Stones from the River

Stones from the River

Stones from the River

  • Great product!

From the acclaimed author of Floating in My Mother’s Palm and Children and Fire, a stunning story about ordinary people living in extraordinary times—“epic, daring, magnificent, the product of a defining and mesmerizing vision” (Los Angeles Times).

Trudi Montag is a Zwerg—a dwarf—short, undesirable, different, the voice of anyone who has ever tried to fit in. Eventually she learns that being different is a secret that all humans share—from her mother who flees into madness,

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3 thoughts on “Stones from the River”

  1. 190 of 199 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    A magnificent must read, June 30, 2002
    By 
    Lesley West (St James, Western Australia) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Stones from the River (Paperback)
    A friend insisted I buy this book, telling me what a masterpiece it was. I was at first sceptical, and I must confess it did not grab me within the first few chapters as I had hoped that it would. The main character is a dwarf, the child of a mentally ill mother and a father disabled in World War 1, and whereas her life looked as if it would be interesting, if filled with angst, I was confident that this itself would not hold my attention for the whole of the book.
    How wrong I was, becuase it is not Trudi’s life that grabs you, it is the world she is living in – the horror of Germany between the wars. It is difficult to find words to describe how that world changes, with the rise of Adolf Hitler, and the slow and deliberate persecution of the Jews, and the terror of ordinary citizens who barely dared to question what was hapening to their lives. The story becomes shocking, unimaginable and utterly compelling. I also think that it is something that everyone should read, and I like my friend, will recommend it to everyone.
    It is not an easy story to read, and Trudi, the main character is spiky and independent – not always easy to identify with. But is an important book because it also chronicles the life of everyday Germans who were caught up in unspeakable times, and it is with these characters that our sympathies lie.
    I am pleased that I took my friend’s recommendation. Again, not an easy read, but a picture of history that cannot be ignored. It is a truly compelling and magnificent novel.

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  2. 127 of 134 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Amazed at the hostility in these reviews!, November 24, 1998
    By A Customer
    This review is from: Stones from the River (Paperback)
    I usually try to avoid Oprah’s picks for literature. After I finished She’s Come Undone, I unknowingly picked up Stones without realizing that it, too, had Oprah’s stamp of approval. The first few chapters–the ones dealing with Trudi’s mother–bored me and I started to wonder why everything Oprah picked had to do with mental illness of some kind. Once I became engaged in this book, I could not stop reading it. I am amazed when I read other reviews by people who say that this novel is trite or that it’s difficult to care about the characters. Not many Americans could relate the experience of the Nazi regime from the inside. Hegi stunned me as she gave me a clearer insight into World War II Germany (which my high school history classes failed at miserably). This piece works on so many different levels. Trudi’s disability, if that’s the word for it, is an allegory to which almost every other element in the novel can be compared. Stones connects a “biography,” a story of a community, and a compelling account of a horrific time in world history. You don’t have to care about Trudi, but didn’t anyone feel for Alexander or Frau Abramowitz? I’m giving it four stars; Hegi lost my last star for making the first few chapters way too difficult to get through. But this book is definitely rewarding once you get into it.

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  3. 93 of 100 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    “In some people, [fear] brings out the lowest instincts while others become more compassionate.”, July 15, 2006
    By 
    Mary Whipple (New England) –
    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
      
    (COMMUNITY FORUM 04)
      
    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
      

    This review is from: Stones from the River (Paperback)
    Written in 1994, and set in the small (fictional) German town of Burgdorf from 1915 – 1951, this compassionate novel centers on Trudi Montag, a bright, observant, and articulate young woman who is also a zwerg, a dwarf. Born to a mentally ill mother who dies when Trudi is three, Trudi is at first bewildered by her small size, hanging from doorframes to “stretch” her arms and legs, praying that she will become more like other children, and believing that if she is truly good, God will help her.

    Though a circus dwarf once comforts her by describing a fantasyland filled with gold and jewels, where everyone is a zwerg, Trudi finds that real life is not so magical. She is physically and emotionally assaulted, and, as a teenager, watches in horror as the Nazis come to power and assault and later “deport” her Jewish friends, who are now considered “different.” Trudi’s experience of her own “otherness” makes her a sympathetic friend and active supporter of the local Jews, and Hegi evokes great power by connecting the overwhelming Nazi horrors with the life of one small person in one small community. Through Trudi, Burgdorf’s citizens come alive–those who befriend her and those who reject her, those who support her efforts to help the Jews and those who don’t, and those who pity her and those who are inspired by her.

    Throughout the novel, Hegi shows the power of storytelling to influence lives. Trudi works in her father’s pay-library, and she is the community’s best known storyteller, creating entertaining and lively stories that teach lessons, especially during the war years. But Trudi is no Pollyanna–she also uses her storytelling as a weapon against those who offend her, wreaking her own brand of personal vengeance. As the novel evolves, her childhood companions come and go. Some remain stalwart friends, and some change with the times. She matures emotionally, falls in love, and becomes part of the community’s rebuilding after the war.

    Hegi, who lived in Germany until she was eighteen, includes the small details of German life that bring the community and Trudi to life. Her depiction of war-time horrors is honest, and the stories of Trudi’s Jewish friends are heart-breaking in their realism. Despite the sadness inherent in the times, however, Hegi is often lyrical in her celebrations of happiness, and Trudi’s stories are often enchanting. Incorporating universal themes of love and hatred, life and death, strength and weakness, and acceptance and rejection, Hegi creates a novel that is as powerful on its second reading as it is on its first. n Mary Whipple

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