What is the strangest book you’ve ever read? Lincoln in the Bardo is definitely going on that list for me. This was one of the most unique books I’ve ever read. This was the January pick for the Rogue (FLICKS) Book and Movie Club, and it provides for some good discussion.
In February 1862, Abraham
and Mary Lincoln’s eleven-year-old son, Willie, died of typhoid. The loss of their son affected both
greatly. It was said that Abraham
Lincoln would visit Willie in his crypt and would hold his dead body. From this historical snippet, Saunders have crafted
a great tale that takes place over the first night that Willie is entombed, and
Lincoln has come to visit. The graveyard is full of souls that are stuck
between life and the afterlife. The
three main souls are Roger Bevins III, a man who committed suicide, Hans
Vollman, a man who died when a beam hit him on the night he was going to
consummate his marriage with his young wife, and the Reverend Everly Thomas, a
pastor who was afraid of going to hell and is stuck in the in between.
This book is hard to
describe. I read through it
quickly. It was brief snippets of
stories told from the various ghosts.
There are over 100 different characters in the book. You learn about their pasts as well as the
current happenings in the cemetery. There
are also chapters that have the history of what was going on at that time. Some of these snippets are real history from
books, and some are made up. What I
found amusing about them is different people remembered different things – the color
of someone’s eyes was different depending on the narrator or there was a moon in
the sky or not also depending on the narrator.
I enjoyed the unique way
this story was put together as it is always fun to read something completely
different at times. It also made me
puzzle over life and death during the time that my own grandmother was
dying. The people in the in-between
seemed to be caught there as there was something in the real world that they just
couldn’t let go. It could be their wife,
or daughters, or something that had been undone. The pastor was afraid that he would go to
hell from what he saw at the end, although he couldn’t think of what he had
done wrong. After they were able to let
go, they passed on to the afterlife. It
also made me think about the great love that Lincoln had for his son, and the
great loss. I also thought about the so
many parents of that time who were losing their children during the civil war. It was a thoughtful novel.
Favorite Quotes:
“I have grown comfortable
having these Dead for company, and find them agreeable companions, over there
in their Soil & cold stones Houses.”
“Strange, isn’t it? To have dedicated one’s life to a certain
venture, neglecting other aspects of one’s life only to have that venture, in
the end, amount to nothing at all, the products of one’s labors utterly
forgotten?”
Book Source: Birthday gift from my friend Jen.
100 characters wasn’t it a bit crowded - to follow I mean.
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