cover image Night of Amber: A Sequel to the Book of Nights

Night of Amber: A Sequel to the Book of Nights

Sylvie Germain. David R. Godine Publisher, $23.95 (320pp) ISBN 978-1-56792-090-1

French writer Germain's sequel to her award-winning Book of Nights continues the dense, demanding saga of the Peniel family up through the late 20th century. Charles-Victor Peniel, otherwise known as Night-of-amber-Wind-of-fire, is the first child born after WWII in the village of Blackland in the war-ravaged northeast of France; his older brother is the first to die, victim of a hunting accident at the age of eight. Neglected by his grief-stricken parents, Pauline and Baptiste (""Crazy-for-her""), Charles-Victor runs wild. When his sister, Ballerina, is born, he nurtures an incestuous passion for her, initiating her into his world of imaginary monsters and real-life terrors. Other members of the Peniel clan are haunted by their own demons: Thad e, Baptiste's brother, was interned at Dachau and has adopted the children of a former comrade; ""Heartbreaker,"" another adopted cousin, suffers the horrors of the Algerian War. And Night-of-gold-Wolf-face, the family patriarch, broods in the forest, siring two final sons as he awaits death. When Pauline finally commits suicide and Baptiste dies of grief, Charles-Victor goes to Paris to study at the Sorbonne, though he soon submerges himself in the Parisian demimonde. Tortured by his past, he tries to exorcise it in writing and sex, but as Parisian revolutionary fervor reaches its peak in May 1968, he is driven to sacrifice a submissive boy, Roselyn, in a sadistic murderous ritual. It is only years later, in Blackland, that Charles-Victor is presented with a chance for redemption, in the person of a small boy called Ashes. In her lurid, hallucinatory descriptions of Charles-Victor's transgressions, Germain conjures up a modern-day Maldoror; her branching histories of Peniel relatives twine into every corner of the narrative. Germain sometimes founders in her own excess, but nevertheless, this is a rich, penetrating and intoxicatingly unusual novel. (Sept.)