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When God Was a Rabbit: A Novel
When God Was a Rabbit: A Novel
When God Was a Rabbit: A Novel
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When God Was a Rabbit: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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This is a book about a brother and a sister. It's a book about secrets and starting over, friendship and family, triumph and tragedy, and everything in between. More than anything, it's a book about love in all its forms.


In a remarkably honest and confident voice, Sarah Winman has written the story of a memorable young heroine, Elly, and her loss of innocence-a magical portrait of growing up and the pull and power of family ties. From Essex and Cornwall to the streets of New York, from 1968 to the events of 9/11, When God Was a Rabbit follows the evolving bond of love and secrets between Elly and her brother Joe, and her increasing concern for an unusual best friend, Jenny Penny, who has secrets of her own. With its wit and humor, engaging characters whose eccentricities are adroitly and sometimes darkly drawn, and its themes of memory and identity, When God Was a Rabbit is a love letter to true friendship and fraternal love.


Funny, utterly compelling, fully of sparkle, and poignant, too, When God Was a Rabbit heralds the start of a remarkable new literary career.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 10, 2011
ISBN9781608195367
When God Was a Rabbit: A Novel
Author

Sarah Winman

Sarah Winman is an actress who attended the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art and has gone on to act in theater, film, and television. When God Was a Rabbit is her debut novel. She lives in London.

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was my 2nd attempt at reading it. It is very fragmented, especially at the front end of the book, and although it does improve it then completely changes style in the final quarter. Oddly unsatisfying throughout, including the ending, although there were some fun characters along the way. Inconsistent is probably the best word to describe this book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    There was a lot I loved about this book, and just a few things I didn't appreciate. Sure, there were lots of unlikely plot elements, but the characters and their relationships were what got me in. I loved the narrator's family and their unusual family friends. I suppose I am a romantic at heart - I'd like to think that lifelong relationships are possible, despite all sorts of adversity and misadventure. This story focuses on a brother-sister relationship, but there's some pretty positive non-sibling examples too. People actually forgive each other for transgressions that they initially treat as unforgivable. There's a deep connectedness apparent between people in this novel. We readers don't always understand why (e.g. between the narrator's parents) but we believe. Well, I found believable, anyway. I found the book very emotionally engaging, but maybe that's a reflection on my stage of life and my particular family relationships and other people might be somewhat more distant. By comparison with other authors' treatment of LGB relationships, I found these relationships more within my realm of experience, but I am not altogether convinced about the reality of what is presented. I'd like to know what a range of gay & lesbian people think about these characters, and I wouldn't be surprised if the consensus was that life for them wasn't as straightforward as Winman portrays.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A really great read! Sarah Winman covers so many major topics and events such as 9/11. The latter is written about so sensitively through Joe's experience.I feel that the author really knows Cornwall intimately and her descriptions of the house Trehaven and its environment remind me of the place where Philip Marsden and his family went to, as narrated in 'Rising Ground' (see Books Read 2015).In some ways the cast of this novel reminded me of J.B.Priestley's 'Good Companions' - there are such vibrant characters like Arthur.None of the story could happen if it were not for money which underpins their lives - the move that Joe and Elly's parents make from London to Cornwall, Joe's life in New York. Is this true of all our lives to a greater or lesser degree?
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Elle was born in Essex in the 1970s. Her pet rabbit is named god and her older, Joe. This is Elle's journey into adulthood and her perspective on the events that shape her family. I really enjoyed this story, with it's moments of hilarity, it's travels through the same events of my childhood, and it's cast of eccentric but lovable characters. Would read again!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When God Was A Rabbit marks the debut of author Sarah Winman.From the publisher Bloomsbury:"This is a book about a brother and a sister. It's a book about secrets and starting over, friendship and family, triumph and tragedy, and everything in between. More than anything, it's a book about love in all its forms."Elly is the sister and Joe the brother. And in between are their parents, Elly's friend Jenny Penny, assorted lodgers and god the rabbit.Young Elly's early loss of innocence in the first few chapters and her brother's promise to protect her always sets the tone for the sibling's relationship. We follow the siblings from 1968 England through to New York 9/11 in the second half of the book. Winman has crafted a novel that kept me off kilter but quickly turning pages from start to finish. The characters are off beat, but the bonds to those they love are undeniably strong. Every character seems to be a step out of time with the rest of the world."'That's a good thing, isn't it? To stand apart and be different?' he said. 'I'm not sure' I said, quite aware of my own muted need to fit in to somehow simply hide. 'I don't want people to know I'm different'. And I looked up and and saw my brother standing in the doorway." And they are different - but in a good way. I found the story of young Elly and Joe to be especially poignant. However, they didn't evoke the same reaction in me when they were older in the second half. That's not to say that the story unfolded in the latter part of the book is no less emotional. It is, but I think it was the loss of innocence on so many levels by the younger characters that was the most heartbreaking. There are many sad moments in this story, but there are just as many funny ones. The secondary cast, particularly the parents and lodgers were favourites of mine. Their acceptance of any and all and their inclusion of those on the periphery into their family endeared them to me. I found the use of god the rabbit throughout Elly's life to be an unique allegorical device.Winman explores relationships of all sorts with a deft and original hand. But her description of the love between a brother and sister is especially well drawn. An unusual and totally original debut. It will be interesting to see where Winman goes next with her writing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Really enjoyed this story about the lives that surround the central character. Some really touching moments, with enough imagination to soften the sadness.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the story of a brother and sister Eleanor and Joe growing up. Eleanor is the narrator, The story starts in the late 60s and finishes in the present day. Joe is beaten up in New York loses his memory goes home to recuperate. This is a heart warming story about this family through all of their ups and downs and the people the meet along the way.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    More or less exactly what I expected. Reasonably light (in terms of prose), a quick read. It's definitely a solid three stars: the characters are likeable, and Winman fleshes them out well. If the narrative hadn't been so jumpy and incomprehensible in places, I would probably have given this four stars. Some things come out of the blue (dead baby jesus springs to mind) and aren't really all that relevant. Some things (like the boy who drowns and the guy Elly has sex with) are under-explained or never really fleshed out.

    I liked it quite a bit though, despite it feeling a bit roughly put together. I'd read something else by her.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Although this book jumps around a bit, it's still very enjoyable.

    It tells the story of Elly - her innocence as a child, her friend Jenny Penny, the bond she has with her brother, her life as an adult. It tells the story of love.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was my 2nd attempt at reading it. It is very fragmented, especially at the front end of the book, and although it does improve it then completely changes style in the final quarter. Oddly unsatisfying throughout, including the ending, although there were some fun characters along the way. Inconsistent is probably the best word to describe this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very unusual book both in plot and in writing style. I really liked it, but it's certainly not for everybody. The rabbit/god played a surprisingly small part though.

    A sweet childhood/growing-up story where people were just generally nice for a change. Not unrealistically so, but kind people who made mistakes not out of maliciousness, but because they were human. I grew to care about all the characters and were happy to see them evolve.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really enjoyed this book! It was a sweet, yet at times somewhat sad about two children's relationship throughout life. The title definitely drew me in. Great book- if you haven't read it, check it out.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is so well written!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Written in the first person, this is a (fictitious) biographical account of Eleanor and her unconventional, yet loving family. The reader accompanies her through childhood trauma and friendship until the age of twelve; we then rejoin her at the age of 26, now a rather disillusioned adult.I was intrigued by the title and had heard lots of good reviews about this book but unfortunately it didn't live up to its expectations, in my opinion. As you can already tell from my synopsis, there isn't really much to say about the plot, mainly because it's such a hotchpotch of separate events that only have Eleanor in common. Some of the things happening to her and her family and friends are (in no particular order): a coach accident that kills her grandparents; her father escaping several bomb attacks; sexual abuse; a football pools win; a kidnap; a prison sentence for murder; cancer; an assault and mugging with resulting amnesia on the day before 9/11 - all a bit far-fetched, don't you think? As the author states in her notes at the end of the book, "had the book's timeframe extended beyond 2001, the atrocity of Bali in 2002, Madrid in 2004 and London in July 2005 would all have been mentioned too". I have no doubt that somehow Eleanor, a friend or a member of her family would all have been caught up in those events as well (rather like Forrest Gump?). The question is, why accumulate such an array of life-changing experiences when one or two would have sufficed and made the novel more credible? It's somehow like the author had lots of ideas to bring to this project, and lots of messages to get across, but didn't know how to tie them all together and so turned the book into a memoir of sorts. Some of the events are described in great detail, others are merely touched upon and then dropped. (Did anyone understand the bit with Jenny Penny pulling a 50-pence piece from the future from inside her arm?) Her prose is quite beautiful at times, and yet she could find no other verbs to replace "said": half a page of alternating "I said", "he/she said" made me want to scream at times. The mystical plot devices (Arthur's "knowledge" of his death, Jenny Penny reading tarot before 9/11, not to mention the rabbit) sit rather awkwardly amongst all the realism the novel is depicting, and I was left quite bewildered and confused, thinking that I'd missed some vital clues. In the end, it left a very unsatisfactory feeling and one of "glad that's over"; pity.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a delightfully quirky coming-of-age story about a young girl growing up in the 70's in a slightly off-beat family. Elly grew up protected by her older brother Joe, who became her best friend and confidant over the years. The storyline integrates luck and fate as Elly's best friend, Jenny Penny, tends to predict the future throughout the novel. Though somewhat odd as a family, they are a heartwarming bunch who tend to draw in outsiders, particularly after the family decides to open a bed & breakfast, which draws in a few more quirky characters, who are also endearing and enjoyable. A number of the characters have openly gay relationships with one another and though not erotic, there is a good amount of humor in how the characters interact in their openness towards sexuality. The second half of the story tightens up the plot as foreshadowing begins to pull the storyline together along several themes. As tragic events unfold, I found myself choked up at several points as I found I had become very attached to the relationships between the characters! Though only her debut novel, this was one of the best books I've read in a while. Highly enjoyable, touching storyline, great characters and a very well put-together plot. I definately look forward to reading another novel from Ms. Winman!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Enjoyed this story from star to finish - whilst some readers found the two halves disjointed, I had no problem going with the flow.Elly's family, and wider circle of characters are unique and often quirky without being over cute. There are a number of narratives, especially loss and reunions, but also whilst the storytelling has a light touch it is played against a background, a constant reminder, of violence. Trehaven, the family home in Penzance is the sanctuary.Every character has significance and contributes something interesting to the tale, either because of their backstory, or their strengths or frailties. They also provide a mirror and enhance our understanding of the other characters. Even though she narrated the story, I didn't really 'get' Elly until the final 50 or so pages - regardless she is a delightful storyteller.I loved everyone in this book and so was happy when scenes shifted - a lovely book.Most memorable line from Elly - 'the need to be remembered is stronger than the need to remember'.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It has been a long time since I have read a novel this well written. From the first page to the very end, I was completely riveted by Elly and her story. The acts of violence that she has lived through and the understanding that love, family and friendship are a constant in her life makes her tale worthwhile.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When God Was a Rabbit is mostly a love story. Love between Elly and her brother Joe, Elly and her best friend Jenny, and Elly and Joe's love for their unconventional parents. And although their lives aren't rosy and unsullied, the overall tone of the book is one of sweetness. A great coming of age story with a unique focus on sibling relationships.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A lovely, enjoyable read, despite the story-book ending.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found the fact that this book was written with a great lack of detail a little frustrating at first. But about half way through the book I really started to enjoy the book and all the pieces came together in the end, even if it was in a happy-made-for-tv-ending way. But a nice switch from some of the other depressing novels I have read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a real fresco spanning several decades where a young girl turns into a woman. I thoroughly enjoyed the first chapters, full of the wonder and questioning of a young child, eager to understand but at a loss with the subtleties. A friendship that will last throughout the book starts there: imaginative, comical but also sometimes dark as childhood secrets can be. Themes of fitting in, love and sexuality are all broached in a tender and original way.The second part, I found, became disjointed: the focus shifts from the friendship to the sibling relationship all culminating with the 9-11 attacks foreshadowed by very uncreative imagery. I stopped really caring about the characters at that point: there seems to be an unending chain of events, the narrator hides behind her entourage, there seems to be a parade of people that are tenuously linked... it is very plot driven with none of the humour of the first part, even the imagery of god as a rabbit somewhat goes wayward.Generally, it is a very pleasant book to read, with a refreshing outlook, but Winman should have concentrated on the childhood years and developing their meaning, instead of embarking in those cumbersome last years.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A prime instance of a book whose title and cover are what grab me initially, but luckily, unlike what can sometimes happen, this one didn't let me down. I thoroughly enjoyed the characters, who were just eccentric enough to be interesting without being so over the top as to make you want to chuck the book across the room and was happy to follow them on their adventures to the conclusion. Many of my books go straight to the charity shop once read; this was a keeper.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love books...so many, many books, and yet rarely do I read a book that I find unusually memorable or a story that I don't think has been told before. "When God Was a Rabbit" was that kind of work for me. From the creativity of the title and theme to the character development...I was mesmerized. One of my top ten reads of 2011, it left me thinking about its protagonists long after I had finished.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I just loved this book. In terms of style it reminded me a bit of John Irving The World According to Garp - that kind of whimsical mixed with matter-of-fact reportage, if that makes sense. It's impossible to describe the story without doing it justice and/or giving away plot points. Yes, its a coming of age story but one with a bit of a twist. It's also a brother/sister type story too. Perhaps a bit of To Kill a Mockingbird thrown in. There's some very wry humour and some lovely writing/observations of life. What did you think of it?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An unusual book. Told in two parts. I enjoyed the first part better, it had more interesting subjects. The second part was a little disjointed. Overall a good book with some interesting observations on life and love.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "How does one think up stories like this?" I thought to myself while reading When God Was A Rabbit by Sarah Winman. But grateful I am that people do. Ms. Winman's debut novel had me hooked straight away with fresh characters and inventive storytelling. It had me up late into the night as I poured through the book... not quite sure where I was headed, but enjoying the quirky journey. By the end, I found myself emotionally tied with the characters. My heart tugged. My breaths deepened in an attempt to clear away the tears that threatened. Then, moments later, I realized I was chuckling aloud. It's difficult to summarize what the book was about without while conveying the spirit of it. But lets just say I'm glad I read it. I'm glad I was allowed to spy on this family. And I'll miss them now that the book is over.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A bit of a whacky book. I love that god is a rabbit and her friend is magical, but I wish that followed through more to the end. I love how the coconut showed up at the end of the book. Wish god hung around longer. He was awesome.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An unforgettable coming-of-age story exploring the unbreakable and lifelong bonds of siblings. Witty with dry British humor, this literary morsel breathes life into the characters of brother and sister Joe and Elly Maud and their assorted quirky friends and family. From the buccolic English countryside of the 1960's to the horrific day of September 11, 2001 and its aftermath, we share their loss of innocence, disillusionments and heartbreak. Sarah Winman's debut keeps us engrossed as Joe and Elly's closely guarded secrets play out, and how it examines their beliefs about fate and destiny and their desire for acceptance. Well done in portraying friendships and love in all forms.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "His excitement was the taper that ignited our sluggish souls, and drew us all towards him that summer; that summer when the light went out."Elly lives with her parents and older brother Joe in north London in the 1970s, and life is good. She makes friends with a girl called Jenny Penny, whose mother is a bit scandalous. She gets a pet rabbit and decides that god is a good name for a bunny. She's a little disconcerted when her parents decide up sticks and buy a B&B in Cornwall but proceeds to make friends with the various residents who seem to become permanent, including Arthur, an elderly professor type who claims to know when he's going to die, and Ginger, a faded actress who is regularly stoned. Her brother emigrates to New York and his diary places him in the World Trade Center on that fateful morning...(it's been a few weeks since I read this one, bear with me if my review is a little scatty).Ummm. This reminded me a lot of The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake. Emotionally absent father? Check. Weird older brother? Check. Crush on older brother's best friend? Check. Carefree childhood? Check. So I loved the London part. Winman makes it very clear that we're in the 1970s, not today, but that's fine.Then we move to Cornwall and we're angsty and teenagey and Jenny Penny disappears and Joe moves to New York and it's all a bit... odd. I think other people would find this section charming but I did not.Then 9/11 happens and Joe isn't answering his phone and we know that according to his diary, he must be dead, and Elly flies over and there's a lot of sibling soul-searching without being very soul-searching, mostly the preemptory grief of the families/friends as they desperately hoped that their loved one had been spared, had been late for work, had got out quickly. All very moving.Anyway eventually there is a resolution to all the suspenseful family tragedy and we are back in Cornwall and life is downright weird, with lots of people not remembering things, or being stoned or just off their rockers. Plenty of mid-life crisis going around.What I am trying to say is:great writing? yesgood characters, variety, people we care about? yesplot? not so much although a few bitsgood book? yesgreat book that everyone in the world has to read right now or else? no.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When God was a Rabbit is a story of love, friendship, and family and searching for what is lost. An interesting and novel storyline. Great character development. Was sad to turn the last page and lose these characters. A great and quick read.

Book preview

When God Was a Rabbit - Sarah Winman

necessary.

Part One

1968

I decided to enter this world just as my mother got off the bus after an unproductive shopping trip to Ilford. She’d gone to change a pair of trousers and, distracted by my shifting position, found it impossible to choose between patched denims or velvet flares and, fearful that my place of birth would be a department store, she made a staggered journey back to the safe confines of her postcode where her waters broke just as the heavens opened. And during the seventy-yard walk back down to our house, her amniotic fluid mixed with the December rain and spiraled down the gutter until the cycle of life was momentously and, one might say, poetically complete.

I was delivered by an off-duty nurse in my parents’ bedroom on an eiderdown that had been won in a raffle, and after a swift labor of twenty-two minutes my head appeared and the nurse shouted Push! and my father shouted Push! and my mother pushed, and I slipped out effortlessly into that fabled year. The year Paris took to the streets. The year of the Tet Offensive. The year Martin Luther King Jr. lost his life for a dream.

For months I lived in a quiet world of fulfilled need. Cherished and doted on. Until the day, that is, my mother’s milk dried up to make way for the flood of grief that suddenly engulfed her, when she learned her parents had died on a walking holiday in Austria.

It was in all the papers. The freak accident that took the life of twenty-seven tourists. A grainy photograph of a mangled coach lodged between two pine trees like a hammock.

There was only one survivor of the crash, the German tour guide, who had been trying on a new ski helmet at the time—the thing that had obviously saved his life—and from his hospital bed in Vienna, he looked into the television camera as another dose of morphine was administered and said that although it was a tragic accident, they had just eaten so they died happy. Obviously the trauma of plummeting down the rocky crevasse had obliterated his memory. Or maybe a full stomach of dumplings and strudel had softened the blow; that is something we would never know. But the television camera stayed on his bruised face, hoping for a moment of sensitive lucidity for the heartbroken families back home. It never came. My mother remained grief-stricken for the whole of my second year and well into my third. She had no stories to recall, no walking stories or funny first words, those events that give clues to the child that might become. The everyday was a blur, a foggy window she had no interest in wiping clear.

What’s going on? sang Marvin Gaye, but no one had an answer.

And yet that was the moment my brother took my hand. Took me protectively into his world.

He had skirted the periphery of my early life like an orbiting moon, held between the alternate pulls of curiosity and indifference, and probably would have remained that way had destiny not collided with a Tyrolean coach that tragic, pivotal afternoon.

He was five years older than me and had blond curly hair that was as unfamiliar to our family as the brand-new car my father would one day buy. He was different from other boys his age; an exotic creature who secretly wore our mother’s lipstick at night and patterned my face with kisses that mimicked impetigo. It was his outlet against a conservative world. The quiet rebellion of a rank outsider.

I blossomed into an inquisitive and capable child, one who could read and spell by the age of four and have conversations usually reserved for eight-year-olds. It wasn’t precocity or genius that had become my bedfellow, simply the influence of this older brother, who was by then hooked on the verse of Noël Coward and the songs of Kander and Ebb. He presented a colorful alternative to our mapped-out lives. And every day as I awaited his return from school, my longing became taut, became physical. I never felt complete without him. In truth, I never would.

Does God love everyone? I asked my mother as I reached across a bowl of celery to take the last tea cake. My father looked up from his papers. He always looked up when someone mentioned God; it was a reflex, as if he was about to be hit.

Of course he does, my mother replied, pausing in her ironing.

Does God love murderers? I continued.

Yes, she said. My father looked at her and tutted loudly.

Robbers? I asked.

Yes.

Poo? I asked.

Poo’s not a living thing, darling, she said seriously.

But if it was, would God love it?

Yes, I expect he would.

This was not helping. God loved everything, it seemed, except me. I peeled off the last curve of chocolate, exposing the white marshmallow mound and the heart of jam.

Are you all right? asked my mother.

I’m not going back to Sunday school, I said.

Hallelujah! said my father. I’m glad about that.

But I thought you liked it? said my mother.

Not anymore. I said. I only really liked the singing bit.

You can sing here, said my father, looking back down at his papers. Everyone can sing here.

Any reason? my mother asked, sensing my withholding.

Nope, I said.

Do you want to talk about anything? she asked quietly, reaching for my hand. (She had started to read a book on child psychology from America. It encouraged us to talk about our feelings. It made us want to clam up.)

Nope, I said again through a small mouth.

It had been a simple misunderstanding. All I had suggested was that Jesus Christ had been a mistake, that was all: an unplanned pregnancy.

Unplanned indeed! screamed the vicar. And where did you get such blasphemous filth, you ungodly child?

I don’t know, I said, just an idea.

"Just an idea? he repeated. Do you honestly think God loves those who question his divine plan? Well, I’ll tell you, missy, he does not, and his arm shot out and pointed toward my banishment. Corner," he said, and I wandered over to the chair facing the damp, crumbling green wall.

I sat there thinking about the night my parents had crept into my room and said, We want to talk to you about something. Something your brother keeps saying to you. About you being a mistake.

Oh, that, I said.

Well, you weren’t a mistake, said my mother, just unplanned. We weren’t really expecting you. To turn up, that is.

Like Mr. Harris? I said (a man who always seemed to know when we were about to sit down and eat).

Sort of, said my father.

Like Jesus?

Exactly, said my mother carelessly. Exactly like Jesus. It was like a miracle when you arrived—the best miracle ever.

My father put his papers back into his battered briefcase and sat next to me. You don’t have to go to Sunday school or church for God to love you, he said. "Or for anyone to love you—you know that, don’t you?"

Yes, I said, not believing him.

You’ll understand that more as you get older, he added. But I couldn’t wait that long. I’d already resolved that if this God couldn’t love me, then it was clear I’d need to find another one that could.

What we need is another war, said Mr. Abraham Golan, my new next-door neighbor. Men need wars.

Men need brains, said his sister Esther, winking at me as she hoovered around his feet and sucked up a loose shoelace that broke the fan belt and made the room smell of burnt rubber. I liked the smell of burnt rubber. And I liked Mr. Golan. I liked the fact that he lived with a sister in his old age and not a wife, and hoped my brother might make the same choice when that far-off time came.

Mr. Golan and his sister had come to our street in September and by December had illuminated every window with candles, announcing their faith in a display of light. My brother and I leaned against our wall and watched the blue Pickering van turn up one mild weekend. We watched crates and furniture carried carelessly from the truck by men with cigarettes in their mouths and newspapers in their back pockets.

Looks like something died in that chair, said my brother as it went past.

How do you know? I asked.

Just know, he said, tapping his nose, making out he had a sixth sense even though the other five had proven many times to be shaky and unreliable.

A black Zephyr pulled up and parked badly on the pavement in front and an old man got out, a man older than any man I’d ever seen before. He had goose-white hair and wore a cream corduroy jacket that hung off his frame like loose skin. He looked up and down the road before heading toward his front door. He stopped as he passed us and said, Good morning. He had a strange accent—Hungarian, we later learned.

You’re old, I said. (I’d meant to say hello.)

I’m as old as time, he said, and laughed. What’s your name?

I told him and he held out his hand and I shook it very firmly. I was four years, nine months, and four days old. He was eighty. And yet the age gap between us dissolved as seamlessly as aspirin in water.

I quickly shunned the norm of our street, swapping it instead for his illicit world of candles and prayers. Everything was a secret and I guarded each one like a brittle egg. Abraham told me that nothing could be used on Saturdays except television, and when he returned from shul we ate exotic foods—foods I’d never tasted before—foods like matzo bread and chopped liver and herring and gefilte fish balls, foods that evoked memories of the old country, he said.

Ah, Cricklewood, he’d say, wiping a tear from his blue, rheumy eyes, and it was only later at night that my father would sit on my bed and inform me that Cricklewood bordered neither Syria nor Jordan, and it certainly didn’t have an army of its own.

I am a Jew, he said to me one day, but a man above all else, and I nodded as if I knew what that meant. And as the weeks went by I listened to his prayers, to the Shema Yisrael, and believed that no God could fail to answer such beautiful sounds, and often he would pick up his violin and let the notes transport the words to the heart of the divine.

You hear how it weeps, he said to me as the bow glided across the strings.

I do, I do, I said.

And I would sit there for hours listening to the saddest music ears could bear, and would often return home unable to eat, unable even to talk, with a heavy pallor descending across my young cheeks. And my mother would sit next to me on my bed and place her cool hand on my forehead and say, What is it? Do you feel ill? But what could a child say who has started to understand the pain of another?

Maybe she shouldn’t spend so much time with old Abraham, I heard my father say outside of my door. She needs friends her own age. But I had no friends my own age. And I simply couldn’t keep away.

The first thing we need to find, said Abraham, is a reason to live, and he looked at the little colored pills rolling around in his palm and quickly swallowed them. He began to laugh.

Okay, I said, and laughed too, although the ache in my stomach would years later be identified by a psychologist as nerves. He then opened the book he always carried and said, Without a reason, why bother? Existence needs purpose: to be able to endure the pain of life with dignity; to give us a reason to continue. The meaning must enter our hearts, not our heads. We must understand the meaning of our suffering.

I looked at his old hands, as dry as the pages he turned. He wasn’t looking at me but at the ceiling, as if his ideals were already heaven-bound. I had nothing to say and felt compelled to remain quiet, trapped by thoughts so hard to understand. My leg, however, soon started to itch; a small band of psoriasis that had taken refuge under my sock was becoming heated and raised, and I urgently needed to scratch it—slowly to start with—but then with a voracious vigor that dispelled the magic in the room. Mr. Golan looked at me, a little confused.

Where was I? he said.

I hesitated for a moment.

Suffering, I said quietly.

Don’t you see? I said later that evening as my parents’ guests huddled silently around the fondue burner. The room fell silent, just the gentle gurgling of the Gruyère-and-Emmental mix and its fetid smell.

"He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how, I said solemnly. That’s Nietzsche," I continued with emphasis.

You should be in bed, not wondering about death, said Mr. Harris, who lived in number 37. He’d been in a bad mood since his wife left him the previous year after a brief affair with (whispered) another woman.

I’d like to be Jewish, I pronounced as Mr. Harris dipped a large hunk of bread into the bubbling cheese.

We’ll talk about it in the morning, said my father, topping up the wine glasses.

My mother lay down with me on my bed, her perfume tumbling over my face like breath, her words smelling of Dubonnet and lemonade.

You said I could be anything I wanted when I was older, I said.

And she smiled and said, And you can be. But it’s not very easy to become Jewish.

I know, I said forlornly. I need a number.

And she suddenly stopped smiling.

It had been a fine spring day, the day I actually asked him. I’d noticed it before, of course, because children would. We were in the garden and he rolled up his shirtsleeves and there it was.

What’s that? I said, pointing to the number on the thin translucent skin of his underarm.

That was once my identity, he said. During the war. In a camp.

What kind of camp? I asked.

Like a prison, he said.

Did you do something wrong? I said.

No, no, he said.

Why were you there, then? I asked.

Ahh, he said, raising his index finger in front of himself. The big question. Why were we there? Why were we there indeed?

I looked at him, waiting for the answer, but he gave none. And then I looked back at the number: six digits, standing out harsh and dark as if they had been written yesterday.

There’s only one story that comes out of a place like that, Abraham said quietly. Horror and suffering. Not for your young ears.

I’d like to know, though, I said. I’d like to know about horror. And suffering.

And Mr. Golan closed his eyes and rested his hand on the numbers on his arm as if they were the numbers to a safe and one he rarely opened.

Then I will tell you, he said. Come closer. Sit here.

My parents were in the garden fixing a birdhouse to the sturdy lower branch of the apple tree. And I listened to their laughter, to their shrieks of command, to the Higher, No, lower, of clashing perspectives. Normally I would have been outside with them; it was a task that would have thrilled me once, the day being so fine. But I’d become quieter those last couple of weeks, gripped by an introversion that steered me toward books. I was on the sofa reading when my brother opened the door and leaned awkwardly in the door frame. He looked troubled; I could always tell because his silence was flimsy and craved the dislocation of noise.

What? I said, lowering my book.

Nothing, he said.

I picked up my book again and as soon as I did he said, They’re going to cut my knob off, you know. Or part of it. It’s called a circumcision. That’s why I went to the hospital yesterday.

What part? I asked.

Top bit, he said.

Will it hurt?

Yeah, probably.

Why are they going to do that, then?

The skin’s too tight.

Oh, I said, and must have looked confused.

Look, he said, a little more helpfully. You know that blue roll-neck jumper you’ve got? The one that’s too small?

Yes.

Well, you know when you tried to put your head through and you couldn’t and it got stuck?

Yes.

Well your head’s like my knob. They’ve got to cut off the skin—the roll-neck part—so the head can be free.

And make a round neck? I said, sounding much clearer.

Sort of, he said.

He hobbled around for days swearing and fiddling with the front of his trousers like the madman who lived in the park, the man we were told never to go near but always did. He recoiled at my questions and my request for a viewing, but then one evening about ten days later, when the swelling had subsided and we were playing in my bedroom, I asked him what it was like.

Happy with it? I said, finishing the last of my Jaffa Cake.

I think so, he said, trying to suppress a smile. I look like Howard now. I have a Jewish penis.

Just like Mr. Golan’s penis, I said, lying back onto my pillow, unaware of the silence that had immediately filled the room.

How do you know about Mr. Golan’s penis?

A pale sheen now formed across his face. I heard him swallow. I sat up. Silence. The faint sound of a dog barking outside.

Silence.

How do you know? he asked again. Tell me.

My head pounded. I started to shake.

You mustn’t tell anyone, I said.

He stumbled out of my room and took with him a burden that, in reality, he was far too young to carry. But he took it nevertheless and told no one as he had promised. And I would never know what actually happened when he left my room that night, not even later, he wouldn’t tell me. I just never saw Mr. Golan again. Well, not alive anyhow.

He found me under the covers, breathing in my nervous, cloying stench. I was fallen, confused, and I whispered, He was my friend, but I couldn’t be sure if it was my voice anymore, not now that I was different.

I’ll get you a proper friend, was all he said as he held me in the darkness, as defiant as granite. And lying there coiled, we pretended that life was the same as before. When we were both still children, and when trust, like time, was constant. And, of course, always there.

My parents were in the kitchen, basting the turkey. The meaty roast smells permeated the house and made both my brother and me nauseous as we attempted to finish off the last two chocolates from a box of Cadbury’s Milk Tray. We were standing in front of the Christmas tree, the lights dangerously flickering and buzzing due to a faulty connection somewhere near the star (something my mother had already warned me not to touch with wet hands). We were frustrated, looking at the piles of unopened presents scattered about underneath, presents we weren’t allowed to touch until after lunch.

Only another hour to go, said my father as he skipped into the living room dressed as an elf. His youthful features stood out from under his hat, and it struck me that he looked more like Peter Pan than an elf; eternal boy rather than spiteful sprite.

My father was into dressing up. He took it seriously. As seriously as his job as a lawyer. And every year he liked to surprise us with a new festive character, and one that would remain with us throughout the Christmas period. It was like having an unwanted guest forcibly placed amidst our lives.

Did you hear me? my father said. Only another hour till lunch.

We’re going outside, said my brother sullenly.

We were bored. Everyone else on our street had already opened their gifts and were parading the Useful and the Useless in front of our envious eyes. We sat dejectedly on the damp front wall. Mr. Harris ran past showing off his new tracksuit, a tracksuit that unfortunately showed off too many parts of him.

It’s from my sister Wendy, he said, before unnecessarily sprinting down the road, arms splayed out wide toward an imaginary finishing post.

My brother looked at me. He hates his sister Wendy.

I thought she couldn’t much like him as I watched the purple-orange-and-green flash disappear around the corner, narrowly missing Olive Binsbury and her crutch.

Lunch! shouted my father at three minutes to two.

Come on, then, said my brother. Once more unto the breach.

Once more where? I said as he led me toward the dining room and the scent of my parents’ selfless and enthusiastic offerings.

It was the box I saw first: an old cardboard television box that obscured my brother’s head and made his feet tap out their way like white sticks.

Am I nearly there yet? he said, heading toward the table.

Nearly, I said.

He placed the box down on the table. I could smell the fecund dampness of straw. The box moved jerkily, but I wasn’t scared. My brother opened the flaps and pulled out the biggest rabbit I’d ever seen.

I said I’d get you a proper friend.

It’s a rabbit! I said with piercing delight.

A Belgian hare, actually, he said rather brotherly.

A Belgian hare, I repeated quietly, as if I’d just said words that were the equivalent to love.

What do you want to call it? he asked.

Eleanor Maud, I said.

You can’t name it after you. My brother laughed.

Why not? I said, a little deflated.

Because it’s a boy, he said.

Oh, I said, and I looked at the rabbit’s chestnut-brown fur and his white tail and the two little droppings that had fallen from his arse and thought that he did indeed look like a boy.

What do you think I should call him, then? I asked.

"God," said my brother grandly.

Smile! said my father, pointing his new Polaroid camera in front of my face. Flash! The rabbit struggled in my arms as I temporarily went blind.

You okay? asked my father as he excitedly placed the film under his arm.

Think so, I said, walking into the table.

Come on, everyone! Come and watch this, he shouted, and we huddled around the developing image, saying Ooh and Ahh and Here she comes as I watched my blurred face sharpen into focus. I thought the new, short haircut that I’d pleaded for looked odd.

You look beautiful, said my mother.

Doesn’t she? said my father.

But all I could see was a boy where once I would have been.

January 1975 was snowless and mild. A drab, uninspiring month that left sledges unused and resolutions unsaid. I tried most things to delay my imminent return to school, but eventually I passed through those heavy gray doors with the sullen weight of Christmas Past pressed firmly on my chest. This would be a dull term, I concluded, as I dodged airless

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