Details for 'The Art of Hearing Heartbeats' by Jan-Philipp Sendker

The Art of Hearing Heartbeats

by Jan-Philipp Sendker
This is a beautiful and moving tale of love and loss, in Burma and New York, in the 1950s and the present day.
This book was featured by me on Radio Suffolk
The Art of Hearing Heartbeats
by Jan-Philipp Sendker
My review:

Julia is bewildered when her father, a New York lawyer disappears. There is no hint of what might have happened to him until an old love letter is discovered. Determined to solve the mystery, Julia decides to travel to Burma to trace a woman that neither she nor her mother knew existed.

Once there, Julia meets an old, wise man who says he can take her to her father, but first he tells her a story of a man she realises she never knew.

The narrative is astonishing. It moves from modern day New York to village life in Burma in the 1950s. It tells the story of terrible loss, sadness and suffering, but also the ability to overcome, to love, to believe and to hope. There is a real sense of authenticity in its presentation of a culture and outlook which is full of wisdom about life, relationship and community.

I was in tears for much of my reading of this book, yet it is a beautiful and understated story, so sensitively and charmingly written that I would read it again.

This review appears on LoveReading.co.uk.
 

Date of my review March 2013
Read by Woodbridge Book Group on 27th January 2014

Elements of this story of love and loss did not ring true, but most felt that it didn't detract from a beautiful, engrossing, magical tale.