Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Review: A Complicated Kindness


Nomi Nickel feels trapped in her small, Mennonite Manitoba town. East Village, Manitoba, combines strict religiosity with all of the career opportunities inherent in a chicken-rendering plant, and has brought nothing but strife to Nomi and her family. At the book's start Nomi's mother and sister have already run off, escaping the strictures of East Village. Nomi spends much of her time dreaming about reuniting with her mother and sister, reminiscing about the past, and trying to escape the strictures of East Village. Toewes does a brilliant job of narrating as Nomi, a troubled teenager. Much of Nomi's resistance seems to come from her perverse sense of humor, which sometimes distracts the reader from just how tragic her situation is. Nomi's is a world with few opportunities and no real solutions, and the novel is certainly a cautionary statement on the dangers of ideology without thought.

Miriam Toews, A Complicated Kindness (Counterpoint, 2005) ISBN: 1582433224

1 comment:

Hannah Stoneham said...

This sounds like a fascinating read - although maybe a hard one to deal with?

Interesting post - thanks for sharing

Hannah