Purge

Purge

Paperback
5.03

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Description

An international sensation, Sofi Oksanen’s award-winning novel Purge is a breathtakingly suspenseful tale of two women dogged by their own shameful pasts and the dark, unspoken history that binds them.

When Aliide Truu, an older woman living alone in the Estonian countryside, finds a disheveled girl huddled in her front yard, she suppresses her misgivings and offers her shelter. Zara is a young sex-trafficking victim on the run from her captors, but a photo she carries with her soon makes it clear that her arrival at Aliide’s home is no coincidence. Survivors both, Aliide and Zara engage in a complex arithmetic of suspicion and revelation to distill each other’s motives; gradually, their stories emerge, the culmination of a tragic family drama of rivalry, lust, and loss that played out during the worst years of Estonia’s Soviet occupation.

Sofi Oksanen establishes herself as one the most important voices of her generation with this intricately woven tale, whose stakes are almost unbearably high from the first page to the last. Purge is a fiercely compelling and damning novel about the corrosive effects of shame, and of life in a time and place where to survive is to be implicated.
Main Genre
N/A
Sub Genre
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Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Price
N/A

Posts

2
All
5

Purge is a very impressive book about the tragic history of an Estonian family in the 20th century, which is characterized by war, occupation, violence, betrayal and humiliation. The book begins with an elderly woman in western Estonia finding a young woman in front of her house in the woods in 1992. She is maltreated and abused. It turns out, that she’s the granddaughter of her sister, who grew up in Siberia. But how did it happen that this young woman named Zara shows up so suddenly? And why is Aliide, the elderly woman, so suspicious? What is her dark past? The book quickly caught on for me. In constantly changing perspectives and time jumps between 1936-1951 and 1991/1992, the story of Zara and Aliide is rolled up. What I liked best about the book was the way Oksanen creates an atmosphere when people meet each other. The two women are watching each other and nobody wants to reveal too much of their secrets. Oksanen writes powerful, vivid and ruthless, especially when it comes to sexual violence. No book for the faint-hearted. It appears in the beginning that the roles of good and evil as well as victims and perpetrators are clearly distributed, this impression blurs more and more with the increasing retrospectives. Victims also become perpetrators when the suffering lasts too long. The novel is an adaptation of a stage play by Oksanen. This is quite unusual, but interesting. Oksanen describes a scene like in a play. It serves less as an epic narrative about the history of Estonia in times of oppression. But it is not a women's book, as some write in their reviews. The two protagonists are female, but this is by no means a book written exclusively for a particular gender. Ultimately, it is a book about longings and obsessions that, if not fulfilled, can have a negative impact on a whole family until its demise. Recommended.

5

Purge is a very impressive book about the tragic history of an Estonian family in the 20th century, which is characterized by war, occupation, violence, betrayal and humiliation. The book begins with an elderly woman in western Estonia finding a young woman in front of her house in the woods in 1992. She is maltreated and abused. It turns out, that she’s the granddaughter of her sister, who grew up in Siberia. But how did it happen that this young woman named Zara shows up so suddenly? And why is Aliide, the elderly woman, so suspicious? What is her dark past? The book quickly caught on for me. In constantly changing perspectives and time jumps between 1936-1951 and 1991/1992, the story of Zara and Aliide is rolled up. What I liked best about the book was the way Oksanen creates an atmosphere when people meet each other. The two women are watching each other and nobody wants to reveal too much of their secrets. Oksanen writes powerful, vivid and ruthless, especially when it comes to sexual violence. No book for the faint-hearted. It appears in the beginning that the roles of good and evil as well as victims and perpetrators are clearly distributed, this impression blurs more and more with the increasing retrospectives. Victims also become perpetrators when the suffering lasts too long. The novel is an adaptation of a stage play by Oksanen. This is quite unusual, but interesting. Oksanen describes a scene like in a play. It serves less as an epic narrative about the history of Estonia in times of oppression. But it is not a women's book, as some write in their reviews. The two protagonists are female, but this is by no means a book written exclusively for a particular gender. Ultimately, it is a book about longings and obsessions that, if not fulfilled, can have a negative impact on a whole family until its demise. Recommended.

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