Girl at war A novel

Sara Nović, 1987-

Book - 2015

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Novic Sara
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Novic Sara Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Published
New York : Random House [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Sara Nović, 1987- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
320 pages : illustration ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780812996340
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

SPINSTER: Making a Life of One's Own, by Kate Bolick. (Broadway, $16.) The author examines her lifelong quest for independence, weaving in the stories of female writers whose lives inspired her along the way. In their quests for solitude, Boiick and her heroines find pleasure in the alternatives to a familiar sequence: "You are born, you grow up, you become a wife." MY STRUGGLE: BOOK 4, by Karl Ove Knausgaard. Translated by Don Bartlett. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $16.) The fourth volume of Knausgaard's six-part autobiographical novel finds 18-year-old Karl Ove newly arrived in a remote Norwegian village to teach and hone his writing. The narrative follows him as he works toward adulthood, with digressive ruminations on his adolescence, hopes for a girlfriend and youthful ambition. AMERICAN WARLORD: A True Story, by Johnny Dwyer. (Vintage, $17.) Dwyer tells the story of Chucky Taylor, the son of Charles Taylor, the former Liberian leader whose legacy of violence still scars the country. Chucky was largely neglected by his parents during his childhood in Orlando, but after a visit to Liberia in the 1990s, he joined the cycle of violence and torture there, and killed for sport during the civil war. THE UNFORTUNATES, by Sophie McManus. (Picador/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $16.) CeCe, the aging heir to a rubber fortune, is sent away to a sanitarium by her son and enrolled in an experimental drug trial, leaving him free to pour the family's wealth into a comically disastrous opera. For all the trappings of a familiar WASP story, CeCe's unexpected generosity and wit give this debut novel "its remarkable maturity and heft," Britt Peterson wrote here. THE MILLIONAIRE AND THE BARD: Henry Folger's Obsessive Hunt for Shakespeare's First Folio, by Andrea E. Mays. (Simon & Schuster, $16.) Mays, a historian, traces one wealthy American's impassioned quest to purchase as many copies of the First Folio, the crucial collection of Shakespeare's plays published in 1623, as he could. Over his lifetime, Folger amassed a holding of more than twice the number of the copies known to exist in England. GIRL AT WAR, by Sara Novic. (Random House, $16.) Ana Juric, this novel's protagonist, was 10 years old when the violent breakup of Yugoslavia reached her hometown, Croatia's capital. The ensuing horrors, on both a national and personal level - Ana's parents were killed, and she was conscripted as a child soldier - leave her as the "sole repository of family memory," Anthony Marra wrote here. THE AGE OF ACQUIESCENCE: The Life and Death of American Resistance to Organized Wealth and Power, by Steve Fraser. (Basic Books, $18.99.) The current economic chasm in American society amounts to what Fraser sees as a reprisal of the Gilded Age, with a difference: 200 years ago, inequality mobilized citizens to protest, while today that impulse has stalled. Fraser investigates why.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 3, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Novic's important debut brings painfully home the jarring fact that what appears in today's headlines on a daily basis the atrocities of wars in Africa and the Mideast is neither new nor even particularly the worst that humankind can commit. Take it from 10-year-old Ana Juric, conscripted into the Yugoslav civil war in the early 1990s by the bad luck of simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time. She is able to calm herself by going through the motions of loading and reloading a munitions magazine. And she's one of the so-called lucky ones who survived and who was, by the grace of UN peacekeepers, delivered from her nightmarish homeland to the safety of an adoptive American family. However, as Novic gradually reveals, you can take the girl out of the war zone, but you can't take the war zone out of the girl. By the time Ana becomes a student at a New York university, all that violence has been bottled up inside her head for a decade. Thanks to Novic's considerable skill, Ana's return visit to her homeland and her past is nearly as cathartic for the reader as it is for Ana.--Chavez, Donna Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Novic lived in Zagreb at the beginning of the civil war in Croatia between Croats and Serbs in the 1990s, and she has based her debut novel on this experience. We first meet her protagonist, Ana, as an ordinary, happy girl, living with her parents and baby sister in a small apartment and riding bikes with her friend Luka through the city. Soon enough, however, people begin to disappear, bombs begin to fall, and the children are plotting their bike routes around traumatized refugees and homemade explosives. The climax of the book comes early, when Ana's family takes a fateful journey to Sarajevo to bring Ana's little sister, Rahela, who is suffering from kidney failure, into the hands of an organization that will send her to the United States for treatment. The story swings back and forth from past to present, tracking young Ana's survival in a war zone that defies comprehension. Dreamy sequences of her time in a safe house reloading guns and of desperate escapes with friends and strangers alike alternate with more recent scenes of Ana in New York City, sleepwalking through her existence in a place she does not feel she really belongs. This is a fine, sensitive novel, though the later scenes in Manhattan never reach the soaring heights of the sections set in wartime Croatia. Novic displays her talent, heightening the anticipation of what she will do next. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

We know the broad outlines of the terrible shattering of the Balkans in the early 1990s, but the essence of war is in the details, and Croatian-born Novic''s debut novel delivers a finely honed sense of what the bloodshed really meant for those who withstood it. Ana Juric', who's been blithely chasing around Zagreb with best friend Luka, gets a taste of what's to come when she goes to buy cigarettes for her godfather and is asked nastily whether she wants the Serbian or Croatian brand. Even as the fighting breaks out, Ana's little sister becomes so ill that the family must risk a trip to Sarajevo. Rahela is sent to America for treatment, but the rest of her family doesn't fare well on the trip home, and we next see Ana as a college student in New York. Adopted by the couple who also took in Rahela, Ana powerfully resists discussing a past that includes a bone-jarring turn as a child soldier, as revealed in flashback. Finally, Ana returns to Croatia, uncertain what she wants and uncertain in what she finds. VERDICT Novic's heartbreaking book is all the more effective for its use of personal rather than sensational detail and will be embraced by a wide range of readers. [See Prepub Alert, 10/13/14.]--Barbara -Hoffert, Library Journal © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Understated, self-assured roman clef of a young girl's coming of age in war-torn Croatia.In this promising debut, Novic tells the story of 10-year-old Ana, for whom "the war in Zagreb began over a pack of cigarettes": sent to fetch smokes for an indulgent godfather, she returns puzzling over the shopkeeper's query whether she wants Serbian or Croatian. A cigarette is a cigarette is a cigarette, until it's not. Then, like everything else, a packet of Filter 160s takes on the powers of shibboleth, something Ana and her best friend, Luka, have to learn, these distinctions not being inborn no matter what the nationalists insist. And imagine what happens, as Ana does, in neighboring Bosnia, "a confusing third category," where people used both the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets and probably smoked a third kind of tobacco. The war moves from abstraction to bitter reality soon enough, and Ana finds herself in a swirl of rumor ("Have you heard? The president exploded right at his desk!") and motion, whisked across the continent and thence to America, where time passes and Ana finds herself explaining the world to uncomprehending young people: "I told him about Rahela's illness and MediMission and Sarajevo. About the roadblock and the forest and how I'd escaped.When I finished, Brian was still holding my hand, but he didn't say anything." The tutelary spirits of W.G. Sebald (whom the aforementioned Brian deems "a bit of a German apologist") and Rebecca West hover over the proceedings, and just as West once lamented that everyone she knew in the Balkans of the 1930s was dead by the 1950s, Ana assigns herself the scarifying task of sorting through the rubble of her homeland and reclaiming what can be saved of itand of herself. Elegiac, and understandably if unrelievedly so, with a matter-of-factness about death and uprootedness. A promising start. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

I They Both Fell 1 The war in Zagreb began over a pack of cigarettes. There had been tensions beforehand, rumors of disturbances in other towns whispered above my head, but no explosions, nothing outright. Caught between the mountains, Zagreb sweltered in the summer, and most people abandoned the city for the coast during the hottest months. For as long as I could remember my family had vacationed with my godparents in a fishing village down south. But the Serbs had blocked the roads to the sea, at least that's what everyone was saying, so for the first time in my life we spent the summer inland. Everything in the city was clammy, doorknobs and train handrails slick with other people's sweat, the air heavy with the smell of yesterday's lunch. We took cold showers and walked around the flat in our underwear. Under the run of cool water I imagined my skin sizzling, steam rising from it. At night we lay atop our sheets, awaiting fitful sleep and fever dreams. I turned ten in the last week of August, a celebration marked by a soggy cake and eclipsed by heat and disquiet. My parents invited their best friends--my godparents, Petar and Marina--over for dinner that weekend. The house where we usually stayed the summers belonged to Petar's grandfather. My mother's break from teaching allowed us three months of vacation--my father taking a train, meeting us later--and the five of us would live there together on the cliffs along the Adriatic. Now that we were landlocked, the weekend dinners had become an anxious charade of normalcy. Before Petar and Marina arrived I argued with my mother about putting on clothes. "You're not an animal, Ana. You'll wear shorts to dinner or you'll get nothing." "In Tiska I only wear my swimsuit bottoms anyway," I said, but my mother gave me a look and I got dressed. That night the adults were engaging in their regular debate about exactly how long they'd known each other. They had been friends since before they were my age, they liked to say, no matter how old I was, and after the better part of an hour and a bottle of FeraVino they'd usually leave it at that. Petar and Marina had no children for me to play with, so I sat at the table holding my baby sister and listening to them vie for the farthest-reaching memory. Rahela was only eight months old and had never seen the coast, so I talked to her about the sea and our little boat, and she smiled when I made fish faces at her. After we ate, Petar called me over and handed me a fistful of dinar. "Let's see if you can beat your record," he said. It was a game between us--I would run to the store to buy his cigarettes and he would time me. If I beat my record he'd let me keep a few dinar from the change. I stuffed the money in the pocket of my cutoffs and took off down the nine flights of stairs. I was sure I was about to set a new record. I'd perfected my route, knew when to hug the curves around buildings and avoid the bumps in the side streets. I passed the house with the big orange beware of dog sign (though no dog ever lived there that I could remember), jumped over a set of cement steps, and veered away from the dumpsters. Under a concrete archway that always smelled like piss, I held my breath and sped into the open city. I skirted the biggest pothole in front of the bar frequented by the daytime drinkers, slowing only slightly as I came upon the old man at his folding table hawking stolen chocolates. The newsstand kiosk's red awning shifted in a rare breeze, signaling me like a finish line flag. I put my elbows on the counter to get the clerk's attention. Mr. Petrović knew me and knew what I wanted, but today his smile looked more like a smirk. "Do you want Serbian cigarettes or Croatian ones?" The way he stressed the two nationalities sounded unnatural. I had heard people on the news talking about Serbs and Croats this way because of the fighting in the villages, but no one had ever said anything to me directly. And I didn't want to buy the wrong kind of cigarettes. "Can I have the ones I always get, please?" "Serbian or Croatian?" "You know. The gold wrapper?" I tried to see around his bulk, pointing to the shelf behind him. But he just laughed and waved to another customer, who sneered at me. "Hey!" I tried to get the clerk's attention back. He ignored me and made change for the next man in line. I'd already lost the game, but I ran home as fast as I could anyway. "Mr. Petrović wanted me to pick Serbian or Croatian cigarettes," I told Petar. "I didn't know the answer and he wouldn't give me any. I'm sorry." My parents exchanged looks and Petar motioned for me to sit on his lap. He was tall--taller than my father--and flushed from the heat and wine. I climbed up on his wide thigh. "It's okay," he said, patting his stomach. "I'm too full for cigarettes anyway." I pulled the money from my shorts and relinquished it. He pressed a few dinar coins into my palm. "But I didn't win." "Yes," he said. "But today that's not your fault." That night my father came into the living room, where I slept, and sat down on the bench of the old upright piano. We'd inherited the piano from an aunt of Petar's--he and Marina didn't have space for it--but we couldn't afford to have it tuned, and the first octave was so flat all the keys gave out the same tired tone. I heard my father pressing the foot pedals down in rhythm with the habitual nervous jiggle of his leg, but he didn't touch the keys. After a while he got up and came to sit on the armrest of the couch, where I lay. Soon we were going to buy a mattress. "Ana? You awake?" I tried to open my eyes, felt them flitting beneath the lids. "Awake," I managed. "Filter 160s. They're Croatian. So you know for next time." "Filter 160s," I said, committing it to memory. My father kissed my forehead and said good night, but I felt him in the doorway moments later, his body blocking out the kitchen lamplight. "If I'd been there," he whispered, but I wasn't sure he was talking to me so I stayed quiet and he didn't say anything else. In the morning Milošević was on TV giving a speech, and when I saw him, I laughed. He had big ears and a fat red face, jowls sagging like a dejected bulldog. His accent was nasal, nothing like the gentle, throaty voice of my father. Looking angry, he hammered his fist in rhythm with his speech. He was saying something about cleansing the land, repeating it over and over. I had no idea what he was talking about, but as he spoke and pounded he got redder and redder. So I laughed, and my mother poked her head around the corner to see what was so funny. "Turn that off." I felt my cheeks go hot, thinking she was mad at me for laughing at what must have been an important speech. But her face softened quickly. "Go play," she said. "Bet Luka's already beat you to the Trg." My best friend, Luka, and I spent the summer biking around the town square and meeting our classmates for pickup football games. We were freckled and tan and perpetually grass-stained, and now that we were down to just a few weeks of freedom before the start of school we met even earlier and stayed out later, determined not to let any vacation go to waste. I found him along our regular bike route. We cycled side by side, Luka occasionally swinging his front tire into mine so that we'd nearly crash. It was a favorite joke of his and he laughed the whole way, but I was still thinking about Petrović. In school we'd been taught to ignore distinguishing ethnic factors, though it was easy enough to discern someone's ancestry by their last name. Instead we were trained to regurgitate pan-Slavic slogans: "Bratstvo i Jedinstvo!" Brotherhood and Unity. But now it seemed the differences between us might be important after all. Luka's family was originally from Bosnia, a mixed state, a confusing third category. Serbs wrote in Cyrillic and Croats in the Latin alphabet, but in Bosnia they used both, the spoken differences even more minute. I wondered if there was a special brand of Bosnian cigarettes, too, and whether Luka's father smoked those. When we arrived in the Trg it was crowded and I could tell something was wrong. In light of this new Serb-Croat divide, everything--including the statue of Ban Jelačić, sword drawn--now seemed a clue to the tensions I hadn't seen coming. During World War II the ban's sword was aimed toward the Hungarians in a defensive gesture, but afterward the Communists had removed the statue in a neutralization of nationalistic symbols. Luka and I had watched when, after the last elections, men with ropes and heavy machinery returned Jelačić to his post. Now he was facing south, toward Belgrade. The Trg had always been a popular meeting place, but today people were swarming around the base of the statue looking frantic, milling through a snarl of trucks and tractors parked right in the cobblestoned Trg, where, on normal days, cars weren't even allowed to drive. Baggage, shipping crates, and an assortment of free-floating housewares brimmed over the backs of flatbeds and were splayed across the square. I thought of the gypsy camp my parents and I once passed while driving to visit my grandparents' graves in Čakovec, caravans of wagons and trailers housing mysterious instruments and stolen children. "They'll pour acid in your eyes," my mother warned when I wiggled in the pew while my father lit candles and prayed for his parents. "Little blind beggars earn three times as much as ones who can see." I held her hand and was quiet for the rest of the day. Luka and I dismounted our bikes and moved cautiously toward the mass of people and their belongings. But there were no bonfires or circus sideshows; there was no music--these were not the migrant people I'd seen on the outskirts of the northern villages. The settlement was made almost entirely out of string. Ropes, twine, shoelaces, and strips of fabric of various thicknesses were strung from cars to tractors to piles of luggage in an elaborate tangle. The strings supported the sheets and blankets and bigger articles of clothing that served as makeshift tents. Luka and I stared alternately at each other and at the strangers, not knowing the words for what we were seeing, but understanding that it wasn't good. Candles circled the perimeter of the encampment, melting next to boxes on which someone had written "Contributions for the Refugees." Most people who passed added something to a box, some emptying their pockets. "Who are they?" I whispered. "I don't know," Luka said. "Should we give them something?" I took Petar's dinar from my pocket and gave them to Luka, afraid to get too close myself. Luka had a few coins, too, and I held his bike while he put them in the box. As he leaned in I panicked, worrying that the city of string would swallow him up like the vines that come alive in horror movies. When he turned around I shoved his handlebars at him and he stumbled backward. As we rode away I felt my stomach twist into a knot I would only years later learn to call survivor's guilt. My classmates and I often met for football matches on the east side of the park, where the grass had fewer lumps. I was the only girl who played football, but sometimes other girls would come down to the field to jump rope and gossip. "Why do you dress like a boy?" a pigtailed girl asked me once. "It's easier to play football in pants," I told her. The real reason was that they were my neighbor's clothes and we couldn't afford anything else. We began collecting stories. They started out with strings of complex relationships--my best friend's second cousin, my uncle's boss--and whoever kicked the ball between improvised (and ever-negotiable) goal markers got to tell their story first. An unspoken contest of gore developed, honoring whoever could more creatively describe the blown-out brains of their distant acquaintances. Stjepan's cousins had seen a mine explode a kid's leg, little bits of skin clinging to grooves in the sidewalk for a week afterward. Tomislav had heard of a boy who was shot in the eye by a sniper in Zagora; his eyeball had turned to liquid like a runny egg right there in front of everyone. At home my mother paced the kitchen talking on the phone to friends in other towns, then hung out the window, passing the news to the next apartment building over. I stood close while she discussed the mounting tensions on the banks of the Danube with the women on the other side of the clothesline, absorbing as much as I could before running off to find my friends. A citywide spy network, we passed on any information we overheard, relaying stories of victims whose links to us were becoming less and less remote. On the first day of school, our teacher took attendance and found one of our classmates missing. "Anyone hear from Zlatko?" she said. "Maybe he went back to Serbia, where he belongs," said Mate, a boy I'd always found obnoxious. A few people snickered and our teacher shushed them. Beside me, Stjepan raised his hand. "He moved," Stjepan said. "Moved?" Our teacher flipped through some papers on her clipboard. "Are you sure?" "He lived in my building. Two nights ago I saw his family carrying big suitcases out to a truck. He said they had to leave before the air raids started. He said to tell everyone goodbye." The class erupted into high-strung chatter at this news: "What's an air raid?" "Who will be our goalie now?" "Good riddance to him!" "Shut up, Mate," I said. "Enough!" said our teacher. We quieted. An air raid, she explained, was when planes flew over cities and tried to knock buildings down with bombs. She drew chalky maps denoting shelters, listed the necessities our families should bring underground with us: AM radio, water jug, flashlight, batteries for the flashlight. I didn't understand whose planes wanted what buildings to explode, or how to tell a regular plane from a bad one, though I was happy for the reprieve from regular lessons. But soon she began to swipe at the board, inciting an angry cloud of eraser dust. She let out a sigh as if she were impatient with air raids, brushing the settling chalk away from the pleats in her skirt. We moved on to long division, and were not offered a time for asking questions. Excerpted from Girl at War by Sara Novic All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.