(7/20/2016)
We are introduced to Ivan Isaenko by way of his diary. Ivan is a patient at the Mazyr Hospital for Gravely Ill Children, which treats the medical conditions of children suffering from the effects of catastrophic radiation following a nuclear explosion in 1986. Ivan suffers with unformed or partially formed limbs, and has lived at the hospital since birth. The hospital is all that he has known, and through the years has developed a way to cope and catalog in his mind all that goes on. Then, one day, a young girl his age comes in, outwardly she doesn't seem to suffer through the disastrous effects of radiation, but is indeed very ill with leukemia. Ivan takes to his diary, to explain himself to his new friend Polina, and then to make sure he marks the time he has left with her.
The voice of this novel is that of a young man, suffering, then alive with caring for another person, a first for Ivan. The story is eloquently told, thorough exquisite writing we are there with Ivan in his wonderment, his brashness and his pain of loss. There are wonderful characters in this book, Nurses who are cruel and overworked, and nurses that touch Ivan and help Ivan come to terms with adulthood. I found this to be a quick read, and enjoyed the story immensely. In so many books that I enjoy I am hesitant to finish, worried that I won't be satisfied by the ending, but Scott Stambach gave Ivan justice at the end. This is a book that I highly recommend. You will laugh, cringe...and cry.