Ads are not an endorsement by the blog author.

Slapinions

Public Journal
 Back to Journal Archives | Subscribe to Alerts Alerts Subscribe to Alerts | Feeds
< Nekked Babies are
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Joe Loong would b >
Saturday, February 23, 2008
February 2008
Happy Leap Year!
Lost: The Constant .  . . Season 4, Episdode 5
Another Smiley Update
Update on Smiley
Help me make a list of Must Read Books
The leavings of my fragile little mind
Joe Loong would be proud
Book Review - The Farther Shore by Matthew Eck
Nekked Babies are the Best Babies - Baby's 6 month pics; the flower petals
Why Lurkers Suck
Happy 13th Anniversary Sinatra!
Lost: Eggtown Season 4, Episode 4
A Scrapbook Entry - Stonefire Pizza, Early Summer 2007
Just a Quick Photo of the Donkey Mask
Because if it was easy it'd be someone else's life - The Lion King Feb 17th '08 Pt 2
On Castro, Blu-Ray, and my choice in the WI Primary
Because if it was easy it'd be someone else's life - The Lion King Feb 17th '08 Pt 1
Of Baby Food, Concerns with Smiley, accidents, and Mango Baby
Well whadaya know!
YaYa's 1st Ever Pair of Glasses
Lost: The Economist Season 4, episode 3
Hey, Pictures are working again!
Morecambe and Wise
How I spent my day - exciting aint it?
Just for the folks who know me offline - My Birthday List
LuLu's First Speaking Role in Church
A Short Quote from 9/11
Please excuse the technical problems w/ the last post
The Ash Wednesday Blizzard of 2008
New Graphics for the Site
What's your take on this?
Weekly Sentence with Val
'Just' some pics of Lauren
My Updated Blogroll
JLand Phot Shoot #128 - Pets
Lauren is 6 months old Today!
Lost: Confirmed Dead
My opinions of Super Tuesday 2008
One heck of a photo from Alaska
In which I nearly eat the unthinkable, send YaYa to the eye Dr, see Hannah Montana, and drink Tang
A request
Super Tuesday on the Horizon
My first professional submission of 2008
Nobody's Perfect - The Giants Win! 18-1
A Request for Help for a Fellow JLander, Sorrow for a Departed Friend, and Thanks for an Award!
Buddy Holly - 49 years on
Lost: 'The Beginning of The End'
On how my kids are far from perfect and why my evening was awful
« February 2008 Archive
Saturday, February 23, 2008

Book Review - The Farther Shore by Matthew Eck

The Farther Shore by Matthew Eck, Milkweed Editions, 192 pp

 

The plot of Matthew Ecks The Farther Shore could hardly be simpler. A handful of American soldiers are abandoned in an African city torn apart by civil war, and their only hope for survival is a perilous journey through the city and all its many dangers.

Along the way there are the prerequisite staples of serious war literature; the unintentional ‘collateral damage’, in this case the mistaken killing of two children that sets off the tragic events of the novel, the native who had once spent time in America; and the author’s stubborn refusal to assign moral judgments to the actions he depicts.

On the surface, that sounds like an indictment of the novel. On the contrary; it takes a skilled hand to take the clichés of a genre and morph them into something fresh and intriguing. Eck manages to pull if off with a austere simplicity and ease that belies the fact that he is a first time novelist.

While its stark and bare-bone style is reminiscent of Harry Brown’s WWII Italy in A Walk in the Sun, Eck tells the story of a modern day conflict, albeit one never identified by year or name.

The story centers on Joshua Stantz, an Army sergeant and one of four soldiers left behind after a botched mission leaves two children dead. Among the group Josh can claim a certain detachment – by chance he never opened fire on the children – but there is no doubt he is weighed down by the same guilt and sense of impending doom that plague the rest.

“ . . my thoughts turned to times when I hadnt done enough to save others as they . . . disappeared beneath the waves of this world. And there I was standing on the farther shore, hoping they would surface again.”

Separated from the Army and with no immediate hope for rescue the group begins a cross town odyssey to the imagined safety of a nearby city. The characters and events that spring forth along this journey both shape their future and illuminate the mistakes of their immediate past.

“We made a mess of this whole thing,” one character says. “And I’m sick with it.”

Its left up to the readers imagination – and political inclination – to decipher whether or not the book stands as an indictment of the current occupation of Iraq.

Eck himself may not absolve the Americans of the novel of the chaos they created, but he also doesn’t canonize the violent inhabitants of the city. In one disturbing scene a couple is viscously attacked and mutilated for a act of adultery, and at one point Stantz wonders why a nation that has such high rainfall totals fails to grow enough crops to feed its own starving people.

If there is one complaint about the book, it’s that the journey Stantz and company undertake doesnt seem all that terror inducing. Despite being hunted by most of the city they are able to travel in the open with seeming ease, covering multiple miles and rarely encountering even mild opposition.

Its a disturbingly surreal journey, one that at times seems no more foreign, no more dangerous, than a similar walk in some parts of America.

More than once the American characters fear that their actions will ‘follow them home’.

Perhaps that’s Ecks point - that once we become entangled in the politics and bloodshed of another land it becomes impossible to separate ourselves from the conflict, physically or spiritually.

For Stantz and the other survivors, their private war will indeed ‘follow them home’.

Not an AOL/AIM member? Click here to comment


Tags: , ,



slapinions at 9:15:00 PM CST Blog about this entry
This entry has 2 comments: (Add your own)
  • #2 Comment from gdireneoe 
    2/28/08 10:25 AM Permalink
    Very interesting. ;)  C.
  • #1 Comment from jfourb 
    2/24/08 2:53 PM Permalink
    Perhaps thats exactly what the author intended to do, the danger was not around them per say, but within them. It sounds like an interesting read though. I enjoy your reviews!

    Julie