
The Element of Water
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Narrated by:
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Julia Winwood
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By:
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Stevie Davies
About this listen
In pre-war Germany, two boys grow up together inseparable. However, as adulthood approaches and Nazism continues its inexorable march, Dahl and Quantz can no longer reconcile their childhood friendship as one becomes an SS officer and the other a pawn in the intelligence unit. Thirteen years later, their children meet: a woman and a man exposed to the sins of their fathers.
©2001 Stevie Davies (P)2020 Audible, LtdReading this novel, I often returned to ask myself the same question - who is setting the good example to whom? The occupiers or the occupied? Teaching staff to pupils? Haven’t we all at some point sat on the fence, turned a blind eye to something that is fundamentally wrong when we feel the need for self preservation? ‘It wasn’t my fault... it was the times’ fault...’ ‘Where madness is normal... what ordinary person can see through it and stand against it?’
At its heart, this radical novel centres on the meeting of Isolde, child of a German refugee mother and a Nazi perpetrator, and Wolfi, son of a German officer of the Abwehr. Davies portrays the relationships of the younger generation: the effect on their characters of the traumatised or duplicitous silences of their parents. Never have I come across such beautiful, powerful, tender and moving narrative: see especially chapters 11 and 12. This gem is ultimately a tale of love and loss, fear, shame and hate - but most of all hope. Hope that it’s possible to move on and recover, that beautiful things can emerge from the worst of times.
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Julia Winwood narrates this exceptionally well. A first class performance, I was thoroughly absorbed.
Seamless dual timeless, a stunning historical WW2 era novel.
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