Remember Me
by Trezza Azzopardi
A review by Christina Schwarz
Here, as in Azzopardi's dazzling debut novel, The
Hiding Place, a narrator's subjective version of the truth wonderfully twists
and shades reality. In The Hiding Place the narrator was limited in understanding
because she was a child, which occasionally gave the reader the satisfaction of
knowing more than the character. In this novel the narrator is a homeless woman
both fierce and pitiful, her "grandfather's age" and, by her own unreliable
admission, "not right in the head," a liar and a thief. Azzopardi has
made her perfectly ambiguous: although sympathetic, she sometimes takes us for
a ride. From childhood she slips insecurely her name keeps changing, as do
her caretakers and even one of her physical features along the fringe of a
harsh world in which the weak must fend for themselves and selfishness nearly
always swamps love. Azzopardi skillfully sets up and reveals secrets, though the
plot staggers under a few too many coincidences, and the miraculously consistent
voice she achieved in The Hiding Place sometimes wavers here, as if she
is occasionally pulling back to make sure readers know what's what. But we're
better off when Azzopardi keeps us in the dark. There she creates images so vivid
that they leave their silhouettes behind her readers' eyes, and the ugliness of
the world becomes gorgeous and haunting although no less horrifying in her
rendering.
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