Reader Score
79%
79% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 6 reviews on
Battling numbing cold, ever-present hunger, and German soldiers determined to hunt them down, four dozen resistance fighters--escapees from a nearby ghetto--hide in a Ukrainian forest, determined to survive the war, sabotage the German war effort, and rescue as many Jews as they can from the trains taking them to concentration camps. Their leader is relentless in his efforts to turn his ragtag band of men and boys into a disciplined force that accomplishes its goals without losing its moral compass. And so when they're not raiding peasants' homes for food and supplies, or training with the weapons taken from the soldiers they have ambushed and killed, the partisans read books of faith and philosophy that they have rescued from abandoned Jewish homes, and they draw strength from the women, the elderly, and the remarkably resilient orphaned children they are protecting. When they hear about the advances being made by the Soviet Army, the partisans prepare for what they know will be a furious attack on their compound by the retreating Germans. In the heartbreaking aftermath, the survivors emerge from the forest to bury their dead, care for their wounded, and grimly confront a world that is surprised by their existence--and profoundly unwelcoming.
Narrated by seventeen-year-old Edmund--a member of the group who maintains his own inner resolve with memories of his parents and their life before the war--this powerful story of Jews who fought back is suffused with the riveting detail that Aharon Appelfeld was uniquely able to bring to his award-winning novels.
"Surviving the horrors of the Holocaust, Appelfeld suggests with characteristic terseness, entails more than simply the fight to keep breathing . . . The partisans make it their goal not only to preserve their past, but also to secure their future by rescuing as many Jews as possible. Their struggle is a moving one."
--Jordana Horn, The New York Times Book Review
"Appelfeld constructs his characters with a sensitive grace and humanistic depth; they are luminous concoctions, awhirl with mysteries and passions, at once sentimental and tragic . . . To the Edge of Sorrow is ultimately a work of neat, almost hermetic resonances."
--Tablet Magazine
"To the Edge of Sorrow, in Stuart Schoffman's lively and masterful translation, is certainly among Aharon Appelfeld's top three novels . . . Discuss it, dear reader, among the many selves you will discover in yourself as you read this important work."
--Hadassah
"In sharp yet affectless language, Aharon Appelfeld, one of Israel's most honored novelists, has created a created a group of brave, loyal, generous, and intellectually disputatious Jewish partisans."
--New York Journal of Books
"In this spirited novel set in Ukraine near the end of World War II, Appelfeld describes the daily hardships and travails of a band of Jewish resistance fighters in near-reportorial detail. A powerful tale of lives lived amid the duress and horrors of war that is unflinching in its authenticity."
--Publishers Weekly
"To the Edge of Sorrow is immediately recognizable as Appelfeld's, through its spare, eerily understated approach, which records atrocities from a grim remove. Unlike many of the brilliantly allusive author's other novels, this one makes explicit reference to the Holocaust, but there's still a dreamlike quality at work . . . The story moves toward its climax with the usual disquieting force. Another haunting and heartbreaking tale of the Holocaust from one who survived it."
--Kirkus Reviews (starred)