I love this book. There, I said it. If it were possible, I would
leave the review at just that.
It's been a long time since I've spoken so passionately about
a book that at least five people bought it after a lunch or meeting
with me. Or that I've talked about a novel's characters as if they
were old friends. Or that I've dog-eared so many pages I have some
folded both ways because there were lines on both sides that I wanted
to remember. I own the paperback; I want the hardcover. If you are
a friend of mine and have a birthday or special event anytime soon,
you can guess your gift.
The story couldn't be simpler. Patrick lives in a nursing home.
He's in his eighties and spends his days reflecting on his life
with honesty, acceptance and regret. Most of his memories focus
on a woman named Julia, the fiance of his World War I buddy, Daniel.
A large part of the story is about the war, the Great War that
forced Patrick to grow up and face the ugly side of life while he
was still a boy. Contrasting the starkingly haunting images ---
of bodies blown apart, barbed wire and destruction --- and the raw
words --- about the smell, the sounds and the taste of war --- is
Daniel's almost poetic prose about Julia and his love for her. He
writes her from the trenches and savors the letters she writes in
return. And he talks endlessly to Patrick about her. In a place
where life is so ugly, Julia becomes a symbol of hope: the one beautiful
thing.
After Daniel dies, Patrick meets Julia at a war memorial service
and begins a relationship that lasts days --- and a lifetime.
Patrick spins his tale knowing he is in his final days. Cancer
is eating away at him, but so are thoughts of Julia that he needs
closure on. Sounds sad? It isn't. Patrick has the humor of a man
who knows he's old but doesn't feel that way. His is an earned realism;
he knows what he needs to do before he moves on.
LOSING JULIA is about love and losing it. At some moments, readers
will wonder if it was ever there, or if loving Julia was something
Patrick so fiercely needed that to let the feeling slip away would
be unspeakable. Readers could debate if this was love or fantasy,
or if love like this could be real. But one thing is certain ---
feelings for Julia fueled Patrick's entire life.
Where Hull takes the story in the end is either overly contrived
and too neat or just the way it needed to wrap. My sister, who encouraged
me to read this book, loathed the ending. I cried my way through
it --- but I was always the more emotional of the two of us.
Finishing a book I love this much is doubly painful. Not only
do I miss being under its spell, everything else I read pales by
comparison. But a book like this also keeps me searching, because
I hope I can find something this good to share with other readers.
But first....I urge you to read LOSING JULIA.
--- Reviewed by Carol Fitzgerald