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AUGUST 2025 READING

All the Broken Places book jacket.jpg

All the Broken Places by John Boyne

published 2022, Pamela Dorman Books

399 pp

ISBN-13 978-0593653074

Book Club Meeting

August 26 2025, 7 PM

Hosted by:   Beth Kanalley

​​Snack provided by:  Val Ross

​Wine provided by: Linda LeVan/Beth Kanalley

Book selected by:  Sandy Hudler

Accessibility

Print

  • Finger Lakes Library System​
     

E-book​

  • NY Public Library 

  • Amazon (Kindle)

  • Finger Lakes Library System
     

E-audio book

  • NY Public Library (OverDrive)

  • Amazon (Audible)

About the Author:  John Boyne

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"John Boyne (born April 30, 1971, Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish author known for his novels, particularly 'The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas' (2006), a story that takes place during the Holocaust and follows the friendship between a German boy and a Jewish boy who is a prisoner at the Auschwitz concentration camp.  The novel was adapted into a movie titled 'The Boy in the Striped Pajamas' (2008).

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Boyne enjoyed reading and writing from an early age. He attended Trinity College in Dublin, where he received a bachelor’s degree in English literature. He then went to the University of East Anglia in Norwich, Norfolk, England, graduating with a master’s degree in creative writing. While there he won the Curtis Brown Prize, which is awarded annually to a student excelling in a creative writing program.

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Boyne began his career writing short stories and then transitioned into novels for adults. His critically praised debut novel was 'The Thief of Time' (2000), which chronicles the life of a man who does not grow older. The story blends historical elements from the 18th century to the 20th century, including the French Revolution and the 1920s American movie industry. The novel Crippen (2004) is based on a real-life murder of a doctor’s wife in 1910.

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In 2006 Boyne published 'The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas', which is geared toward young adult readers. Mostly set at Auschwitz during World War II, the book explores the budding relationship and tragic ending of the lives of two young boys. One is the son of the concentration camp’s commandant, and the other is a Jew imprisoned there. The book earned critical praise, and Boyne later published a sequel, 'All the Broken Places' (2022), for an adult audience. Boyne’s second book for younger readers was Noah Barleywater Runs Away (2010), a fairy tale combining elements of magic and fantasy with life lessons.

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Boyne used World War I as the background for the novel The Absolutist (2011). The book explores themes of shame, guilt, jealousy, secrets, and betrayal. The Heart’s Invisible Furies (2017) follows the life of an adopted man as he searches for his identity in 20th-century Ireland. The Echo Chamber (2021) gives a comedic look at social media and the consequences of expressing oneself publicly.

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In additon to his novels for adults and younger audiences, Boyne published several collections of short stories. He also contributed numerous book reviews to The Irish Times. His work earned many awards, including the Hennessy Literary Hall of Fame Award (2012) and the Gustav Heinemann Peace Prize (2015)."

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SOURCE

All the Broken Places

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The Guardian book review:
 

"All the Broken Places by John Boyne review – a sequel of sorts

 

"The follow-up to 'The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas' is a powerful novel about secrets and atonement after Auschwitz."

"John Boyne’s latest novel is a sequel of sorts to 2006’s 'The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas', perhaps his best known work. Written for children, it was essentially a fable, about Bruno, the young son of an Auschwitz commander, who makes friends with Shmuel, a Jewish boy, through the fence that surrounds the camp. Although the book has been accused of spreading misinformation about the Holocaust, it remains an involving account of humanity amid horror.

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Boyne explains that he began making notes for 'All the Broken Places' as soon as he’d finished writing its predecessor. Its major themes are guilt, complicity and the apparently inescapable cycles of grief arising from world-shaking events. It is gripping, well honed and very much aimed at adults.

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Gretel, Bruno’s grieving, guilt-ridden sister, is the narrator. The reader gradually pieces together her story as the narrative switches confidently from present-day Mayfair, where for decades she has been living in a comfortable flat, to her peripatetic past. As she tries to escape the chaos of the end of the second world war, she grapples with her memories of Auschwitz, her parents and her own part in her brother’s death. These are vividly detailed, with a sense of revenge and retribution always lurking around the corner.

 

Gretel’s smart, engaging and uncompromising voice draws the reader in deftly – at the beginning she feels like a cosy crime heroine, or the deliciously spiky narrator found in Zoë Heller’s Notes on a Scandal. She spies on her wealthy new neighbours: a film producer, his wife and their small son, Henry. But it doesn’t stay cosy for long. Gretel and the film producer are both hiding very dark secrets indeed. The two circle each other warily, as Gretel considers how much she is prepared to do to save someone’s life without compromising her own safety.

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There are few functioning families within the novel: everyone is affected by the reach of war, its tendrils stretching across the planet and through time. Warped parent/child relationships range from the apparently trivial (Gretel’s greedy son wants her to sell her luxurious flat) to the truly monstrous.

Gretel’s mother, we learn, remained a true believer in nazism until the end. In the present-day plot strand, the film producer’s abuse of his family threatens to erupt into tragedy. Henry is a ghost-like figure, reminding Gretel both of her dead brother and of her failures as a mother.

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The novel is consummately constructed, humming with tension until past and present collide. There are moments of shocking violence, such as in postwar Paris, where residents’ hatred of Nazis explodes.

 

Boyne also explores the deeply personal aspects of the war’s aftermath. In Australia, where Gretel flees in order to be as far away from Europe as possible, an idyll is shattered by a revenant; having retreated to London, she falls in love with a Jew who has lost relatives in the concentration camps, and has no idea of her background. These moments of tender, fractured personal interactions are as devastating as the blood and gore.

 

Gretel’s final act is worthy of a tragic heroine: elements of purgation are involved, as she confronts her own and others’ evil. The book forces us to consider the nature of atonement, and whether violence can ever justify the prevention of something even worse. All the Broken Places is a defence of literature’s need to shine a light on the darkest aspects of human nature; and it does so with a novelist’s skill, precision and power."

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SOURCE

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