People of the Book

Paperback, 448 pages

Published April 7, 2008 by Penguin Books.

ISBN:
978-0-14-311454-3
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3 stars (1 review)

From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of March, the journey of a rare illuminated manuscript through centuries of exile and war. In 1996, Hanna Heath, an Australian rare-book expert, is offered the job of a lifetime: analysis and conservation of the famed Sarajevo Haggadah, which has been rescued from Serb shelling during the Bosnian war. Priceless and beautiful, the book is one of the earliest Jewish volumes ever to be illuminated with images. When Hanna, a caustic loner with a passion for her work, discovers a series of tiny artifacts in its ancient binding—an insect wing fragment, wine stains, salt crystals, a white hair—she begins to unlock the book's mysteries. The reader is ushered into an exquisitely detailed and atmospheric past, tracing the book's journey from its salvation back to its creation.In Bosnia during World War II, a Muslim risks his life to protect it from the Nazis. In the hedonistic …

13 editions

meh

3 stars

Oof. I liked a lot about this! It also drove me nuts in ways I haven’t worked out but part of it is captured by the voice in the book that praises a future where we’re all beautiful mutts, and just, fuck you, lady. A vision of a future where different races and ethnicities have children together so we’re all amorphously raced is not the happy vision the book’s liberal voice thinks it is. I didn’t like March much either, fwiw.