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Did The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas need a sequel?

Critics attacked John Boyne's 2006 novel for obscuring the historical reality of the Holocaust. Now he's back with a follow-up

September 15, 2022 13:59
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2 min read

All the Broken Places
By John Boyne
Doubleday, £20
Reviewed by David Herman

It is more than 15 years since John Boyne published his famous bestseller The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (2006).

The children’s book sold millions of copies worldwide and was made into a successful film in 2008. Both tell the story of two boys, Bruno, the German son of the commandant at Auschwitz, and Shmuel, a Jewish prisoner in the camp. The boys become friends and the novel ends with a twist that readers either find deeply moving or grotesquely sentimental.

The novel generated considerable controversy. Critics attacked it for obscuring the historical reality of the Holocaust and, in particular, for creating a false equivalence between victims and perpetrators.

At the end of the film, the grief of Bruno’s German family encourages the viewer to feel sympathy for Holocaust perpetrators. The leading Holocaust historian David Cesarani wrote in his review, “The story is utterly implausible.

Except for a few peculiar cases there were no Jewish children in the extermination camps: they were gassed on arrival.”

Cesarani called the novel “a distortion of history”. The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas was published at just the right time, towards the end of a decade of hugely successful novels about the Holocaust that included The Reader (1995), The Pianist (English translation 1999), Everything is Illuminated (2002), The History of Love (2005), and The Book Thief (2005).

Some of these are superb, some are schlock, none more than Boyne’s novel, which turned the Holocaust into sugary sentimentality but has been taught as history in countless classrooms.

Now Boyne has published a sequel, this time for adults, All the Broken Places. In some ways it is better, in other ways it’s just as bad.

It’s better because it’s more grown-up. It takes on big issues about shame, guilt and complicity. How does the daughter of a vicious antisemite come to terms with such a legacy? She was only a child when he committed his terrible crimes but still has to find a way of living with what he did — and what she did.

It is also about secrets. How do people live with their secret past? It is a dark novel about mental illness, suicide attempts and surviving the deaths of people you have loved. It is full of broken lives.

Boyne’s new novel is also much better written than The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. It is full of twists and turns and unexpected revelations. It moves back and forward in time, following the life of Bruno’s sister Gretel, after her brother’s death in Auschwitz.