Waterloo Region Record

The Immortalis­ts is a sweeping family saga

- Kim Curtis

To describe Chloe Benjamin’s second novel, “The Immortalis­ts,” as a story about the evolution of a family would be true, but insignific­ant for the breadth and depth of this amazing work of fiction.

The story begins on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1969. The Gold siblings — two girls and two boys ranging in age from 7 to 13 — innocently make their way to a travelling gypsy soothsayer who predicts exact dates of death. Each child visits the woman separately, but they leave her apartment together — frightened, stunned silent and forever altered.

Benjamin unfurls a dense, yet beautifull­y spun and satisfying tale that spans 50 years and goes from New York to San Francisco and back. The children grow up and grow old; they find love and suffer loss; and, throughout the years, they live with the knowledge — true or not — of when they’ll die.

Each sibling, as well as family matriarch Gertie, receives equally surefooted literary treatment in Benjamin’s capable hands. Every page is imbued with Benjamin’s obvious storytelli­ng skill.

Near the end of “The Immortalis­ts,” Varya sums it up well: “Stories did have the power to change things: the past and the future, even the present . ... The power of words. They weaseled under door cracks and through keyholes. They hooked into individual­s and wormed through generation­s.”

Begin 2018 with the book that could easily retain the year’s top spot, “The Immortalis­ts” is a can’t-put-down, makes-you-think tale of a not-so-average family.

 ??  ?? "The Immortalis­ts" (G.P. Putnam’s Sons), by Chloe Benjamin
"The Immortalis­ts" (G.P. Putnam’s Sons), by Chloe Benjamin

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