#6Degrees of Separation – A book chain from Butter to The Signature of All Things

It’s the first Saturday of the month which means it’s time for 6 Degrees of Separation.

Here’s how it works: a book is chosen as a starting point by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best and linked to six other books to form a chain. Readers and bloggers are invited to join in by creating their own ‘chain’ leading from the selected book.

Kate says: Books can be linked in obvious ways – for example, books by the same authors, from the same era or genre, or books with similar themes or settings. Or, you may choose to link them in more personal or esoteric ways: books you read on the same holiday, books given to you by a particular friend, books that remind you of a particular time in your life, or books you read for an online challenge. Join in by posting your own six degrees chain on your blog and adding the link in the comments section of each month’s post.   You can also check out links to posts on Twitter using the hashtag #6Degrees.


ButterThis month’s starting book is Butter by Asako Yuzuki. As usual, it’s a book I haven’t read but the blurb tells me it’s about a female gourmet cook and serial killer, and is inspired by a true story. Links from each title in the chain will take you to my review or the book description on Goodreads.

Picking up the dairy theme of the title, my first link is to Milkman by Anna Burns which is set in Belfast during the period in Northern Ireland’s history known as ‘The Troubles’.

These Days by Lucy Caldwell is also set in Belfast but during the Second World War and, in particular, on four days during which the heaviest bombardment by German aircraft took place.

Lucy Caldwell has recently published a short story collection, Openings, as has Kate Atkinson. Normal Rules Don’t Apply consists of eleven interconnected stories.

In North Woods by Daniel Mason the connection that runs through the book is with the woods of the title and the people, animals and insects that inhabit it over the centuries. One of the latter is a ‘lusty beetle’.

The search for a very special beetle is the subject of Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce in which spinster Margery Benson abandons her job as a schoolteacher and sets out on an expedition to prove the existence of the golden beetle of New Caledonia.

New Caledonia is an archipelago in the South Pacific and The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert also features an expedition to the South Pacific, this time to Tahiti by fictional nineteenth-century botanist, Alma Whittaker.

My chain has taken me from Japan to Tahiti. Where did your chain take you this month?
#6Degrees of Separation June 2024

Book Review – The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis

About the Book

Book cover of The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis

Amidst the horrors of Auschwitz, German officer, Angelus Thomsen, has found love. But unfortunately for Thomsen, the object of his affection is already married to his camp commandant, Paul Doll.

As Thomsen and Doll’s wife pursue their passion – the gears of Nazi Germany’s Final Solution grinding around them – Doll is riven by suspicion. With his dignity in disrepute and his reputation on the line, Doll must take matters into his own hands and bring order back to the chaos that reigns around him.

Format: ebook (322 pages) Publisher: Vintage
Publication date: 30th September 2014 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Zone of Interest on Goodreads

Purchase The Zone of Interest from Bookshop.org


My Review

This was a book club pick prompted by the recent release of the film adaptation. I haven’t seem the film but I’m reliably informed it is quite different from the book in that, although it focuses on the family of the camp commander of the Auschwitz concentration camp, the camp is very much in the background – quite literally – whereas Amis takes us right inside it.

This is a very dark place to be and it’s fair to say many of the book club members found it a place they did not want to inhabit and either didn’t finish the book or, knowing the subject matter, decided not to read it at all. I can definitely understand this as there are some extremely disturbing scenes although of course these probably pale into insignificance compared to the reality. There are phrases in German scattered throughout the book without any accompanying translations which some readers also found a barrier. Personally, I didn’t bother looking up what they meant.

Each chapter of the book features three narrators: German officer Golo Thomsen, the nephew of Martin Bormann, who is in charge of the construction, using camp labour, of a factory to produce synthetic rubber; Paul Doll, the camp commandant (based on the real-life commandant of Auschwitz, Rudolf Höss); and Szmul, a member of a group of Jewish prisoners tasked with escorting fellow Jews to the gas chamber and disposing of their remains.

Initially Thomsen, something of a playboy, views his position and his Aryan good looks as an opportunity to bed any female he sets his eyes on but he soon becomes besotted by Hannah, the wife of the camp commandant. His feelings for her seem to awaken a sense of humanity in him and they share a growing awareness that Germany is going to lose the war.

Doll is obsessed with numbers, treating his role as something like the overseer of a production line, bewailing the unceasing demands from his superiors and the complaints of local inhabitants about the smells emanating from the camp and the state of the local drinking water. Often drinking himself into a stupor, Doll bemoans his wife’s unwillingness to sleep with him, observing her in the bathroom through a two-way mirror he has had installed. The sections written from his point of view are shot through with black humour as he becomes an increasingly ridiculous figure albeit a remarkably dangerous one.

Szmul knows his survival rests on his usefulness to the Germans but that this will end at some point. The only kindness he can bestow on those heading for the gas chamber is to tell them ways to shorten their suffering.

As I was reading the book, Hannah Arendt’s phrase ‘the banality of evil’ came to mind. This is mass murder as a bureaucratic operation with every detail recorded, prisoners’ worth calculated in terms of the work they can do versus the calories they consume, the arrival of trains carrying new prisoners meticulously scheduled and the most cost effective way of disposing of bodies argued over. At the same time, there is the nauseating artificiality of new arrivals being welcomed by the camp commandant whilst an orchestra plays in the background.

Many questions arise from the book: How did such an atrocity happen? How did a whole nation allow the ‘normalisation’ of mass murder? How did one individual manage to convince good people to do awful things? I don’t know the answers to those questions but books like this, even as disturbing to read as this one, should make us keep asking them, especially as we look around the world today.

The Zone of Interest is not an easy read but I think it’s an important one.

In three words: Hard-hitting, dark, thought-provoking
Try something similar: All the Broken Places by John Boyne


About the Author

Author Martin Amis

Martin Amis was an English novelist, essayist, and short story writer. His works included the novels MoneyLondon Fields and The Information.

He passed away on Friday 19 May, 2023, aged 73.