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Extraordinary Renditions [Paperback]

Andrew Ervin (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 24, 2010

Set in Budapest—a city marked by its rich cultural heritage, the scars of empire, the fresher wounds of industry, and the collateral damage of globalism—Extraordinary Renditions is the sweeping story of three equally tarnished expatriates. World-renowned composer and Holocaust survivor Lajos Harkályi has returned to Hungary to debut his final opera and share his mother's parting gift, the melody from a lullaby she sang as he was forced to leave his Hungarian home for the infamous Czech concentration camp Terezín. Private First Class Jonathan "Brutus" Gibson is being blackmailed by his commanding officer at the US Army base in Hungary, one of the infamous black-sites of the global War on Terror, and he must decide between going AWOL or risking his life to make an illegal firearms deal in Budapest. Aspiring musician Melanie Scholes is preparing for the most important performance of her career as a violinist in Harkályi's opera, but before she takes the stage she must extricate herself from a failing relationship and the inertia that threatens to consume her future. As their lives converge on Independence Day, they too will seek liberation—from the anguish of the Holocaust, the chains of blackmail, and the bonds of conformity.

A formidable new voice in American fiction, Ervin tackles the big themes of war, prejudice, and art, lyrically examining the reverberations of unrest in today's central Europe, the United States' legacy abroad, and the resilience of the human spirit.



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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Three disparate lives—of an aging, internationally renowned composer; an African American GI; and a young American violinist—intersect in contemporary Budapest in Ervin’s first novel. Lajos Harkályi returns for the first time to his native city to attend the world premiere of his new opera with his niece, Magda, a translator at a nearby U.S. Army base; PFC “Brutus” Gibson is having an affair with Magda; and Melanie Scholes has a solo in Harkályi’s opera. But each person’s story has a darker side: Harkályi is reminded of being sent to the Terezen concentration camp as a youth and narrowly escaping death, Gibson is blackmailed by his sadistic commanding officer and attacked by skinheads in the city where his race makes him stand out, and Scholes is an expat adrift in a personal relationship. Ervin’s prose style seems to fit his protagonists, becoming more elegant for Harkályi, angrier and more combative for Gibson, and more diffident for Scholes until the climax, as the theme of “Strange Fruit” grows stronger. A thought-provoking exploration of tyranny, freedom, and the power of music. --Michele Leber

Review

“The variety of viewpoints and the author’s evident intimacy with an ancient foreign capital [Budapest] are promising, and Ervin makes it plain that he is taking on weighty themes.”—The New York Times Book Review

"Set in a madly grasping modern Budapest, literary critic Ervin's debut mines very different ways of achieving personal and artistic freedom in three neatly polished, interlocking tales. . . . With dexterous sensibility and fluid prose, Ervin's protagonists find liberation from the onerous strictures of Budapest's Nazi and Communist past."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"A thought-provoking exploration of tyranny, freedom, and the power of music."—Booklist

“Ervin keeps his emotionally and politically fraught setting animated, thanks largely to his skill at inhabiting each of his characters . . . .[Extraordinary Rendition’s] ending makes a poignant case for the power of art in an age of war.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Darkly evocative . . . the book has a prismlike quality; each story makes us see the city from a different but overlapping perspective."—Philadelphia Inquirer

"Andrew Ervin writes with an empathetic passion, near poetic words, daring politics, and a sensitive and mature grasp of his characters. This is a strong debut."—Chris Abani

"I can't decide what amazes me most about this book: the confident, muscular beauty of Andrew Ervin's writing; the breadth of his imagination; or the depth and diversity of his profoundly engaging characters. Again and again, though the force of the narrative drove me relentlessly onward, I would stop simply to marvel. Extraordinary Renditions is an extraordinary debut."—Julia Glass

"This tautly plotted, richly detailed trio of linked stories documents, with devastating and blackly comic ardor, the impossibility of simple morality in the rapidly aging era of terror. With Philadelphia and Budapest as his unlikely anchors, Andrew Ervin gives us crooked military men, postmodern artists, marauding skinheads and concert musicians, all rendered in nimble prose that never fails to shock and delight. An awesome debut."—J. Robert Lennon

"Through the eyes of three outsiders, Extraordinary Renditions takes the reader deep into the heart of Budapest, both its past and present. The whole city is here, the banks of the Danube brimming with history, intrigue, art, food, drink, and most important of all, music. His characters may be lost—even the one native is a foreigner—but Andrew Ervin is a sharp-eyed, sure-handed guide."— Stewart O’Nan

"There is a striking moral clarity—a certainty even to the questions the work poses—evidenced as these narratives ponder the long-form's grand themes. Being. Music. War. Love. Extraordinary Renditions' clear tenor hearkens the ancient masters of the novel in the most sublime way, even as it points toward that which is post-mastery."—Bayo Ojikutu



Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Coffee House Press; 1St Edition edition (August 24, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1566892465
  • ISBN-13: 978-1566892469
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.6 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,127,839 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A little-know aspect of Holocaust history, August 31, 2010
By 
Amy Henry (Nipomo, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Extraordinary Renditions (Paperback)

The Holocaust remains one of the harshest examples of human brutality in history, and yet its history is still only partly known. Because the regions and peoples of Eastern Europe were all involved in different degrees, the experience is not simply defined. For example, a Jew in Russia may have had a completely different experience during this time period than a Jew in Warsaw or one in Hungary. Because of these differences, it's possible to read new accounts and catch new details that may be missed in another publication. All of them horrific, as the end usually remained the same no matter where they were from.

That's what made this novel especially unique: it's the first time I had ever heard of Terezin, in Czechoslovakia. It was a camp that served as a stop on the journey to the more deadly concentration camps. In all, more than two hundred thousand Jews are estimated to have been through Terezin and who eventually died*. However, this camp was unique in that it was designed to propogate the idea that Hitler was simply moving Jews to a nice location to wait out the storms of war. Films were made to show the happy Jews enjoying the orchestra and the fine foods and beautiful resort-like buildings. However, like a movie set, this was all a facade. Before filming, prisoners painted and revamped the buildings, potted flowers were brought in to add color, and inmates had to rehearse their smiles.

"For days, the filmmakers shot images of children playing soccer, of families sitting around large, food-laden tables, of citizens in line to deposit fake money at the town's newly built bank. The world would see the glorious gift the kaiser had given to the Jews-their own Edenic village, far from the devastation of the war."

Prior to filming, a symphony was prepared and practiced. Since many musicians were sent to Terezin especially because of their talent, the symphony appeared to be a chance for them to demonstrate their skills. The musicians were given new and stylish clothes to wear before they performed, while the potted plants in front of their chairs concealed their actual disintegrating shoes. It was a triumphant performance, and horrific in that as soon as the filming ended, the musicians were led off the stage into waiting traincars heading to Auschwitz, and their likely death. Adding to the poignancy was the conductor, a Jew himself, who had to choose which musicians were selected for this 'special' performance.

Sadly, for a long period of time the true horror of Terezin was hidden. Even Red Cross investigators inspected the camp and approved of the facility.

Andrew Ervin has used this factual history to compose his own triptych-like storypiece, one that reveals true historical details from Budapest, the military (both then and now), and the structure of orchestras and music. He begins with the fictional composer and violinist Harkalyi, one of the few children who had survived Terezin, now back in Budapest for a special celebration of his new composition. This new symphony is to him the final evolvement of his personal life, from Terezin to a spectacular career as a renowned musician. He's returned to Budapest to see his only living family member, his niece Magda.

In an intersecting story, Magda's boyfriend, a US soldier, is residing at the army base in Taszar, Hungary where she works on top-secret interrogations. His own experience in Budapest is another one of survival from oppressive injustice, and one that forces him to make a choice regarding his future. Finally, the last of the three stories is of Melanie, a musician set to play in the orchestra of the first performance of Harkalyi's new symphony. She's a violinist conflicted about her future and discovering how oppressive dissolution and indecision can be. She, too, finds transformation in Budapest.

The stories have a synchronicity to them because of their themes, and while the characters seek resolution, their path is never clear cut. Despite Harkalyi's tremendous suffering, he finds that his own niece is involved in the same sort of interrogation techniques of political prisoners at the base that he himself had suffered. He gives her a smooth stone, one given to him by his mother right before he was transported, and the last time he ever saw her. He's carried it his entire life as a symbol of his history, and as he passes it on to Magda, it's clear she doesn't grasp the significance of the token.

I really enjoyed the historical details of this novel. By far, the most fascinating part was about Harkalyi's life, and details of the fraud at Terezin, as well as his wish for his niece to understand her past. The middle story about Brutus, the soldier, lost me in the details of base life and seemed to be more of an indictment on military policy today rather a character portrayal, and I didn't see exactly how it fit the book as well as the other two stories around it. There seemed no purpose to his inclusion other than to set off on another story of human rights issues. The final story of Melanie, in the orchestra, is stronger and threads back to Harkalyi's own life. Additionally, the book served well as a jumping-off point for further research.

[...]
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A concerto of chaos, and an extraordinarily rich three-course meal, March 6, 2011
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This review is from: Extraordinary Renditions (Paperback)
I choose to view Andrew Ervin's 2010 work of fiction, "Extraordinary Renditions," as a novel, even though his own publisher, Coffee House Press, does not designate it so. It could be categorized as a collection of three novellas, but since the stories intertwine at the 10,000-foot level, and the book comes off at 183 pages, it feels to the reader like only one work - and a nicely stylized, contemporary, economical work at that.

At his best, Ervin's voice envelopes his characters like a well-tailored suit, giving his third person narration a first-person intimacy, like some of Ian McEwan's early fiction.

You would feel the loneliness of Brutus (the subject of the second chapter, or story) even if his absence from the Hungarian military base was voluntary. Ervin has this African-American soldier in the middle of the night, being carried along toward Budapest in one of those decades-old, enormous, boxy passenger trains that still lumber, dutifully, through the Old World. It takes a nervy writer to de-romanticize European train travel. But Ervin knows what Cesare Pavese knew, that "traveling is a brutality."

You are constantly off balance here, but there is no vertigo. There is only wonder - about what lay ahead in these quiet (though not yet desperate) lives, amid an urban atmosphere that is a blur of the gray past and the yawning present. "The temperature and the fetid air - diesel exhaust, grease, burned meat - attacked him, an all-powerful and immovable force that he knew would shadow him for the next two days," Ervin writes about Harkalyi, the aging music composer and the subject of the book's first narrative. He could have been describing any of the three, including Melanie, the mixed-up violinist anti-hero of the last story.

Yet despite the cold setting, they all move about with an inner lamp of warmth, a spirit of getting-through that Ervin has wrought for three characters who must reconcile their respective duties to slavery, if not torture. Straddling the Old World and the New, they are Americans all - an elderly Jewish Holocaust survivor, a young black man with a gritty urban background, and a lesbian who is striving to find the sublime art beyond her workman-like professionalism. He renders them with a palette that offers lovely, lively, lurid color amid the gray and the dark of the Danube underfoot.

In particular, pay attention to his language on the color, feel, taste and other dimensional aspects of music. The dust jacket promises a "crescendo" of an ending, and damned if Ervin does not deliver, literally as well as figuratively.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fiction with real world relevance, March 13, 2011
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This review is from: Extraordinary Renditions (Paperback)
Extraordinary Renditions is an example of quality fiction. Andrew Ervin, the author, craftly weaves the lives of three characters into a overall story of human motivation, adversity, and triumph. His vivid story telling brings to life the city of Budapest in such a way that as I reader I could visualize it. This is simply a must read if you enjoy good story telling, excellent prose, and a plot with relevance to today's world.
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