Barnes & Noble Guide to New Fiction
First published in Holland in 1997, this "compulsively readable" and "erudite" epic novel weaves a very human story about man's constant drive from the Old World to the New - and his desire, despite everything, for home and homeland. "Fascinating, complex, and challenging - Moring is an extraordinarily gifted writer," and "the rightful heir to Garcia Marquez." But some reviewers "needed Cliff Notes" to understand this one.
Boston Globe
Ingenious storytelling..resonant..entertaining...Marcel Moring and his protaganist Nathan are such skillful and prolific storytellers that fact, fiction, and fairy tale blur together, pleasurably...(a splendidly accomplished novel.
Die Welt
With this novel, Moring has finally joined the ranks of the most important European writers of his generation.
Independent
Ambitious... In Babylon opens with the epithet: “Trees have roots. Jew have legs.” It jumps all over four centuries of those legs journeying along “the roads” that, as Magnus says, “are all the same and lead to each other”. It is Marcel Moring's achievement that he has rendered this profusion of trails from the Old to the New World so diverse, so divergent and so divinely — or diabolically — funny.
NRC Handel
Mysterious, magical and full of suspense, one of the mostsingular and extraordinary reading experiences I have ever had.
Times Literary Supplement
A moving and convincing testimony to the continuing tension between the desire for assimilation and the awareness of seperateness...Marcel Moring is beyond doubt one of the most imaginative and perceptive novelists writing today.
Publishers Weekly
- Publisher's Weekly
The arc of this grand, engrossing novel spans four centuries and two continents. Trapped by "the winter to end all winters" in an isolated house in the country, Nathan Hollander, a 60-year-old Dutch fairy-tale writer, and his niece, Nina, the last of the Hollanders, delve deep into their family history. In order to claim the house, left to him by his uncle Herman, a famed sociologist who died in the arms of a prostitute, Nathan was required to compose a biography of the dedeased; now that the project is nearly complete, Nathan has "allowed" himself to revisit the home where he spent much of his youth. After arriving in a ferocious snowstorm, Nathan and Nina must combat not only the fierce cold but also the mysterious work of some hostile force. To relieve the grimness of their plight, Nathan shares Herman's biography--which he describes as "more of a family chronicle"--with Nina, so she can learn the history of the clan from which she was long estranged. As the two uncover the house's mysteries, Nina learns of Chaim and Magnus, ancestral ghosts who have visited Nathan for 50 years; of the family profession: clock making; of their migration from Poland to Holland in the 17th century, where they took on their adopted country's name; of their flight to America during WWII and their return to Holland; of Nathan's brother and Nina's father, Zeno, a "20th-century prophet" who disappeared 30 years earlier. Moring's prose is fluid and erudite, and the transitions between the many eras masterfully achieved; only occasionally does the narrative linger too long in the past or a philosophical discussion (sometimes related via a fairy tale) impede the flow of the text. As historically instructive as it is suspenseful, this is an impressive, accomplished tale of a perennially uprooted family and its last remaining members seeking their home in an inhospitable world. (Apr.) FYI: M ring is a bestseller in the Netherlands, where this book was first published in 1997. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
Library Journal
The death (by call girl) of 80-year-old scholar Herman Hollander brings together Nathan Hollander and his niece Nina to muse upon the family's tangled history as clockmakers and eventually refugees of 1940s Eastern Europe. Not your traditional "making it in America" story, this ambitious novel refracts its themes of displacement and regret through the characters of Herman and his brother Emmanuel, witnesses to the development of the atomic bomb, and Zeno, a child prodigy turned underground cult leader. Also thrown into the mix are portraits of the Hollanders' family life, courtships, and ancestral visitations, bookended by a freak snowstorm confining Nathan and Nina to Uncle Herman's mansion and setting these tales in motion. M ring's story wears its "epic" garments lightly, with many appealing personalities and much humorous dialog nicely captured through Knecht's translation, but there's too much territory to be covered, and the reader will be left wondering how exactly all of this ties together. An imperfect but amiable enough novel that was a great success in the author's native Holland. For larger libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/99.]--Marc A. Kloszewski, Indiana Free Lib., PA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\