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My Last Lament by James William Brown

My Last Lament

by James William Brown

  • Critics' Consensus (7):
  • Published:
  • Apr 2017, 352 pages
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Reviews


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for My Last Lament
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  • Suzanne G. (Tucson, AZ)
    An interesting story
    This was an enjoyable book. I felt a connection to the characters; they were real. The despair of each one talked to me throughout the whole story of Aliki about happiness and sadness created in her life. Decisions she and others made in a time of such unrest and sorrow provided the plot. I looked forward to each chapter written in the form of tape recordings she narrated, describing the war and aftermath of the many events taking place within her life. I'd not known about the Greek tradition of lamenting so that information was a plus. The ending was a surprise but not unexpected.
  • Marcia S. (Ackley, IA)
    There is much in life to lament
    The Last Lament is not a happy story. The main character, Alita, performs laments at funerals. She seems to fall into a trance and memorialize the deceased and their life through verse. When asked to tell her story as a lamenter, she actually tells her life story. The majority of which, concerns her life during the war in Greece. It is also the story of her first love, Stelios, and a young neighbor boy with some mental problems. The characters are well-developed. There is a twist at the end of the book, which leaves the reader, and Alita, with further questions.
  • Beverly J. (Hoover, AL)
    Pleasant Historical Fiction
    A pleasant historical fiction storyline set mainly in occupied and post-WWII Greece recollects the life of a professional lamenter, Aliki and the two people she counts as her family, Stelios and Takis. The strength of this story for me were the details of the Greek cultural practices against a turbulent and unpredictable time. Although there are some dramatic and twisty moments to keep the story moving at times the characters seemed a little too simplistic to me and bogged down the pace. I enjoyed the format of Aliki recording her life on cassette tapes as this connected the oral storytelling tradition that Aliki informs the readers of the puppet shows and dirge-poems regarding the deceased. This lovely story will appeal to fans of cultural history and WWII stories with a different twist.
  • Yvonne K. (Magnolia, TX)
    Mixed Feelings
    I have mixed feelings on this novel. The subject matter is one I am always drawn to, set in Greece it covers WWII and the aftermath of the civil war in that country. This is a microcosm of WWII but more about the unrest that followed in the aftermath when so many men were killed and the country was ravaged leaving those remaining to make hard and at times poor choices. Weaved through the story is the culture of the last lament and Greek History.
  • Nancy K. (Perrysburg, OH)
    First the war...
    WWII books are currently very popular but mostly they are about the European portion. This book happens to be about the War in Greece. Unfortunately, after the War civil fighting persisted and many more people were killed, injured or imprisoned. This is a sad story told by an old woman named Aliki. She is one of the last lamenters or those who bemoan a death at funerals. Asked by an American college student to make a record of her art she instead decides to tell her life story on the cassettes that the student gave her. The whole country of Greece is in disorder and Alikl and her two companions' lives mirror this turmoil. One of the brighter parts of the book is when the three characters give plays throughout the area using puppets and stories from the old Greek tragedies, technically this is the craft of "shadow theatre"
  • Barb M. (Naperville, IL)
    my lament
    My Last Lament is a tale of one woman's experiences in the post-war Greece. Her life is her last lament, as an archetype of the Greek woman. This novel deeply investigates darkness -- the ravages of war, tragedy, insanity, lost love, abandonment and betrayal. Through it all, I came to love and admire the lamenter, Aliki.

    Brown's writing style relies heavily on dialog, and I felt sometimes the detail put the story in slow motion. That said, I would recommend it to book clubs for discussion.
  • Carolyn S. (Decatur, GA)
    WWII in Greece
    Since there have not been any new books about World War II in Greece, I found the book interesting. The book is a personal description of that war and how it affected the main character and her family.
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