My Rating: 4 Stars
Description: International bestseller White as Milk, Red as Blood, has been called the Italian The Fault in Our Stars.
Leo
is an ordinary sixteen-year-old: he loves hanging out with his friends,
playing soccer, and zipping around on his motorbike. The time he has to
spend at school is a drag, and his teachers are “a protected species
that you hope will become extinct,” so when a new history and philosophy
teacher arrives, Leo greets him with his usual antipathy. But this
young man turns out to be different. His eyes sparkle when he talks, and
he encourages his students to live passionately, and follow their
dreams.
Leo now feels like a lion, as his name suggests, but
there is still one thing that terrifies him: the color white. White is
absence; everything related to deprivation and loss in his life is
white. Red, on the other hand, is the color of love, passion and blood;
red is the color of Beatrice’s hair. Leo's dream is a girl named
Beatrice, the prettiest in school. Beatrice is irresistible - one look
from her is enough to make Leo forget about everything else.
There
is, however, a female presence much closer to Leo, which he finds
harder to see because she’s right under his nose: the ever-dependable
and serene Silvia. When he discovers that Beatrice has leukemia and that
her disease is related to the white that scares him so much, Leo is
forced to search within himself, to bleed and to be reborn. In the
process, he comes to understand that dreams must never die, and he finds
the strength to believe in something bigger than himself.
White
as Milk, Red as Blood is not only a coming-of-age story and the
narrative of a school year, but it is also a bold novel that, through
Leo's monologue - at times easy-going and full of verve, at times more
intimate and anguished - depicts what happens when suffering and shock
burst into the world of a teenager, and the world of adults is rendered
speechless.
My Thoughts: I am always up for a novel that has been translated into English,
both because it helps support the arts from other cultures and because
it allows a glimpse into life outside of the English speaking worldview.
This
book is told solely from the perspective of Leo, a teenage boy who
starts of the book behaving like all the children who made me give up
substitute teaching. And for that reason, I definitely had a hard time
getting into the beginning of the story. However, as the story
progressed and life started to challenge Leo's perceptions, the
personality he had began to change, and this Leo I liked much better.
The
narrative of the novel is a poetic one, with most of the story told in
introspective metaphors. And this introspection was what drew me to the
later part of the story, despite the fact that I usually do not care for
poetic narratives. However, while being beautiful analogies, many of
the metaphors rely on sound or look alike words. And since this book was
translated from Italian, those words no longer look or sound the same.
Unfortunately, there was likely a lot that was lost in the translation
simply because of the way the author used language to tell his story the
first time and not by fault of the translator.
In the
end, this book may take some getting used to. The reader needs to be
alright with a poetic narrative which does not hold up as well in
English. As well as overlook how well the adults in the story recognize
Leo's teenage angst for what it is-- a cry for help as he struggles to
understand a world that is no longer as simple and colorful as he
thought it was, and how easily he accepts their attempts to help him.
I
did enjoyed it by the end and would be interested in reading other
translated works of D'Avenia's, should any of those be made.
I have provided an honest review after having received a copy of the book through the Fiction Guild.
This sounds like a beautifully written story despite the potential losses through its translation. I love reading books from other countries and cultures too so will give it a closer look. Thanks so much for sharing your review :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you Stephanie! It is a really well told story.
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