Caging Skies

Caging Skies

2004 • 304 pages

Ratings4

Average rating3.3

15

If you want to read this book because of Jojo Rabbit don't bother.

Taika Waititi took the most palatable aspects of this book and radically transformed it into a dark comedy about acceptance and love gained through shared hardships. Caging Skies, on the other hand, is a book about a man so obsessed with a woman that he lies to her about the end of the war just to keep her in his possession. It's a deeply uncomfortable read because the author manages to weave historical fact expertly in amongst Johannes's obsession with Elsa. But it was never supposed to be comfortable; we are after all reading from the point of view of the abuser in this dynamic. And the World War Two setting with a Nazi protagonist obsessed with a Jewish girl hiding in his attic just heightened that uncomfortable feeling.

So even though I enjoyed the historical aspects of it where Leunens draws on many historical events to heighten the tension of her narrative while also expertly illustrating life in that period. The exploitative nature of using World War Two as set dressing to tell a story about an abuser in the abuser's own perspective. Where by the end he is still obsessed with Elsa, even though the truth has come out and she has left him. Made me personally uncomfortable while reading this the whole time, in ways unattended by the author. There will be some people who will be able to set aside that aspect and enjoy the concept of this book; that was not me.

While Jojo Rabbit will still probably remain one of my favorite movies. I don't personally see myself ever revisiting this book.

Personal Enjoyment 1.5/5; Execution 3.5/5

January 17, 2020Report this review