Though composed on a smaller canvas, it is another keenly observed study of human nature, and in this case of Burgundy paysans. In a leisurely narrative, middle-aged narrator Silvio recounts three interlocking stories of love and betrayal over two decades. These secret affairs, he says, can be explained only by 'fire in the blood,' the intense passion that can overtake men and women when they are young, highly sexed and vulnerable. Silvio's laconic descriptions of unappeasable desire are seasoned by bitter assessment of the wisdom earned after things cool. Linked through blood and common local history, the characters in this la ronde of betrayal exist in a seemingly idyllic community that is always alert for deviations from the social code. Némirovsky's restraint in unfolding her story contributes to the emotional crescendo at the story's denouement. In its penetrating distillation of manners and mores, this spare and elegant book makes a worthy follow-up to Suite." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Review"
by San Francisco Chronicle,
"[Némirovsky] coolly explores the heat of passions old and new...leav[ing] readers profoundly satisfied with this portrait of la vieille France...so manifestly dear to her."
"Review"
by Charles Taylor, Newsday,
"Courageous, uncompromising....An entire world, vividly rendered, emerges from [these] pages....Némirovsky sets the tragedies of the plot in motion so unobtrusively, yet so surely, that when they come together the book has the inevitability — and yet the shock — that characterizes the books that mark us."
"Review"
by Seattle Times,
"With startling economy, Némirovsky telegraphs the prejudices, passions and taboos that govern life in this isolated community....Translator Sandra Smith deftly renders its noirish bite into English, giving us a taste of what Némirovsky the writer was like before history handed her the subject matter that killed her."
"Review"
by The Christian Science Monitor,
"[T]here's enough of Némirovsky's intelligence and caustic powers of observation to make Fire in the Blood more than a mere curiosity. For those who loved Suite Française, the existence of this quiet, melancholy story is good news."
"Review"
by Kirkus Reviews,
"[A] short elegiac novel about the brief yet passionate loves and infidelities of youth....Neither a masterpiece nor a curiosity but an elegant expression of universal longings rooted in a specific milieu, provincial France, that's observed with a caustic brilliance."
"Review"
by San Antonio Express-News,
"Fire in the Blood is short, at only 126 pages, but it is finished and polished, expressing more than many 500-page novels....So rarely can readers find such theme-rich prose. Every page, every sentence is a treasure."
"Review"
by Los Angeles Times,
"Although it is hard to match the power of Suite Française, Fire in the Blood is strangely engaging despite its overheated prose. Némirovsky again excavates the hypocrisy and self-serving impulses embedded in French culture — and, perhaps, all human nature."
"Synopsis"
by Ingram,
From the author of the universally acclaimed and best-selling Suite Française, a newly discovered novel, a story of passion and long-kept secrets, set against the background of a rural French village in the years before World War II.
"Synopsis"
by Ingram,
Written in 1941, the manuscript of Fire in the Blood was entrusted in pieces to family when the author was sent to her death at Auschwitz. The novel — only now assembled in its entirety — teems with the intertwined lives of an insular French village in the years before the war.
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