BOOKS @ VOLUME #202 (30.10.20)
Read our latest newsletter and find out what we are reading and recommending.
BOOKS @ VOLUME #202 (30.10.20)
Read our latest newsletter and find out what we are reading and recommending.
Our Book of the Week, The Harpy by Megan Hunter, is an exploration of love, revenge and female rage drawing on mythology and the dark recesses of the psyche with precision and spine-chilling unease set in the normality of the suburban middle-class home.
| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | |
![]() | The Beat of the Pendulum by Catherine Chidgey {Reviewed by THOMAS} What are you looking at? Nothing. I’m not looking at anything. Up there in the corner? No, I’m concentrating. Trying to. What on? I’m writing a review of this book by Catherine Chidgey book. You’re writing a review on a Wednesday? But your deadline's Friday. You've never written a review before Friday before. I like the cover. It’s by Fiona Pardington. The photograph. What is it? A moth’s wing, or a butterfly’s. It’s probably some reference to Nabokov. He was a lepidopterist. I don’t know what reference, though. Nabokov not being a writer I particularly appreciate. Why is it called The Beat of the Pendulum? That’s a reference to Proust. Something he wrote about writing novels. It’s in the epigraph. The writer as the manipulator of the reader’s experience of time. The writer as able to make the reader experience time as such, by speeding it up. Or by slowing it down, I suppose. Proust might be mistaken on this, though. What? I am more interested in the differential of the reader’s and the characters’ experience of time. The writer’s inclusion or exclusion of detail controls the reader’s awareness and makes the book move at a varying pace, that’s what detail is for, really that is all it's for, slowing down, speeding up, leaping over swathes of time that would have been experienced by the characters, if they weren’t fictional, a kind of hypothetical time, so to call it, but inaccessible to the reader because those moments are one step deeper into fiction than the text reaches. Sounds more like a concertina than a pendulum. Yes. The book should be called The Squeeze of the Concertina. I’m not sure readers are necessarily aware, consciously, of the difference between text time and narrative time, notwithstanding Proust, though they might well be. What has this got to do with the book? It’s just a transcript of all the conversations the author overheard or that she was involved in. Is it even a novel? Just? Have you read this book? No. But [N.] read it. Or read some of it. Or a review. Or talked to someone who had read it. Or some of it. Or a review. Yes. And said? That it was self-indulgent. I don’t agree with that. At least, it is less self-indulgent than most novels. I mean, what kind of person, other than a novelist, would be so presumptuous as to expect others to spend hours of their time witnessing their make-believe? But people like doing that. That’s beside the point. And the point is? The point is that this book turns the tables on the author, subjects her to the very kinds of scrutiny that most novels are constructed to deflect, if I can damn all writers with one blow, or at least the kinds of writers that write the kind of make-believe that the ‘people’ you referred to earlier like to indulge in. There are other kinds? So in a way this novel is a kind of literary gutting inflicted upon the author by the rigours of the constraint she has chosen, Knausgaard without the interiority. It’s like Knausgaard? No. It’s more a kind of extension of the Nouveau roman project outlined by Robbe-Grillet: a turning-away from the tired novelistic props of plot, character, meaning, a verbal ‘inner life’, inside-out, and all that. Robbe-Grillet wanted a novel made only of objects, surfaces, objective description. This book doesn’t have any of those. Hmm. Yes. This book has cast off all those. Perhaps it’s even more rigorous. There are only words, spoken by people about whom we know nothing but what the words tell us, or imply. We are immersed in language, it is our medium, or the medium of one strand of our awareness. Our sensory awareness and our verbal awareness are very different things. Are you giving a lecture here? I suppose this book, by removing both the referents for language and the matrix of interpretation, or context, the conceptual plinths that weigh down novels, is testing to what extent speech is any good at conveying anything by itself. Conceptual plinths? There aren’t any. The book reminds me, a little, of Nathalie Sarraute, The Planetarium perhaps, where the novel is comprised only of voices. In this book the reader does the same sort of work to ‘build’ the novel around the words. Is that fun? Fun? Well, actually, yes, this book is enjoyable to read. I thought I would read a bit, get the idea, and then take some pretty large running stitches through it, so to speak, but, even though nothing much happens in the way of plot, it is just an ordinary life, after all, the book is hugely enjoyable, and frequently very funny, you want to read every bit, because it so perfectly captures the way people say things, the way thought and language stutter on through time. The book is takes place entirely in the present moment, a present moment regulated by language. By the beat of the sentence. What is said is unimportant. Relatively unimportant. It doesn’t matter what happens? Why should anyone care about that? Apart from the characters, so to call them. She spent a year spying on people and writing down whatever they said, whether she was in the conversation, probably quite private conversations, or things she overheard people saying? How could she do that? How could she not do that? A novelist is always spying on other people, not to overhear what people say but how they say it, not to find out information but to find out how people approach or are affected by or transfer information. You don’t think a novelist is predatory of plot, then? Or scavenging for plot? You can’t hear or see plot. There’s no such thing, objectively. So I suppose you can’t steal one, only impose one. The realist novel, or the so-called realist novel, as a form, makes the most outrageous of its fantasies, its fallacies, in the area of plot. I think that’s unjustified. But people like plot. Yes. Yes, I suppose plot has little to do with objective reality. So to call it. Yes. In fact, coming back to what you said before about objectivity. Dialogue is the only objective form of writing. Description is prone to error, to the interposition of the viewer to the viewed, and no-one would pretend that interiority was anything but an unreliable guide to the actual… No-one as in not even you? …which is its richness, I suppose. But no-one would dispute the saying of what is said. No-one as in not even you? Verbatim is actuality, or, I mean, resembles actuality, at least structurally. Verbatim creates an indubitable immediacy for the reader, which is very seductive, and clocks time against speech. Why write conversation? Conversation is propulsion. It is rocket fuel for a stuck writer, for any writer. It gets the writer out of the way of the text and lets the characters take responsibility for its progression. Conversation gives at least the illusion of objectivity. Conversation draws the reader into the illusion of ‘real time’. Even if it’s not. No. Irrelevant, though. But this novel, The Beat of the Pendulum, purports to be a record of things actually said, in the real world. Yes, I believe it. How is that a novel? All novels are a kind of edited actuality, some more swingeingly edited than others. Otherwise they wouldn’t be believable. She’s edited this? Well, obviously there’s been some sort of selecting process going on, some choosing. A year’s worth of “I’m putting on some washing. Is there anything you want to add to the load”/”There are some socks on the floor in the bedroom, if you wouldn’t mind.” might get a bit tedious. But is not out of keeping with the project. Well, no. I suppose not. But then it wouldn’t be a novel. Literature is potentised by exclusion rather than by inclusion. What makes this book a novel is the rigour of its form. It is an experiment in form. A laboratory experiment, if you like. You said this book is funny. I don’t remember The Wish Child being funny, and her new book, Remote Sympathy, doesn't seem remotely funny. Where does the humour come from? Scientific rigour is indistinguishable from humour. The world is a relentless funfair? If you look at it dispassionately. And a relentless tragedy. There are some rather memorable and enjoyable passages, revelatory, even, you could say. Such as? There is a long passage, maybe a dozen pages, which just records the sales pitch of a sales assistant showing Catherine and her husband a carpet shampooing machine. The use, or misuse, of language is just so well observed, it’s hilarious and tragic. Likewise the patter used by Fiona Pardington when taking Chidgey’s portrait, or there’s the compound pretension and insecurity of the conversations in the creative writing classes Chidgey tutors, or the attempt to read The Very Hungry Caterpillar to an inattentive child. Humour often comes from the simultaneous impact of multiple contexts upon language. I thought humour comes from noticing the world as it actually is. That’s why humour is often cruel. Or all the medical appointments, or the woman overheard in a waiting room talking about her jewellery. “I’m a silver person but my three daughters are gold people,” or something like that. Chidgey reveals the distortions, the structural flaws and inconsistent texture of the verbal topographies we wander through. Hark at him. And the way words act as hooks or burrs that accrete details to entities in ways sufficiently idiosyncratic to make them specific. So you get to know the characters in this book? Even though nobody’s named. No, not really. At least, not closely. Surprisingly, perhaps. But then an overdefined personality, or ‘character’ is a definite flaw that fiction, even—sometimes—good fiction, but certainly—always—bad fiction, is prone to fall into. What we call identity is really just a grab-bag or accretion of impressions and tendencies, and multiple voices, including incompatible impressions and contradictory tendencies and conflicting voices. We are much less ourselves than we pretend we are. Speak for yourself. Attachment to what we, for convenience, call persons, is something imposed upon actuality and is not something inherent in it. Chidgey’s book is not involving in the way we sometimes expect novels to be involving, there’s no story, or any of those other appurtenances, but there is both a fascination and a shared poignancy that comes with this cumulative evidence of the feeling that actual life is slipping away, with each beat of the pendulum, its loss measured out in words. Each squeeze of the concertina. The moments whose residue is on these pages will never return. The words both immortalise them and mark their evanescence. It’s both an anxiety and a release from anxiety. So our anxiety about our vulnerability magnifies our vulnerability? That’s a fairly accurate observation. That’s what we use words for. Ha. The book is arranged on a day-by-day basis through the year. Yes. You’re supposed to read only what’s on today’s date, then, for a year. Haha. That would be a bit religious. Yes, you could. That would be an experiment in reading. It’s been done. But not in a novel. I don’t know. What are you doing? I’m putting my computer away. You’re not going to write the review? All this talking has used up the time I was going to write it in. You can always write it on Friday. Deadline day. I suppose. I was hoping to at least make a start. Sorry. Don’t say that. Sorry. It’s ironic, isn’t it, our situation, two fictional characters engaged in a fictional conversation about an objective novel comprising only actual, ‘real-life’, material. What are you saying? We’re both fictional, authorial conceits if you like. Mind you, you are rather more fictional than I am. Someone might mistake me for an actual person. But you’re not? Not on the evidence of our conversation. |
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
![]() | The Harpy by Megan Hunter {Reviewed by STELLA} A marriage, a betrayal and a punishment. Meet Lucy, wife and mother, mid-30s. She’s put her career on hold for the children — never finished her PhD — and works part-time editing on contract. It fits in with the children. Jake is her charming husband and life is good, even if they can’t afford their own home in the increasingly expensive suburbs. A message from David Holmes breaks the fairytale. Jake’s been having an affair with a work colleague (David’s wife Vanessa). Lucy is understandably shocked and an inner rage starts to build. To save the marriage Lucy and Jake make a deal. She can hurt him three times unexpectedly and without any discussion. Life carries on and the hurts are dealt out. Yet Lucy, despite her best intentions to play her roles, particularly for the boys, becomes incensed by the reactions of her husband, the other parties involved, and the neighbours. As she hosts the neighbourhood pre-Christmas party she becomes increasingly aware of the double standards of her community. Jake is as popular as ever, while she is either maligned or pitied by his actions. This would be another relationship drama about motherhood, wifedom and sacrifice if it wasn’t for Hunter’s superb writing style, which invites you into Lucy’s world in episodic fragments — rich and nuanced — and the mythical fascination that Lucy has with the harpy — that monstrous, powerful bird-woman, a creature she has been curious about since childhood. And her childhood, the impact of parental behaviour, is a pivotal aspect of this novel. Under Lucy’s skin claws a beast, a rage, adamant to be heard and seen. When the punishment crosses the line, her revenge tips out of control. Will she be consumed by her rage or will her rage avenge the wrongs perpetrated upon her? This is brilliant and, like her first book, The End We Start From, the language is pointed, sparse and beautiful — taut and finely tuned. The Harpy is an exploration of love, revenge and female rage, drawing on mythology and the dark recesses of the psyche with precision and spine-chilling unease, set in the normality of the suburban middle-class home. |
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Wow by Bill Manhire $25Lo-TEK: Design by radical indigenism by Julia Watson $110
In an era of high-tech and climate extremes, we are drowning in information while starving for wisdom. Enter Lo-TEK, a design movement rebuilding indigenous philosophy and vernacular architecture to generate sustainable, resilient infrastructure and design solutions that are eco-positive.
"Can ancient fixes save our crisis-torn world? This book is the result of a decade of travelling to some of the most remote regions on the planet, interviewing anthropologists, scientists and tribe members. Watson carefully documented their indigenous innovations using the landscape architect's language of plans, cross-sections and exploded isometric diagrams to explain clearly how they work." —The Guardian
BOOKS @ VOLUME #201 (23.10.20)
Read our latest newsletter and find out what we are reading and recommending.
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
Burnt Sugar by Avni Doshi {Reviewed by STELLA} With the quotation, “Does the wound of daughter turn into something else if left unattended?” from Linda Yuknavitch opening this novel, you are, from the start of this Booker finalist, set on a course. Burnt Sugar is a sharp-edged portrayal of a mother-daughter relationship that has love, revenge and confusion at its core. Antara, the daughter, is in the throes of her mother’s madness. A madness that has invaded her life from the outset, in one sense or the other. A madness of selfishness and obsession leads Tara, as a young mother, to gather her baby, leave her husband, and follow the guru at the local ashram. Her sexual relationship with the guru leaves her young child to the whims of communal life and, fortunately, the hands of an older woman, Kali Mata. Antara’s memories of this time are fragmented and, at times, frightening, and these early years of abandonment mark her interactions with both her parents as well as making her wary of close relationships with others. When Tara does leave the ashram, her relationship with the guru in tatters, it does nothing to heal the wound for Antara — the daughter is never good enough — a burden who is endured rather than loved, and later a competitor for attention as Tara ages. While Doshi does not overstate the interactions of Antara with her husband, friends and, later, her own baby, it is clear by her behaviour that she has difficulty finding emotional security in her everyday life. Antara is an artist and her artworks focus on memory and obsession. She has a daily project — drawing and redrawing the same face each day — the small changes recorded over time reflect the way in which actions are rewritten incrementally. This project in itself reveals the complex relationship between mother and daughter — one of misguided love and obsession. While it is easy to see this novel as a story of a poisonous mother, this would do Avni Doshi’s novel an injustice. Yes, Antara at times sees her mother’s dementia as a penance for her bad behaviour and for her failure as a parent, and Tara does still inflict destruction in her present incarnation — habitually as much as anything, but there is also an empathy here for her mother’s state, if not forgiveness, especially as she deals with her own sense of entrapment by marriage and motherhood. Doshi explores these themes, along with the expectations of women’s roles in contemporary India, with a honed eye and acid wit. Revenge comes in spoon-fed sugar mouthfuls, and love is elusive, yet hovering at the edges, for Antara. She is not your average heroine nor villain — a victim but also a perpetrator of deceit: Doshi’s portrayal of a young woman at odds with the world she lives in — middle-class India — and at odds with her mother — “I would be lying if I said my mother’s misery has never given me pleasure” — is searingly honest. |
| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | |
![]() | The Lost Writings by Franz Kafka {Reviewed by THOMAS} “People are individuals and fully entitled to their individuality, though they first must be brought into an acceptance of it.” If I write more of this it will mean nothing, but this does not stop me sitting at my little desk, here in the hall of our apartment, writing away each night after the others have gone to sleep. The clock in the sitting room slices away the seconds with each swing of its pendulum; the seconds, the minutes, the hours, each moment a decapitation of all that I have written, these sentences just as deserving of being considered shavings from my pencil as the shavings that accumulate at my page-side. Which is the better monument to my labour? It is hard to begin to write, but I am one who believes that beginning to write is possible, perhaps with superhuman effort, or with effort that is human if superhuman effort is not attainable by humans, but I do not believe that it is possible to bring writing to completion, and so I complete nothing. Not that it is not easy to stop; nothing could be easier. Anyone who writes has an equal ability to stop writing; though the ability to write may be very unequally distributed, to stop writing is within the reach of all. Why then, if stopping is so easy, do so many writers not improve the quality of their work by availing themselves more often of this common ability? If a good writer is one who manages not to write bad books, a reasonable definition, then, and I state this without conceit, though I complete nothing I am a better writer than many writers more famous than me. If it is possible to begin and possible to stop but impossible to complete, at least for me who does not believe in the possibility of completion and who does not believe that the world contains completion, only beginnings and stoppings, what is produced by all this writing? I produce nothing but fragments. I believe in nothing but fragments. Even the great sheaf of pages that I call The Proceedings is a fragment, an interminable fragment, uncompletable, and I would rather this is burned after my death than turned into a work by an editor or executor, no matter how well-intentioned. Will there come a day, perhaps a hundred years from now, when the fragment is recognised as a literary form in itself, perhaps the only literary form, the only form that can approach the truth, no matter that it limps in its approach. The smaller the fragment, then, the more perfectly it expresses its inability to be anything other than a fragment, but how shall these fragments be assembled and arranged? Fragments are best arranged in a fragmentary way. Just as dust accumulates throughout an unswept house, but more in some places than in others, such as in the space between an unclosed door and the wall against which it rests, so fragments naturally become lost within the drifts of which they are part. How shall they be found among all the other fragments in which in plain sight they are as good as lost? There is nothing lost about these lost writings. The writer and the reader are more lost than what is written, but only when they write and read. I write to be rid of myself. I write to be rid of thought. I write to be rid of what I have written but every fragment adds to this burden I write to put down. I sharpen my pencil again as the pendulum swings and add to the pile of shavings that is my more fitting legacy, the one that my executor will not hesitate to burn, should they happen to survive that long. I write as the birds begin to sing in the trees in the street below. I will not complete what I write. It is not possible to complete what I write. Whether I wish to complete what I write or not affects nothing, I will produce a fragment, but the question of whether I should strive for completion remains. I will be found where I am lost. Every opportunity is a trap, but I leap in regardless [...] |
Inspired by the American Black Panther Party, the Polynesian Panthers were formed in 1971 to advocate revolutionary alternatives to trans-global capitalism and the racism, disenfranchisement and monoculturalism it saw as a corollary to this. The movement advocated non-violent resistance, Pacific empowerment, and an education programme aimed at changing the New Zealand's social landscape. It was given impetus in the mid-1970s by resistance to Muldoon's Dawn Raids. In this week's Book of the Week, The Platform: The Radical Legacy of the Pacific Panthers, Melani Anae shows how the movement is still relevant today.
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![]() | Suppose a Sentence by Brian Dillon {Reviewed by THOMAS} Could he even write a review of a book he had read about someone writing about sentences that he in turn had read which were written by yet other people, some of whom, or, rather, some of which, he himself had read directly, if that is the word, that is to say not just in the book about sentences in which these sentences also appear and which he has also read? The question mark, when it finally arrived, seemed somehow out of place, so far did it trail the part of the sentence he had just written in which the matter of the question appeared early, all those clauses shoving the question mark to an awkward distance, already the thought that the sentence described was changing direction, as thoughts do, but the sentence was still obliged to display the mark that would make the first part of the sentence, and indeed the whole sentence thereby into a question, there was a debt to be paid after all, he was lucky to get off without interest. The separation of the question mark from the quested matter was not the only reservation he had about the sentence he had just written, he had other reservations, both about its structure and its content, in other words both about its grammar and its import, if that is the right word. One reservation was that he had chosen to write the sentence in the third person, a habit he had acquired, or an affectation that he had adopted, that depersonalised his reviews and made them easier to write and, he hoped, more enjoyable to read, certainly, he thought, less embarrassing for himself to read, or should that be re-read, not that he was particularly inclined to do such a thing. These reviews were also written in the past tense, for goodness sake. Could he write in the first person and in the present tense, he wondered, or was that a mode he contrarily reserved for fiction? Can I even write a review of a book I have read, he wrote as an experiment, about someone writing about sentences that he has read which were written by yet other people, some of whom, or, rather, some of which, I have read directly, if that is the word, that is to say not just in the book about sentences in which these sentences also appear and which I have also read?, he wrote, though I must say, he thought, that question mark is more problematic than ever. Also, would it not be ludicrous, he thought, to even attempt to write a review about a book about fine sentences, or exceptional sentences, or exemplary sentences or whatever, from William Shakespeare to Anne Boyer, including sentences from several of my favourite writers, though not perhaps the sentences of theirs that I would choose if I had been choosing, he thought, when my own sentences churn on, when in my own repertoire I have only commas and full stops, a continuation mark and a stopping mark, when those two marks for him are already too much for him to handle, accustomed as he had once made himself to the austerity of the full stop alone, you could write a whole book using only full stops, he thought, or he had once thought. He had wandered, and tried to return to the task in hand, or the book in hand, or to the thought in head, so to speak. Because the book was about sentences he found himself unable to write any sentences about it. If he wrote a review, he thought, he had no doubt that at least some of the readers of that review, if not all of the readers of that review, if there were any such readers, which seemed unlikely, would find his sentences fell short of their subject, or if they did not fall short they would quaver under their scrutiny, weaken and collapse, which is another sort of falling. His sentences would rather point than be pointed at. Thinking of writing would have to suffice. I would like to write, he thought of writing, that this book, Suppose a Sentence by Brian Dillon, is the sort of book that anyone interested in reading better, or, indeed, in writing better, which goes without saying, as writing is a subset of reading, if that goes without saying, though not everyone’s subset, he thought, and would have said had he been saying instead of thinking and writing, or, rather thinking and thinking of writing, Brian Dillon is good company in working out how text works when it works well, but, although he thought of writing this, as he had said, see, he does say though he said he was not saying, he did not write this as, by this time, his comma-infested sentences were almost unable to move in any direction even if not in a straight line, bring on the full stops, he thought. "Every writing worthy of its name wrestles with the Angel and, at best, comes out limping.” —Jean-François Lyotard |
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The Inkberg Enigma by Jonathan King {Reviewed by STELLA} Miro lives with his Dad in Aurora — a small fishing town — and it’s the school holidays. He loves adventures — the ones in books — and spends his days happily lying on the sofa hidden in fantastic and amazing worlds. But he's a bookworm and needs to feed his book stack. Luckily, the house they have recently moved to has an attic of treasures — and some of these treasures are sought after. Miro is a regular at the antique shop and is a dab hand at bartering. His trade done, it’s off to get a stack of books at the second-hand bookshop. While in the village, he’s keeping an eye out for Dad — he doesn’t want to run into him (Miro’s book collection is growing — some may think too large) — and for the town bullies. Yet buried in anticipation of reading his new stash, he doesn’t notice the bullies, but someone else does: Zia, equipped with her camera and an eye for trouble, easily frightens them off. Miro and Zia make the perfect duo — one smart and thoughtful, the other curious and fearless, and they both love adventures — Miro’s in books and Zia’s in real life. And something fishy is happening in their small town. Jonathan King has created a brilliant world. It’s Aotearoa, but could be a fishing town along the American coast or Canadian isles, loosely based on Lyttelton and Diamond Harbour, complete with the ferry and the fish works. There are recognisable buildings — the mysterious mansion is Larnach Castle and the ship stuck in the ice is a classic Antarctic explorer territory, and the sea, as in many New Zealand stories is never far from the action. When Zia pulls Miro into a real-life adventure, the weird underbelly of the town comes to the surface in more ways than expected. Yes, as you would expect, there is a creature from the depths, but how and why it is surfacing in little Aurora is a mystery from the past, with strange rituals, shady characters, and an unusual book. Why is the mayor so keen on keeping a secret? What’s really happening at the fish works? And why are Miro and Zia being warned to keep their noses out of it? With the help of the museum’s archives, a marine biologist (Miro’s Dad’s girlfriend), and Zia’s insatiable curiosity, the duo will find the key to the mysterious happenings in the harbour and unlock the secrets of the Inkberg — while just keeping their heads above water! A brilliant graphic novel illustrated in the style of 'Tintin 'for 7 to 12-year-olds, Jonathan King’s The Inkberg Enigma is a wonderful adventure with plenty of twists and just enough scares to please. Here’s hoping for more adventures with this excellent duo from the pen of this comic artist. |
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BOOKS @ VOLUME #199 (9.10.20)
Read our latest newsletter and find out what we've been reading and recommending.
| >> Read all Stella's reviews. | |
Red Pill by Hari Kunzru {Reviewed by STELLA} A middle-aged writer living in Brooklyn with his human rights lawyer wife and three-year-old daughter is having a crisis. He has writer’s block and is deeply subsumed by a malaise that he can’t shrug off. When an opportunity comes to attend a writers’ residency in Berlin, this seems the perfect way to escape the mill of the freelance writer and the distraction of family life. He’s had the first-book success, but time has passed and the pressure is on to produce the next work. The romantic notion of the lone writer in a creative hub situated on the shores of Lake Wannsee seems ideal. Yet the Deuter Centre is not what he expected. There is no ‘being alone’: participation is expected with the other residents and staying in your room is frowned upon. He is encouraged to take his place in the library, to converse with others, most of whom he finds unbearable, and to eat in the dining room. His work on the new book about "The construction of the self on lyric poetry” becomes more elusive than ever. As our narrator’s inability to write continues, his downward spiral escalates. Initially, he walks around the village, the lake, and through the grounds of the house in a contemplative mood, really avoidance, delving into the history of the German Romantics, in particular Heinrich von Kleist. His obsession with Kleist’s suicide pact keeps his mind occupied. As the director of the Centre becomes increasingly vexed by the writer’s non-participation, our narrator’s resistance ratchets up a level. He avoids the other residents, pretends to be writing in the library and spends his spare time immersed in watching a violent crime drama, Blue Lives, on his laptop obsessively. His paranoia is on the rise and he suspects he is being watched — and maybe this is so — the Deuter Centre has security cameras and a slightly oppressive air. Cut to the second part of the book, an interlude in the narrator’s story. He meets Monika, the cleaner at the house, by chance at a cafe in the village and while, at first, she resists his attempts to talk with her — he’s desperate for human connection in this foreign place where nothing is going to plan — she succumbs, possibly out of pity or empathy. This interlude entitled Zersetzung (Undermining) tells Monika’s story of being in an all-girl punk band as a drummer in East Berlin and the workings of the Stasi as they infiltrate what they deem to be disruptive forces and anything that resonates with 'freedom' or the West. From rebel to informer, Monika’s story is realistic and tragic. Kunzru is starting to draw us a picture, one of obsessive paranoia and authoritarian dictates. And here the novel ramps up. Our narrator meets the director of Blue Lights at a party. Anton is as fascinating as he is frightening, and the writer’s obsession with him deepens to a dangerous level — one where he will lose his mind. Anton is a monster moulded by cynicism and extreme views dressed casually in a cloak of bonhomie and intellectual gymnastics, toying with the writer and using the popular culture channels of his show and his fame to inflame extreme behaviour. When our protagonist is thrown out of the residency programme and instructed to fly home, he instead starts to follow Anton, culminating in a confrontation on a remote Scottish Island, a confrontation which will eventually get him home to Brooklyn, in time to usher in the 2016 American election. The title of the book is drawn from the film The Matrix, in which Neo is offered the red pill or the blue. The red pill will free his mind and allow him to see reality, horrendous as it might be, while the blue will let him live in blissful ignorance. Kunzru’s Red Pill feels more prescient than ever, as the world is rocked by the rise of the alt-right worldwide and the subsequent recognition by the liberal left that something is not right, that the comforts of the past decades have opened a window that has let in a foul draught. |
| >> Read all Thomas's reviews. | ||
![]() | The Appointment by Katharina Volckmer {Reviewed by THOMAS}
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