Rubens, Bernice (Vol. 31) - Richard Deveson
RICHARD DEVESON
It is 1835. Reuben and Benjamin, both aged ten, uncle and nephew though they have been brought up as brothers, are in peril of forcible 25-year conscription into the Russian army. Jakob Bindel, their father and grandfather, tells them how they must try to live: 'There is no cause on earth worth dying for, no God … no country … no principle … Only in the name of love is Death worthy. And friendship.' They must survive, he says. And, as generation of brothers succeeds generation, the Bindels survive, or try to survive. Five hundred pages' worth of accidents of history (though also of contrivances of plot) visit upon them a pogrom in Odessa in 1871, a Welsh mining disaster in 1908, incarceration at Buchenwald—where a Bindel brother is driven to assist in murder so that he himself can survive—death in Auschwitz, and torture at the hand of Soviet 'psychiatrists' in the 1970s. Yet each generation manages to pass on to the next the original...
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