The Emperor of
Any Place by
Tim Wynne-Jones (Walker Books)
HC RRP $24.99
ISBN 9780763669737
Reviewed by Anastasia Gonis
Fascinating from the beginning, this dual
point-of-view story is extremely powerful, confronting at times, imaginative,
and deeply moving. It has many themes woven into it, the main ones being the
futility of war and the chaos it leaves behind, family relationships, love,
truth and trust. Presented in precise prose, it’s a book not to be missed.
When Evan’s father dies, the boy discovers an
unusual book on his dad’s desk and begins to read. Two parallel stories begin,
presented in alternating chapters.
Evan’s narrative is in third person. At seventeen,
he is now alone in the world except for his grandfather Griff whom he’s never
seen because of a falling out with Evan’s dad. Life-long critical stories heard
about Griff from his dad built a bitterness and resentment against the old man
in Evan. These negative feelings flare when Griff turns up suddenly. A career
soldier, his regimented army life leaves no room for admitting or making
mistakes, especially his own. Evan is unaware of the significant role his
estranged grandfather will play in his life.
The second story is the one Evan is reading from the
book. Written by the Japanese soldier, Isamu Oshiro, it’s told in the immediate
first person, and begins in July, 1944. It starts as a journal meant to reach
his new wife in the case of his death, but evolves into a continuous confession
of love blended with his daily existence on the island.
A third voice, that of American soldier Derwood
Kraft, shares Oshiro’s narrative later in the book.
Oshiro makes it to the island he later calls Kokoro-Jima, the Heart-Shaped Island. He
is badly wounded and expects to die. But he survives amidst the company of
flesh-eating ghouls, kept alive by the sheer will to live and return to his
beloved. The island becomes his paradise until Kraft arrives. The two begin as
wary enemies struggling to survive, but in fact they have much in common. Here
we witness a parallel war to the one raging on the opposite island. This takes
place between Kraft and Oshiro’s conscience and soldier’s ethics.
Here is a complex and multi-layered story with many
parallels. It is a magnum opus, for the great skill needed to blend the
portions of this magnificent creation into a fluid read is evident in the
stunning outcome. This is a crossover novel suitable for young adult/adult
readers.
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