![The Volunteer](https://dl.bookem.ir/covers/ISBN13/9780525558538.jpg)
The Volunteer
A Novel
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
![Library Journal](https://images.contentreserve.com/libraryjournal_logo.png)
October 15, 2018
A child abandoned by his father in an international airport, speaking an unrecognizable language. That's the start of this saga about Vollie Frade, who enlists in the U.S. Marine Corps to fight in Vietnam, where he's forced to serve a clandestine branch of the U.S. government whose aims he doesn't understand. As Scibona's first novel, The End, was a Young Lions Fiction Award winner and a National Book Award finalist, getting him named one of The New Yorker's 20 Under 40, this follow-up is much anticipated.
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
![Kirkus](https://images.contentreserve.com/kirkus_logo.png)
December 15, 2018
A soldier who goes off to war returns, but the war continues for generations to come.The child is father to the man. But who is the child's father, and what are the true names and identities of both father and son? Scibona (The End, 2008) delivers an enigmatic story that hinges on secrecy and uncertainty. Vollie Frade, befitting his name, joins the Marine Corps at the height of the Vietnam War, forging his father's signature because he's still a minor, shocking his mother, who says resignedly, "I'm surprised they let a person just take himself away like that." With that, Vollie is off to a place in which he will experience all the customary hells of war but where he will also shed one identity to take another. "He kept on unaccountably not getting killed," writes Scibona, but odd bits of metal and ugly misadventures find him anyway--and so does a spook named Lorch, a specialist in the "more modern intelligence function of covert operations," who instructs Vollie that although he had been in Cambodia, he really hadn't, because Congress had passed a law against crossing into Cambodia: "Ergo you were not." Equipped with a new name and job, Vollie roams a world in which meaning is resolutely unfixed. He acquires a wife and son along the way, and happiness does not ensue; the mood turns to Carver territory, punctuated by occasional improbabilities more suited to Pynchon, leading up to a spasm of violence that's unexpected but perfectly appropriate. As with his first novel, with which it has thematic similarities, Scibona's story takes in a broad sweep of time, looking into the future to foresee an end that may not be so terrible but that is just as certain. The plot sometimes threatens to come off the rails, but throughout, the narrative is marked by distinctive lyricism and striking images: "They were standing on a street corner in 1973. The sun fell everywhere like a terrible shower, and they cast no shadows."A touch overlong and sometimes perplexing but original and memorable.
COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
![Booklist](https://images.contentreserve.com/booklist_logo.png)
Starred review from February 15, 2019
When he enlisted, Vollie Frade exchanged the Iowa farmland of his childhood for the jungles of Vietnam and quickly observed that those who fear death have an uncanny way of turning that concern prophetic. He subsequently adopts a devil-may-care philosophy, but on his third tour, Vollie is captured and held in a subterranean tunnel. Upon his release, he is provided a new identity as Dwight Tilly and coerced into a black ops unit with mysterious goals and murkier ethics. After an assignment leaves a young girl dead, Dwight heads to New Mexico in search of an old army pal only to discover a derelict adobe home and a young woman, Louisa, and a young boy, Ellroy, the last inhabitants of an idealistic commune. Dwight and Louisa endeavor to raise the boy and start a family until Dwight's past catches up with him. Scibona's lyrical yet muscular prose anchors this majestic work as he probes deep philosophical questions about family, identity, belonging, and sacrifice. A present-day story line follows Ellroy's son, whom Ellroy abandoned in a Hamburg airport and who has been raised in a German orphanage. Scibona's greatest strength is his ability to inhabit each character with profound psychological depth to explore their guilt, doubt, and humanity. This novel rewards close reading and deserves wide readership.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)
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