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Sweeter Than All The World [Paperback]

Rudy Wiebe (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 17, 2002 0676973418 978-0676973419 Reprint
Rudy Wiebe’s latest novel is at once an enthralling saga of the Mennonite people and one man’s emotional voyage into his heritage and his own self-discovery. Ambitious in its historical sweep, tender and humane, Sweeter Than All the World takes us on an extraordinary odyssey never before fully related in a contemporary novel.

The novel tells the story of the Mennonite people from the early days of persecution in sixteenth-century Netherlands, and follows their emigration to Danzig, London, Russia, and the Americas, through the horrors of World War II, to settlement in Paraguay and Canada. It is told episodically in a double-stranded narrative. The first strand consists of different voices of historical figures. The other narrative voice is that of Adam Wiebe, born in Saskatchewan in 1935, whom we encounter at telling stages of his life: as a small boy playing in the bush, as a student hunting caribou a week before his wedding, and as a middle-aged man carefully negotiating a temporary separation from his wife. As Adam faces the collapse of his marriage and the disappearance of his daughter, he becomes obsessed with understanding his ancestral past. Wiebe meshes the history of a people with the story of a modern family, laying bare the complexities of desire and family love, religious faith and human frailty.

The past comes brilliantly alive, beginning with the horrors of the Reformation, when Weynken Claes Wybe is burned at the stake for heretical views on Communion. We are caught up in the great events of each century, as we follow in the footsteps of Adam’s forebears: the genius engineer who invented the cable-car system; the artist Enoch Seeman, who found acclamation at the royal court in London after having been forbidden to paint by the Elders; Anna, who endures the great wagon trek across the Volga in 1860, leaving behind her hopes of marriage so that her brothers will escape conscription in the Prussian army; and Elizabeth Katerina, caught in the Red Army’s advance into Germany when rape and pillage are the rewards given to soldiers. The title of the novel, taken from a hymn, reflects the beauty and sorrow of these stories of courage. In a startling act of invention, Sweeter Than All the World sets one man’s quest for family and love against centuries of turmoil.

Rudy Wiebe first wrote of Mennonite resettlement in his 1970 epic novel The Blue Mountains of China. Since then, much of his work has focused on re-imagining the history of the Canadian Northwest. In Sweeter Than All the World, as in many of his most acclaimed novels, Wiebe has sought out real historical characters to tell an extraordinary story. William Keith, a University of Toronto professor and author of a book about Wiebe, writes: “Wiebe has a knack for divining wells of human feeling in historical sources.” Here, all the main characters share his name, and the history is one to which he belongs. Moreover, alongside those flashbacks into history is revealed an utterly compelling contemporary story of a man whose background is not totally unlike the author’s own. Wiebe sets his narrative against his two favourite backdrops: the northern Alberta landscape, and the shared memories of the Mennonite people. Sweeter Than All the World is a compassionate, erudite and stimulating work of fiction that shares the deep-rooted concerns of all of Wiebe’s work: how to make history live in our imagination, and how we can best live our lives.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A creative exploration of the interrelationships between personal identity, religious faith and historical particularity…. Wiebe is…successful in crafting a range of haunting and evocative images.”
Mennonite Brethren Herald

“A beautiful, moving book….there is some absolutely lovely stuff here….The descriptions…are marvellous….the book achieves a wonderful cinematic clarity…”
–Mark Sinnett, The Globe and Mail, Saturday, October 27, 2001

“With the audacious confidence of a mature writer, [Wiebe] breathes life into a series of Mennonite characters, who tell their stories from beyond the grave, in the first person and in present tense.”
Maclean’s

“This is a profoundly serious book. It is a many-voiced testimonial, a discrete series of monologues, and it functions by accumulation, one horrific tale after another, augmenting into a chorus of witnesses…. Sweeter Than All the World is a construct of iron tongs and stone, a testimony to what Italo Calvino called … “the virtues of weight.”… [T]his novel deserves respect. It is an important work; a fictional compilation of voices from Mennonite history, and a resonant portrait of a contemporary man inflicted with a chronic (and, it would seem, inherited) sense of brokenness.”
–Margaret Sweatman, Ottawa Citizen

“His great strength lies in meticulous research, passion for his subjects, and a powerful narrative sweep….Fascinating.”
–Quill and Quire

“Intellectually and psychologically challenging….a difficult exercise is ultimately rewarding….
Calgary Herald

“A panoramic examination of Mennonite history through the story of one particular family.”
Saskatoon StarPhoenix

“Wiebe is a writer who does his homework…There is much of interest here, unusual and pertinent points of history, and they are vividly revisited…. the book rises to poetic heights as Wiebe’s unerring sense of place allows it to soar…”
London Free Press

“There are breathtaking scenes infused with poignant beauty…”
Times-Colonist (Victoria)

“Rudy Wiebe has written his epic….richly satisfying and worth reading and pondering again and again.”
Kitchener-Waterloo Record

“Wiebe succeeds in making [history] dramatic, intriguing, romantic and tragic.”
Calgary Herald

Praise for A Discovery of Strangers:

“A work of extraordinary originality and beauty.”
The Globe and Mail

“A pleasure of the first order — the pleasure of true art.”
Edmonton Journal

Praise for Stolen Life:

“So rich...I couldn’t put it down.”
Ann-Marie MacDonald

“The most powerful book I’ve ever read.... Insightful, poetic, gripping.”
The Hamilton Spectator

From the Inside Flap

Rudy Wiebe?s latest novel is at once an enthralling saga of the Mennonite people and one man?s emotional voyage into his heritage and his own self-discovery. Ambitious in its historical sweep, tender and humane, Sweeter Than All the World takes us on an extraordinary odyssey never before fully related in a contemporary novel.

The novel tells the story of the Mennonite people from the early days of persecution in sixteenth-century Netherlands, and follows their emigration to Danzig, London, Russia, and the Americas, through the horrors of World War II, to settlement in Paraguay and Canada. It is told episodically in a double-stranded narrative. The first strand consists of different voices of historical figures. The other narrative voice is that of Adam Wiebe, born in Saskatchewan in 1935, whom we encounter at telling stages of his life: as a small boy playing in the bush, as a student hunting caribou a week before his wedding, and as a middle-aged man carefully negotiating a temporary separation from his wife. As Adam faces the collapse of his marriage and the disappearance of his daughter, he becomes obsessed with understanding his ancestral past. Wiebe meshes the history of a people with the story of a modern family, laying bare the complexities of desire and family love, religious faith and human frailty.

The past comes brilliantly alive, beginning with the horrors of the Reformation, when Weynken Claes Wybe is burned at the stake for heretical views on Communion. We are caught up in the great events of each century, as we follow in the footsteps of Adam?s forebears: the genius engineer who invented the cable-car system; the artist Enoch Seeman, who found acclamation at the royal court in London after having been forbidden to paint by the Elders; Anna, who endures the great wagon trek across the Volga in 1860, leaving behind her hopes of marriage so that her brothers will escape conscription in the Prussian army; and Elizabeth Katerina, caught in the Red Army?s advance into Germany when rape and pillage are the rewards given to soldiers. The title of the novel, taken from a hymn, reflects the beauty and sorrow of these stories of courage. In a startling act of invention, Sweeter Than All the World sets one man?s quest for family and love against centuries of turmoil.

Rudy Wiebe first wrote of Mennonite resettlement in his 1970 epic novel The Blue Mountains of China. Since then, much of his work has focused on re-imagining the history of the Canadian Northwest. In Sweeter Than All the World, as in many of his most acclaimed novels, Wiebe has sought out real historical characters to tell an extraordinary story. William Keith, a University of Toronto professor and author of a book about Wiebe, writes: ?Wiebe has a knack for divining wells of human feeling in historical sources.? Here, all the main characters share his name, and the history is one to which he belongs. Moreover, alongside those flashbacks into history is revealed an utterly compelling contemporary story of a man whose background is not totally unlike the author?s own. Wiebe sets his narrative against his two favourite backdrops: the northern Alberta landscape, and the shared memories of the Mennonite people. Sweeter Than All the World is a compassionate, erudite and stimulating work of fiction that shares the deep-rooted concerns of all of Wiebe?s work: how to make history live in our imagination, and how we can best live our lives.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada; Reprint edition (September 17, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0676973418
  • ISBN-13: 978-0676973419
  • Product Dimensions: 5.1 x 1 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,751,742 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (2)
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rudy's Good Book, December 11, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Sweeter Than All The World (Paperback)
If you like good writing, especially when it's grounded in real history, then you'll like Rudy Wiebe's Sweeter Than All the World.. He takes on the story of a Mennonite family over time, a nearly epic family chronicle covering more than five hundred years, and succeeds astonishingly well. The chapters alternate between the historical/fictional stories and the contemporary story of Adam Wiebe and his family The three epigraphs give the reader a good entry into the novel, especially one from the poet Joseph Brodsky: "You're coming home again. What does that mean?" Answering that question is not so simple for Adam Wiebe, the main character. We watch as he loses his childhood home, then finds a home with his wife and family, only to lose it again, partly through his own actions but also because, like the rest of us, he has cast himself adrift in an over-hyped, noisy and fragmented contemporary society. You don't have to be Mennonite to recognize the emptiness of Adam's a long period of self-imposed wandering and exile. He searches to find not just himself but also to recover what he has at the opening of the novel - a sense of being at home. When her parents separate, his daughter too becomes a global wanderer, trying to lose what she feels is the heavy burden of her family past. When she disappears, Adam's wandering takes on a double purpose as he tries to find both his daughter and a place for himself within a recovered family past.
Home, for Rudy Wiebe, is not simply cast as a physical or geographical place and he makes no bones about the essentially spiritual nature of Adam's quest. In contrast to the wanderings of the earlier Mennonite families, forced by persecution and war, Adam's jaunts from lover to lover and airport to airport would seem almost trivial if they were not so painful for him and so familiar to us. As he did in The Blue Mountains of China, Wiebe's careful use of historical sources is convincingly interwoven with the voices of his semi/fictional characters. I enjoyed checking up on some of the historical references he cites at the novel's end and discovered just how historically accurate much of his "fictional" material really is. What finally knits the generations together here is storytelling. Their faith and beliefs, their lives, their accomplishments and their suffering are passed along in the family stories, a force for ill to the young Adam, but ultimately a powerful force good. Wiebe clearly believes that we need to strike a balance between forgetting the past and obsessing over it, and he comes down on the side of memory. His fictional Wiebe family finally shares the stories, not as a way of burdening the younger generation, but of a way of providing them with the roots they need to grow.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Quite What I was Expecting, April 23, 2004
This review is from: Sweeter Than All The World (Paperback)
I read this book because it was recommended on Amazon's page for _The Russländer_ by Sandra Birdsell. I really enjoyed that book, so I thought that I would give "Sweeter Than All the World" a try.

And, as the title of my review says, "Sweeter" wasn't exactly what I was expecting. One thing I enjoy in any novel, especially a "historical" one (in addition to a good story) is getting a good feel of what it was like to live at that particular time and place. "Sweeter Than All the World" has that it parts, but it really contains two threads. One thread contains various interesting stories about Mennonites throughout history, while the other thread is Adam trying to make sense of himself, and his history, present, and future.

Personally, I found the "20th Century Adam" chapters to be tedious, but I don't want to be too discouraging if this sort of thing is your cup of tea.

However, be aware that this definitely isn't a historical novel along the lines of Michener's "Poland" or "Alaska".

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3.0 out of 5 stars Hmm, January 26, 2009
This review is from: Sweeter Than All The World (Paperback)
A multi-century history of Mennonites, specifically Wiebes. What is the theme? What is sweeter than all the world? Familial love? He's not an easy man to read, but I enjoyed this one because of the history. Have to get hardcovers for my children before they're hard to find.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sweeter than all
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sweeter Than All the World, Young Peter, Adam Wiebe, Elizabeth Katerina, Sister Erika, David Loewen, Grossma Triena, Bishop's Hill, Onkel David, Jan Adriaenz, Peter Loewen, Red Army, Ohm Jakob, Peter Wiebe, Taunte Anna, The Hague, Number Eight Romanovka, Frau Heinrichs, Grosspa Isaak, Ural River, Flying Fortresses, Nogat River, Orenburg Susanovo, Sakhalin Island, The Bloody Theatre
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