Doerr,
Anthony. All the Light We Cannot See. New
York: Scribner, 2014
You might describe
All the Light You Cannot See as an historical novel themed
around the absurd tragedy of war. Someone else might see it as
psychological realism; a story about the resiliency and tenacity of
people in the throes of crushing horror. Both would be right; both
assessments would be too simple.
Structurally, All
the Light We Cannot See can be described as a sequence of
triangles, their arms always converging at points. In fact, radio
signal triangulation preoccupies the military strategy of the German
Wehrmacht as it seeks to clinch its subjugation of France.
Resistance movements were thorns in the side of German planning; broadcasting
from remote, hidden transmitters, partisans were able to stymie the
Germans again and again. New technology made it possible to
triangulate the location of the transmitters, however, surprise the resisting
civilians bringing the arms of resistance and of anti-insurgency to
a point of reckoning.
The
reckoning point in All the Light We Cannot See
is Saint-Malo, a fortified town on an island off the French
coast. Two central characters—a German Hitler-youth named Werner
and a blind French girl named Marie-Laure—are followed through
youth into early adulthood to a convergence in Saint-Malo just before
the city is leveled by the American liberation. It’s through the
eyes (the other four senses in Marie-Laure’s case) that we see the
unfolding and conclusion of World War II: the excessive cruelty, the
indifference to life that escalates and escalates as the world
becomes first appalled, then resigned and finally, inured to death
and destruction.
Werner and Maurie-Laure both
become trapped in the rubble of Saint-Malo, he under a hotel that was
communication headquarters for the Wehrmacht and she in the
attic of a great uncle’s house where a resistance radio has evaded
discovery. Using their skills and learning in new radio technology,
they are destined to converge through that medium.
That Doerr is a skilled
narrator—probably a writer who could teach Charles Dickens and
Jules Verne some useful lessons in gripping, sensory prose writing—almost
goes without saying, especially to anyone who’s enjoyed About
Grace or The Shell
Collector. His handling of
structure here, however, amazed me. Disconcerted somewhat at first to
recognize that All the Light We Cannot See was
going to be told in non-chronological order, I soon came to
appreciate the benefits of such a structure, particularly in a case
where character-development is absolutely of the essence as it is in
this novel. Sections are dated, a concession to the reader I found helpful.
Werner’s
primary dilemma is illustrated in his experience as a cadet in a Nazi
training facility (Schulpforta).
A sensitive, brilliant lad, small for his age, he is cajoled into
participation in cadets’ cruelties meant to harden them, and his
failure to defend his best friend, Frederick, who is selected for
beatings and tortures for his physical weakness will haunt him
forever. But although there is no limit to the excesses of the
training program, for a youth like Werner who grew up curious and
creative, the complete brainwashing cannot necessarily be achieved:
“It
seems to Werner that all the boys around him are intoxicated. As if,
at every meal, the cadets fill their tin cups not with the cold
mineralized water of Schulpforta
but with a spirit that leaves them glazed and dazzled, as if they
ward off a vast and inevitable tidal wave of anguish only by staying
forever drunk on rigor and exercise and gleaming boot leather. The
eyes of the most bullheaded boys radiate a shining determination:
every ounce of their attention has been trained to ferret out
weakness. They study Werner with suspicion . . .. (Page 62, online
edition)
For
Marie-Laure, the struggle, beyond her survival, involves a rare,
magnificent artifact from the museum in Paris, an object museum
officials seek to protect from the marauding, hoarding German Reich.
This object acts as a connecting link through the Paris and
Saint-Malo phases of Marie-Laure’s story. Mysterious and
unparalleled, she finds it her duty to protect the object from the
shameless greed of Nazi officials charged with seeking out and
confiscating national treasures.
What exactly might “treasure”
mean to persons who send youth to their inevitable deaths while
ferreting through conquered lands, stealing art and handling it with
kid gloves? Young Werner says it best:
For
Werner, doubts turn up regularly. Racial purity, political
purity—Bastian speaks to a horror of any sort of corruption, and
yet, Werner wonders in the dead of night, isn’t life a kind of
corruption? A child is born, and the world sets in upon it. Taking
things from it, stuffing things into it. Each bite of food, each
particle of light entering the eye—the body can never be pure. but
this is what the commandant insists upon, why the Reich measures
their noses, clocks their hair color. The entropy of a
closed system never decreases.
(Page 276, on line edition, emphasis mine.)
Werner’s
sight and Marie-Laure’s blindness provide an enchanting,
symbolically rich progression from the intriguing title onward: All
the Light We Cannot See. One is
tempted to say that it is only the blind who really see when the rest
of the world is rendered sightless by madness. That would be too
simple, but Marie-Laure’s blindness as summarized by the narrator
must give us pause concerning light and darkness:
To
shut your eyes is to guess nothing of blindness. Beneath your world
of skies and faces and buildings exists a rawer and older world, a
place where surface planes disintegrate and sounds ribbon in shoals
through the air. Marie-Laure can sit in an attic high above the
street and hear lilies rustling in marshes two miles away. (Page 390,
online edition)
There
is light to be had, but it does us no good if we cannot see it, if
we’re blinded by the madness of greed, our propensity to follow
cruelty and avarice into battle. All the Light We Cannot
See.
To learn more
about Anthony Doerr’s conception of the novel, the story he
envisioned, hear him speak about the novel.
The
online edition (and I presume the paper edition as well) contains
helpful discussion questions for book club consideration.