In assigning a 5-star rating to The Snow Child, I am reminded of
In assigning a 5-star rating to The Snow Child, I am reminded of something I recently learned about the ranks of general officers in our armed forces. The 5-star rank, "General of the Army," is not at the top. There is a 6-star rank, held without controversy by only one man, George Washington, who performed his duties with no supervision at all. The B and N 5-star rating corresponds with the word, "exceptional," and I consider Eowyn's book better than exceptional. Many books are exceptional. Many people are and have been exceptional. I am, in some quarters, considered exceptional, but I have done nothing that is as good as this book. I do not give it 6 stars; it is not the greatest book ever written. It cannot be realistically compared with the Iliad or the Odyssey. It cannot, in the broad sense of the arts, be placed on a plane with Michelangelo's sculptures, "David" or his "Pieta." I can best compare it with Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea. Thus, I say it rates five-and-a-half stars; it is "exceptional plus." The most common adjective I have seen in reviews of this work is "perfect." That is a pretty high compliment, and I wish to add "flawless" to the mix. One example: We do not know the last name of Mabel and Jack because, if we did, they would be less like "everyman," and we would be just a little less able to identify with them. Nearly innumerable touches like this one combine to make this book perfect, but the main reason it is perfect is that Eowyn always goes the right way in her unpredictable twists and turns of the plot. At the same time, he flow is smooth, and her syntax is seamless; I feel almost like I am receiving her artfulness and meaning without the intermediary of words. The most common comment I have found in reading reviews is "I couldn't put it down," and the next most common is "I didn't want it to end." Readers are putting off finishing it because they don't want it to be over. Why? Mainly because one doesn't want to leave their new friends, Mabel and Jack, who, like their environment, are created with such richness, such attention to detail, and such insight, wisdom, and brilliance that I marvel at her grasp of meaning and significance and profundity. In reading her book, I have become a virtual component of it, a character who just stands around and observes. I have only re-read 3 books in my life, and I have never wanted to re-read any of them immediately, as was the case with The Snow Child. I have now restarted it and have already been close to tears, particularly in reading ahead into the Epilogue (and I am no blubberer). The main criticism I have heard is the opinion that the mystical element, which is strong, does not endure to the end, with which I most heartily beg to disagree. (Do not read further if you do not wish to know the ending yet.) Yes, Faina becomes human enough to bear a child and love a husband and foster parents Mabel and Jack, and she must in some sense die in order to bring closure to Mabel's failure to grieve for her stillborn. Yet, for my money, she returned to the snow, and to the aurora borealis, and the woods, and to the animals with which she lived in synergy and not as a gushingly loving caregiver but as a fellow inhabitant of the wild. Perfect. Hence, she also (as it were) did not die; there is no corpus delicti, and the mystical element is therefore well-sustained. This is the great Alaska novel and my favorite book of all. Thank you, Eowyn, from "James Apologist."
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