Will Byrnes's Reviews > All the Light We Cannot See

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
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4/20/15 - PULITZER WINNER for 2014
The brain is locked in total darkness of course, children, says the voice. It floats in a clear liquid inside the skull, never in the light. And yet the world it constructs in the mind is full of light. It brims with color and movement. So how, children, does the brain, which lives without a spark of light, build for us a world full of light?
Marie Laure LeBlanc is a teen who had gone blind at age 6. She and her father, Daniel, fled Paris ahead of the German invasion, arriving in the ancient walled port city of Saint Malo in northwest France to stay with M-L’s great uncle, Etienne. His PTSD from WW I had kept him indoors for two decades. They bring with them a large and infamous diamond, to save it from the Nazis. Daniel had made a scale model of their neighborhood in Paris to help young Marie Laure learn her away around, and repeats the project in Saint Malo, which is eventually occupied by the German army.

Werner and Jutta Pfennig are raised in a German orphanage after their father is killed in the local mine. Werner has a gift for electronics, and is sent to a special school where, despite the many horrors of the experience, his talent is nurtured. He develops technology for locating radio sources, and is rushed into the Wehrmacht to apply his skill in the war. His assignment brings him to Saint Malo, where his path and Marie Laure’s intersect.

description
Anthony Doerr

There are three primary time streams here, 1944 as the Allies are assaulting the German-held town, 1940-44, as we follow the progress of Werner and Marie Laure to their intersection, and the 1930s. We see the boy and the girl as children, and are presented with mirrored events in their young lives that will define in large measure the years to follow. Werner and Jutta are mesmerized by a French radio broadcast, a respite from the anti-Semitic propaganda the government is broadcasting. The Professor in the French broadcast offers lectures on science, and inspires Werner to dream of a life beyond the orphanage.
Open your eyes, concluded the man, and see what you can with them before they close forever, and then a piano comes on, playing a lonely song that sounds to Werner like a golden boat traveling a dark river, a progression of harmonies that transfigures Zollverein: the houses turned to mist, the mines filled in, the smokestacks fallen, an ancient sea spilling through the streets, and the air streaming with possibility.
As her father is the head locksmith for the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, Marie Laure has the run of the place. She spends a lot of time with a professor there, learning everything she can about shells, mollusks and snails.
Dr. Geffard teaches her the names of shells--Lambis lambis, Cypraea moneta, Lophiotoma acuta--and lets her feel the spines and apertures and whorls of each in turn. He explains the branches of marine evolution and the sequences of the geologic periods; on her best days, she glimpses the limitless span of millennia behind her: millions of years, tens of millions of years.
Both Werner and Marie Laure are enriched by teachers and books as they grow. No nuclear families here. Marie Laure’s mother died in childbirth. The Pfennig children lost their remaining parent when father was killed in the mine.

The author, in a video on his site, talks about the three pieces of inspiration that provided the superstructure for the novel. While 80 feet below ground in a NYC subway, a fellow passenger was griping about the loss of cell service. Doerr appreciates the beautiful miracle that is modern communications. At the start of the book I wanted to try to capture the magic of hearing the voice of a stranger in a little device in your home because for the history of humanity, that was a strange thing. I started with a boy trapped somewhere and a girl reading a story. A year later he was on a book tour in France and saw Saint Malo for the first time. Walking around this beautiful seaside town, a walled fortress, the beautiful channel, the green water of the channel breaking against the walls and I told my editor, “look how old this is. This medieval town’s so pretty.” He said, “actually, this town was almost entirely destroyed in 1944, by your country, by American bombs.” So I started researching a lot about the city of Saint Malo immediately and knew that was the setting. That was where the boy would be trapped, listening to the radio. The third piece arrived when Doerr learned that when the Germans invaded, the French hid not only their artistic treasures but their important natural history and gemological holdings as well.

The story is told primarily in alternating Marie Laure’s and Werner’s experiences. But there is a third stream as well, that of Sgt Major Reinhold von Rumpel, a gem appraiser drafted by the Reich to examine the jewels captured by the military and collect the best for a special collection. He becomes obsessed with finding the Sea of Flames, the near mythic diamond Daniel LeBlanc had hidden away. He is pretty much the prototypical evil Nazi, completely corrupt, greedy, cruel, as close to a stick-figure characterization as there is in the book. But his evil-doing provides the danger needed to move the story forward.

There may not be words sufficient to exclaim just how magnificent an accomplishment this book is. Amazing, spectacular, incredible, moving, engaging, emotional, gripping, celestial, soulful, and bloody fracking brilliant might give some indication. There is so much going on here. One can read it for the story alone and come away satisfied. But there is such amazing craft on display that the book rewards a closer reading. In addition to a deft application of mirroring in the experiences of Werner and Marie Laure, Doerr brings a poet’s sense of imagery and magic.

Marie-Laure’s sense of the world is filled with shell, snail, and mollusk experiences and references. Some are simple. During a time of intense stress, she must live like the snails, moment to moment, centimeter to centimeter. In a moment of hopeful reflection, these tiny wet beings straining calcium from the water and spinning it into polished dreams on their backs—it is enough. More than enough. You will find many more scattered about like you-know-what on a beach.
I knew early on that I wanted her to be interested in shells. I'm standing here at the ocean right now. I've always been so interested in both the visual beauty of mollusks and the tactile feel of them. As a kid, I collected them all the time. That really imbued both "The Shell Collector" and Marie with, Why does the natural world bother to be so beautiful? For me, that's really embodied in seashells. I knew early on that I wanted her to find a path to pursue her interest in shells. I think that fits — I hope that fits — with visual impairment, using your fingers to identify them and admire them. - from the Powell’s review
Werner’s snowy white hair alone might stand in for the entirety of the visible spectrum. (although it is described as “a color that is the absence of color.”) The dreaded prospect of being forced to work in the mines in a literally coal-black environment, the very antithesis of light, offers motivation for Werner to find another path, and coal itself offers a balance for that other form of carbon that drives Marie Laure’s father out of Paris, the one that embodies light. While black and white are often used in describing Werner’s environment, the broader spectrum figures large in his descriptions.
Werner liked to crouch in his dormer and imagine radio waves like mile-long harp strings, bending and vibrating over Zollverein, flying through forests, through cities, through walls. At midnight he and Jutta prowl the ionosphere, searching for that lavish, penetrating voice. When they find it, Werner feels as if he has been launched into a different existence, a secret place where great discoveries are possible, where an orphan from a coal town can solve some vital mystery hidden in the physical world.
A nice additional touch is Marie Laure’s reading of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. It permeates the tale as her reading echoes events and tensions in the real world of the story.

Also avian imagery is a frequent, soulful presence. A particularly moving moment is when a damaged character is reminded of a long-lost friend (or maybe a long-remembered fear?) by the presence of a particular bird associated with that friend and the time when they knew each other.

There are substantive issues addressed in this National Book Award finalist. Moral choices must be made about how to respond when darkness seeks to extinguish the light. There are powerful instances in which different characters withdraw into their shells in response to evil, but others in which they rage against the night with their actions. Thoughtful characters question the morality of their actions, as dark-siders plunge into the moral abyss. Sometimes the plunge is steep and immediate, but for others it is made clear that innocence can be corrupted, bit by bit. The major characters, and a few of the secondary ones, are very well drawn. You will most definitely care what happens to them.

As for gripes, few and far between. There is a tendency at times to tell rather than show. Marie Laure may be too good. That’s about it. There are sure to be some who find this story too emotional. I am not among them.

Just as Werner perceives or imagines he perceives an invisible world of radiowaves, All the Light We Cannot See enriches the reader with a spectrum of imagery, of meaning, of feeling. You may need eyes to read the page, ears to hear if listening to an audio version, or sensitive, educated fingers to read a Braille volume (please tell me this book has been published in Braille), but the waves with which Doerr has constructed his masterwork will permeate your reading experience. They may not be entirely apparent to your senses the first time you read this book. They are there. Whether you see, hear or touch them, or miss them entirely, they are there, and they will fill you. All the Light We Cannot See is a dazzling novel. When you read it, you will see.



=============================EXTRA STUFF

November 2, 2023 - Netflix releases the mini-series

Links to the author’s personal, and FB pages

My review of Doerr's 2021 masterpiece, Cloud Cuckoo Land

Definitely check out Doerr’s site. And if you are wondering what he had in mind, specifically, with the title:
It’s a reference first and foremost to all the light we literally cannot see: that is, the wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum that are beyond the ability of human eyes to detect (radio waves, of course, being the most relevant). It’s also a metaphorical suggestion that there are countless invisible stories still buried within World War II — that stories of ordinary children, for example, are a kind of light we do not typically see. Ultimately, the title is intended as a suggestion that we spend too much time focused on only a small slice of the spectrum of possibility. - from Doerr’s site
Interview by Jill Owens for Powell’s

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea for free on Project Gutenberg

Here’s the wiki page for Saint Malo

An interesting article on the damage done to Saint Malo in the 1944 battle

A page on the surrender of Saint Malo, from the site World War II Today

Here is a nice, large panoramic shot of modern Saint Malo, far too wide to include here

Doerr adds a lot to our understanding of the book with his Notes and Highlights commentary here on GR

4/20/15 - Pulitzer prize winners were announced today, and All the Light shines brightest for fiction

6/27/15 - All the Light We Cannot See is awarded the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction

November 2018 = All the Light is among the semi-finalists for GR's Best of the Best Award

January, 2022- Netflix announces that All the Light is being made into a four-part series, starring Mark Ruffalo and Hugh Laurie.
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Reading Progress

June 28, 2014 – Shelved as: to-read
June 28, 2014 – Shelved
November 6, 2014 – Started Reading
November 6, 2014 – Shelved as: books-of-the-year-2014
November 9, 2014 – Finished Reading
November 13, 2014 – Shelved as: all-time-favorites-fiction
June 9, 2018 – Shelved as: fiction
May 5, 2019 – Shelved as: literary-fiction
May 5, 2019 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
May 19, 2023 – Shelved as: world-war-ii

Comments Showing 1-50 of 148 (148 new)


message 1: by Melissa (new)

Melissa Price I cannot wait to read your review, Will. I've been on and off Amazon for days. Putting things in my cart and taking them out unable to decide because I only get one check a month and my Amazon prime expired two days ago so it's been a tough time deciding having to pay shipping costs now and I don't have $35.00 to spend. So it's been tough decision making. Sorry for the TMI, But, seeing your post just hit a frustrated and sad spot. This is one that's been part of the in the cart, save for later, in the cart etc. I'm glad you really enjoyed it and I'm sorry you're sad that you can't refiew it yet :( I'm sure it's going to be as perfect as the rest of your reviews. I Hope you're well.


message 2: by Lily (new)

Lily I can't wait to read your review and thanks for recommending. It sounds like a lovely story.


message 3: by Sue (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sue This is a magnificent review of one of my favorite books of this year and probably of all time. I loved it.


message 4: by Will (last edited Nov 14, 2014 04:19AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks Sue. This one tied with The Enchanted for my favorite new novel of 2014.


Will Byrnes Thanks Bradley. It really is an amazing book.


message 6: by Caroline (last edited Nov 14, 2014 07:25AM) (new) - added it

Caroline A marvellous review, of a book that obviously bowled you over.... and that panoramic shot of Saint Malo is stunning!

And now I have read the article about the damage done to the town in 1944. Horrendous.


Sue Em It's been on my list for a while, but I may have to move it up after your intriguing review.


Kathleen I loved it too!


Lynda Wow, Will. This is a magnificent review to compliment, what I can see is, an amazing book.


Lynda BTW, I voted for The Enchanted in the Goodreads 2014 awards; my favourite novel of this year, and read based on your review. You know how to pick 'em!


message 11: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Lynda. I voted for this one for best historical novel.


message 12: by Jan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Jan Rice I especially loved that panoramic shot, Will.
Another must-read!
P.S. In Words Like Loaded Pistols, that book on rhetoric I read, the author asserts that radio helped make Winston Churchill, as he wasn't that popular in Parliament. And in my ongoing Steven Pinker tome, he argues the transistor radio fueled the '60s "youth revolution" as a foreshadowing of social media that made people feel "as one."


message 13: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes FDR's fireside chats were also significant. Sounds like an interesting read.


message 14: by Jan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Jan Rice Will wrote: "FDR's fireside chats were also significant. Sounds like an interesting read."

Oh, yeah--good point. Thanks.


Linda D Reading this now. ❤️


message 16: by Charlie (new)

Charlie I can't wait to start this! It looks absolutely phenomenal. I enjoyed reading your review.


message 17: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Charlie. You will not be disappointed.


message 18: by Carl (new) - rated it 5 stars

Carl Will,
I just this month read this book and find I am just as enthusiastic as you, meaning I was also inspired to post these following comments and a link to your Goodreads review on my blog, Mycallofstories.com
Thanks

My Favorite Reviewer’s Comments on this book

Will Byrnes is a “friend” on Goodreads, which means I follow his reviews, and I do that because he reads a lot of good books and includes lots of additional material in his reviews.


Hmfogtliwy50 I loved this book. I spent the past year trying to find a book that would move me the way The Goldfinch and Prayer for Owen Meany did. This was it. Your review and analysis were well thought out and expressed. Thank you.


Richard Wonderful review of a mesmerizing and extremely well written book.


message 21: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Rich. This really is a wonderful book.


Steve Now that I've read the book, I can tell how right you are about this one, Will. Funny how that works. Fabulous reviewing, as always, mon ami.


message 23: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Merci, Monsewer


Linda D So excited that this beautiful story won the Pulitzer!


Lauree This is a very thorough, helpful review. I just printed it out to take with me to a book club discussion. I read the whole thing, but this helps me make sense of it in my mind and appreciate it more.


message 26: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Ansbacher Thanks for all the insights, this is a remarkable review. So many of the references in the book are now a lot clearer to me.


Renita D'Silva A beautiful book.


Terry Everett Thanks, Will.


message 29: by Homira (new) - added it

Homira You write the best, most incisive reviews Will.


message 30: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Homira


message 31: by Jean (new) - rated it 5 stars

Jean P Thanks for comprehensive review of a moving and beautifully written book. I put it on my " read again" list. For in the darkness of war, there is often a bit of light to see us through..Excellent book.


message 32: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes TY, Jean


Shivani I've been searching for a good book for a long time. I so happend to pick up this book. And that was the best thing I've ever done! This book is written so elegantly that you feel as if you're a part of this story. Marie Laure is a blind girl from Paris and Werner is an orphan from Germany. Doerr shows that these are two different People who haven't met before. The way that Anthony Doerr writes makes you feel so close to these characters yet you feel so alien to this time period. Towards the end both characters meet for a short time but Doerr makes you feel as if they've known each other before.

I would strongly recommend it to anyone looking for a good book to pick up. out of a scale from 1-10 this book is an 11. Amazing! beautifully woven. As if two different life threads meet and seperate again. It shows how fate brings people together but tears them apart as well. AMAZING LOVED IT!! LITERALLY SPEECHLESS


Annie Romanos Agree with everything you say about this sublime read. Beautiful stuff. My life feels all the more richer for having read this book :-)))


message 35: by Suz (new) - rated it 5 stars

Suz Glad it's a 5, picked it up today for $1, I won't read your review just yet!


Pagethief Excellent review. I read (and loved) this book in May, and am revisiting it again for a book club meeting; your notes were elegant and insightful. Thank you


message 37: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes :-)


Steph Doerr's inspiration for writing the book are so interesting! Thanks for bringing that to my attention. I was recently at a remote cabin in the middle of a corn field with a group of friends, and when some of the group were unable to obtain cell service, the world might well have ended. How little we take in to account the marvel of modern technology and all of those rays of light we cannot see that make magic actually happen.

Learning about the American bombing of Saint-Malo is heartbreaking and fascinating, as well. I loved looking at images of modern day Saint Malo online, too, and marveling at how beautiful it is even if it's all relatively new. I admire the town's commitment to recreating the beauty of their town in the most authentic way possible.
https://schmidtjohnson.wordpress.com


message 39: by Brit (new)

Brit Cheung How surprised! I found this book purely out of a serendipity. I looked through some reviews on some IR stuff and those stuff led me to a few reviewers and the booklist of one of them led me to this book. And when I was checking out its profile and it led me here, to your review, Will .! What made me feel surprised is not that you have reviewed the book and I haven't read it before. It's because after so many twists and turns, it eventually led me here, to you! And its your “all-time-favorate-fiction” ! I am so happy that I found it and so happy that I can share some kinda the same taste you have. It's my great honor,really, to thank you and your reviews out there from the bottom of my heart.
Nice day, Will.:)


message 40: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Brit. This is a wonderful book. You are in for a treat.


message 41: by Mike (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mike An absolutely outstanding review, Will.

You bring so many incredible little extras that enhance your own perspective and take on the novel. It was sheer pleasure to run across and read your review for one of my favortie books.


message 42: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Mike. One of my favorite books as well.


message 43: by Barbara (new) - added it

Barbara Another excellent review Will. I am very anxious to read this book!


message 44: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Barbara. You are in for a treat.


message 45: by Sue (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sue Thexton Bought it at the airport in Boston and before I boarded 3 people had told me what a fantastic book it was. And they weren't wrong. Loved th characters and the sweep of Europe and history.


message 46: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes It really is marvelous


Cecily Gosh, so much love shines from this review, Will; brilliant, like a diamond.

Such a good call about Werner's hair (I noticed all the mentions of its whiteness, obviously, but didn't extrapolate as you have) and the other instances of black and white.

I'm glad to see mention of all the birds, and especially the incident you allude to.


message 48: by Vessey (new) - added it

Vessey ”There may not be words sufficient to exclaim just how magnificent an accomplishment this book is. Amazing, spectacular, incredible, moving, engaging, emotional, gripping, celestial, soulful, and bloody fracking brilliant might give some indication.“

I love it when a book provokes such reaction in the reader. After finding out that Cecily hadn’t liked it all that much I was a bit discouraged (though I still thought I would like it because of the writing), but you make this book sound truly amazing and my hopes are up again. Plus, the writing is more important than the plot anyway. Oh, and your conclusion:

”They are there. Whether you see, hear or touch them, or miss them entirely, they are there, and they will fill you. All the Light We Cannot See is a dazzling novel. When you read it, you will see. “

Will, you have such a passionate, beautiful and tender soul. Thank you so much for this review! It really excited me. :)


Cecily Vessey wrote: "I love it when a book provokes such reaction in the reader. After finding out that Cecily hadn’t liked it all that much I was a bit discouraged (though I still thought I would like it because of the writing)..."

Don't let me put you off! I rated it an objective 4*, but a 3* experience for me, which isn't bad from me, as I'm a harsh marker. The writing is beautiful and I suspect it's more your sort of book than mine anyway.


message 50: by Vessey (new) - added it

Vessey Cecily wrote: "Vessey wrote: "I love it when a book provokes such reaction in the reader. After finding out that Cecily hadn’t liked it all that much I was a bit discouraged (though I still thought I would like i..."

Thanks, Cecily. :) I will read it someday. I think it’s great that you haven’t allowed what you haven’t liked to get away your attention from what you have liked and so you have ended up giving it a good rating. So no, I don’t think you’re a harsh marker. You have even set another, objective rating, undependant on your personal enjoynment. :)


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