Sunday, April 28, 2024

The Gay Place by Billy Lee Brammer

Those names, those occasional faces, were wonderfully reassuring. Life rolled on. There seemed always to be enough names and faces to fill in the gaps where some of the others had left off and deserted. This was reality, the genuine article--it was like stepping down off the stage and moving past the footlights to find an audience of flesh and blood people after all. Silent... vaguely preoccupied... ground under, some of them, by the weight of days--but people live and pumping all the same.

The public life? It was a joke. There seemed no life less public than the politician's. What they had was a fantasy world, populated with kings and priests and brigands and court jesters and camp followers. There was no getting round or out of it. The thing to do was to accept, embrace, believe. Who could be certain whether Miss Alice abandoned reality when she went off down the rabbit hole?

A young state rep from a rural part of Texas is enlisted to help usher in a piece of liberal legislation; a recently appointed U.S. senator must decide whether to run for the seat; the governor's press secretary shepherds him through a weekend on a film shoot as a scandal brews in the capital. All three, protagonists in the novellas that make up Billy Lee Brammer's 1961 political novel The Gay Place, are minor planets orbiting the charismatic governor Arthur Fenstemaker, who was modeled on Brammer's own boss, Lyndon Baines Johnson.

Apparently famously, Brammer's depiction of LBJ as Fenstemaker got him exiled from the governor's good graces. It's difficult, perhaps, in hindsight to see why; many of Fenstemaker's traits cast a kindly light on Johnson. He's both a liberal and a pragmatist, canny and shrewd about what he can and can't accomplish, and uses his know-how and talent to get the most progressive legislation possible in a conservative state. Of course, LBJ was never governor of Texas--when The Gay Place was written, Johnson was still Senate majority leader, and he never held statewide office--but the novel captures some of the capable wheeling and dealing that made him such a powerful politician. In retrospect, one might even say that, in Fenstemaker, LBJ's more vulgarian edges have been sanded down; the Governor never, for example, tries to intimidate anyone by pulling out his enormous penis. But perhaps those elements that do remain in the novel, even admiringly--Fenstemaker's hard drinking, his dalliances with women other than his wife "Sweet Mama" (a stand-in for Lady Bird), his cussing and carousing--might have been too far for a mwn with designs on the White House.

The three novella protagonists struck me as so similar, they might as well be the same person. Neil Christiansen, the senator of "Room Enough to Caper," might be a slightly older version of Roy Sherwood, the rural back-bencher of "The Flea Circus." All three, including the press secretary Jay McGown in "Country Pleasures," are relative nobodies who have been personally plucked out of obscurity by Fenstemaker, who spends much of his time convincing them they possess the value and skill he sees in them. Sometimes they are the objects of his political manipulation, openly or in secret; in "Room Enough to Caper," Fenstemaker leaks the Communist associations of Christiansen's wife and now-dead friend to his possible election opponent, trying to push his chosen candidate into the race. Christianesen, like Sherwood and McGown, is deeply ambivalent about his political ambitions, and suffers from what he feels is a lack of vision. Do politics require vision? Is "vision" what Fenstemaker has, or is it something more earthly and practical? Another thing that binds the three men together is their rocky relationship with women: Sherwood is having an affair with a colleague's wife; Christiansen is half-heartedly trying to rekindle a now-cold marriage; McGown ping-pongs between the sensual movie actress who is the mother of his daughter and the beautiful-but-needy aide he loves. These relationships, in fact, take up most of the men's minds--it's only "Goddamn" Fenstemaker whose prodding brings their attention back to the political life.

I expected The Gay Place to be a satire--perhaps only because LBJ seems like a figure that's ripe for satire. Or perhaps because satire remains the mode by which we typically engage with politics in literature. But The Gay Place, though sometimes funny, is not a satire. It may not even be political. To the extent that it's interested in politics, it offers a snapshot of state politics of a bygone era, in which the halls of power are occupied by the scions of wealthy rural families for whom politics is a hobby, a short-term exercise. They spend less time legislating than they do at the Dearly Beloved Beer Garden (Brammer's version of Austin's legendary Scholz Garden) and having affairs with each other. It's not a place for true believers; there are no true believers, in fact, only wayward souls. I expect that Texas politics, which are increasingly dominated by national news-grabbers and psychopaths like Greg Abbott and Ken Paxton, would be unrecognizable to Brammer. A hint of this future, perhaps, can be seen in "Country Pleasures," where Fenstemaker is happy to be recruited to play an old-time governor in the movie being filmed by McGown's actress wife--a glimpse, perhaps, in which the political life would become not merely a local stage but a national one. A flash of Reagan.

Ultimately, what was most powerful about The Gay Place was its least political aspects. It often reminded me of Walker Percy, with whom it shares a vision of men who are spiritually lost amidst the banal and chauvinist elements of a Southern culture. The title suggests an unfound Eden, the elusive place where true happiness can be found; politics may seem like a way of establishing such a place for all, but these dreams mean little to the men who battle estrangement, alienation, grief, ennui, in the midst of the strangeness of public life. The prose is much better than I expected; if it's not quite Percy, who is, but it captures a poignant disaffection and even makes fascinating use of stream-of-consciousness. If it's a great political novel--as many think--it's because it neither imagines politics as all=encompassing, or incidental. It's a novel that finds the common life between the bedroom and the senate floor, the governor's office and the barroom.

Friday, April 19, 2024

The Dog of the South by Charles Portis

My wife Norma had run off with Guy Dupree and I was waiting around for the credit card billings to come in so I could see where they had gone. I was biding my time. This was October. They had taken my car and my Texaco card and my American Express card. Dupree had also taken from my bedroom closet my good raincoat and a shotgun and perhaps some other articles. It was just like him to pick the .410--a boy's first gun. I suppose he thought it wouldn't kick much, that it would kill or at least rip up the flesh in a satisfying way without making a lot of noise or giving much of a jolt to his sloping monkey shoulder.

Ray Midge is after his wife, who's run off with her first husband, no-good Guy Dupree. Dupree has taken his wife and his credit cards and, what's worse, his beloved Ford Torino, leaving his own beat-up Buick with a hole in the floor. Through his credit card statements, Ray's able to track the pair from Arkansas to Texas and then San Miguel Allende in Texas; from there he learns that they've made for British Honduras, now Belize, where Dupree has a family farm. Ray is joined by a cantankerous old doctor named Reo Symes, trying to make his way to Belize to see his mother. Belize turns out to be a town as ramshackle as they are, and finding Dupree--and Norma--not easy at all, and what's worse, a great hurricane begins to brew.

God, this book is funny. It's as good as everyone says. I'm not even sure what else to say about it, really. I look over the summary above, and it barely seems to capture the madcap energy of the book; it barely seems relevant at all. The Dog of the South is a road trip book, and road trip books, you'd think, have a kind of forward logic, a plottiness like the journey of Ulysses into the underworld--a metaphor that ought to work even better here, given the general downward direction of the beat-up Buick--but the charm of The Dog of the South is the digressions. It's what happens in between the events, which themselves become the core of the novel. Norma is no more important to the novel than the interminable conversation between Ray and Symes about the cheap business grindset pamphleteer Symes thinks is the greatest author of all time, or Symes' mother's pious chiding--Ray, she informs him, is not a name found in the Bible. Half the book seems to be someone telling someone a story about someone else, someone their interlocutor's never met, and Ray, though the straight man of the novel, is no exception. In this way, perhaps, Portis captures something true about the way we talk and the stories we tell, and how little what we say is actually meant to interest or inform anyone else.

In the end, the book is all digression. Norma, Dupree--they're as inconsequential as everything else. We sense early on that the quest will come to naught. That even if Ray is successful in finding his wife and bringing her back home, The Dog of the South is not interested in giving us the catharsis of a showdown, or a tearful reunion, and especially not a moment where the digressions and palaver are all cast away for the "real story." In fact, Ray does find Norma, sick in the Belize hospital and abandoned, and though the moment has its own bittersweet depth, it, too, is deflating, an occasion for a story, though in this case, it's the story--no less shaggy than Ray's--of how she and Dupree ended up in Belize in the first place. (It's there, too, that Ray sees the body of a man he'd recently befriended, a man who had just before been mistakenly placed in Ray's own hotel room, and it's as if this poor unlucky man has wandered into the wrong novel.)

Though The Dog of the South has its moments of profundity and pathos, I think it's impossible to say that it's about much in the hoary old thematic sense. It's funny and frenetic, what might be called a yarn, and maybe one of the best that ever got unspooled. I haven't read True Grit, but it's not hard to see why the Coen Brothers were attracted to Portis' writing; no other book I've read, I think, captures as precisely their particular picaresque sensibility and sense of humor. 

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

The Which Way Tree by Elizabeth Crook

The question come to us then as to whether we was tracking the panther or if, by some unknown hand we was dealt, the panther might be tracking us. I am uneasy to wonder at it even now, and I was sure uneasy at that time. I had seen the size of that panther twice. I had beat its hind end as it gone up the tree after Sam on the night it done in Juda. I had seen the lantern light in its yellow eyes in the goat pen. But the thought of them eyes being on me whilst I slept, and watching me in the dark unawares, was a worse thing to think about than meeting face-on with the creature. It give me a frosty feeling in my soul.

Benjamin Shreve is a young boy living in the Hill Country of Texas during the Civil War. His half-sister, Samantha, is the daughter of his father and his new wife, a formerly enslaved woman named Juda. One day, when Benjamin's father is away, a panther attacks Samantha, leaving her scarred--"cat-marked," as one character later calls it--and kills Juda, who leaps into defend her daughter. Samantha becomes obsessed with tracking and killing the panther, and when it returns years later, she ushers herself and Benjamin into an adventure that will encompass a genteel Mexican horse thief, a kindly preacher, a ragged old panther-hunting dog, and a two-bit criminal named Clarence Hanlin.

The jacket copy of The Which Way Tree compares it to Clinton Portis' picaresques like Dog of the South. I don't know about that, but I'll let you know soon enough. What it reminded me most of, actually, was Huck Finn. The Which Way Tree is narrated by Benjamin as a series of letters to a Texas court judge, who is intent on trying Hanlin in absentia for the murder and robbery of a traveling party. Benjamin knows Hanlin is guilty, and was the last one to see Hanlin alive, and the whole story, which Benjamin tells over the course of several long missives, is, ostensibly, a way to help the judge understand what happened to Hanlin and how. Benjamin's voice is one of the best aspects of the novel. It has a rustic quality, like Huck's, and like Huck an insight belied by the voice's obvious youth. The simplified language of a young teen, steeped in backcountry ways, without a need or capacity for flights of prose, makes the novel brisk and readable.

Benjamin makes allusions to a book he's picked up somewhere called The Whale, one of the few he's ever owned or read, but he claims to have read it cover to cover more than once. The parallels are so obvious, you don't really mind when Crook spells them out: Benjamin's sister Sam is like Ahab, obsessed with bringing down the panther, whom we learn is a legendary mankiller called Demonio de Dos Dedos--the demon of the two toes, an allusion to the bits of the cat that Juda chopped off with her cleaver in saving her daughter's life. The adventure itself could be a little cinematic for my tastes--too much action, too little clarity and insight--but time and again, both Sam and Benjamin must confront the tension between a desire for vengeance and other human needs, like family, kindness, and belonging. Benjamin accuses Sam of being so caught up in bloodlust that she is blind to the way that he has taken care of her since their parents' deaths, and he's right. It's the essential goodness in Benjamin that the judge recognizes over the course of their apparently long correspondence. But vengeance is a hard thing to break free from, and the closer they get to the panther, the more intensely it burns.

Monday, April 15, 2024

God Save Texas: A Journey Into the Soul of the Lone Star State by Lawrence Wright

I drove back to Austin, under a Turneresque sunset with a gibbous moon rising from a bank of pink clouds. A herd of Black Angus cattle moved like shadows in the places where the buffalo once grazed. I thought about how unintentional most of life is. Part of me had always wanted to leave Texas, but I had never actually gone. Sometimes we are summoned by work or romance to move to another existence, and for me those moments when there is no reasonable alternative to departure have always been joyful, full of a sense of adventure and reinvention. Staying is also a decision, but it feels more like inertia or insecurity. Most of the time I live in a state of vague discontent, tempted by the vision of another life but unwilling to let go of the friends and daily habits that fill my time. When I am in other states or countries, I'm always aware of being in exile from my own culture, with all its outsized liabilities. I wish I lived in the mountains of Montana or on the Spanish Mediterranean. I wish I had a condo in a high-rise overlooking Central Park, with a piano by the window. These thoughts have been at play in my imagination for decades. Now here I was, on a darkening highway in Texas, with so much more road behind me than what lay before.

How hard it must be to write a book about Texas. Alaska may be bigger, but it's relatively unpeopled; to encompass Texas, you'd have to write about Houston's oil booms, Austin's weirdness, tensions on the Rio Grande. You'd have to talk about Dallas and Dealey Plaza, about the great nothingness in the middle, about Big Bend and the far west. Lawrence Wright's essay collection God Save Texas might not be Texas-sized; it's hard not to sense that in its attempts to cover every corner, it's missed some of the true mystery that lies along the way, but it's good enough for an outsider like me. From the first moment, when Wright describes biking along the path between San Antonio's historic Spanish missions, it whetted my whistle for the trip I'm taking next week, where I hope to do exactly that. (Let's hope those predictions of rain are exactly that.)

Wright brings a set of necessary skills to the project: he's a journalist, and much of the novel reads like well-researched journalism, especially the section about Houston that traces the history of the oil boom. Wright clearly has access to the chambers of the statehouse in Austin; he devotes two sections--titled "Making Sausage" and "More Sausage" to the conflicts within the Texas Legislature between moderate and ultra-conservative Republicans, and no one, it seems, is unwilling to talk to him--not even Karl Rove, who pops in for a queasy hello. I could have done with less of this stuff, maybe, because Texas's political scene is the least pleasant thing about the whole state, and I'd rather not think about it. But Wright, writing during the Trump administration, makes a powerful case that Texas is--shudder to think--the crucible of the American political scene. Ironically, given its iconoclasm, Wright suggests that Texas is at the forefront of American politics, and what we see there is soon to be what we see everywhere. It's hard to say he's wrong about that.

But Wright is a playwright, too, and much more pleasant are the sections where he uses his more writerly gifts to extol the state's grandeur and beauty. I loved the section about far west Texas, a severe desert where modern artists like Donald Judd found a landscape that could match the pure shape and color of their innovations. Chapters like "Borderlands" and "The High Lonesome," the latter ostensibly about the mid-Texas landscape that birthed musical icons like Buddy Holly, manage to capture in words something of Texas's sheer, mind-altering scale.

Wright, a Texan by birth, writes about returning to his ancestral land after sojourns in New York, Atlanta, Tennessee, and even as far away as Egypt. It's beautiful and difficult, I think, to return to the place whence you came, like the spiral returning; it has an air of backwardness, or perhaps of the final stages of something. But I find it easy, actually, to imagine that returning to Texas feels like home.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

The God of Nightmares by Paula Fox

During the months I lived in New Orleans, I loved more people than I had ever loved in my life. I drowned in waters of love. My heart beat strongly in anticipation of seeing them. I never wearied of their faces, their voices.

Helen lives with her mother in upstate New York, in the long shadow of her father's abandonment. When word comes that her father has finally died, her mother's tenuous hopes of reunion are shattered, and the life that they've been living together suddenly seems dreary and intolerable. Her mother sends Helen to New Orleans to find her sister, Helen's aunt, who, like Helen's mother, was once a glamorous cabaret girl. Ostensibly, Helen is sent to ask Aunt Lulu to return to New York and help manage their humble inn, but as soon as she sees Lulu in the flesh--drunk and nude, cantankerous, living in a converted old ballroom where the ceiling is plastered with stars--she understands that her mother has really sent her to free her, to show her other ways she might live. And sure enough, she finds in New Orleans a new community with whom she falls deeply in love: bohemians, poets, and queers.

Among them are Len, an enigmatic and silver-haired young man whom she falls for, and Nina, a fellow northern emigre, whom she falls for equally intensely, but in a different way. Among these Helen navigates the changing world of the American South in the 1940's: in Europe, the specter of the Nazis is looming, and here in New Orleans the old orthodoxies of race and gender fight jealously for preservation. Claude, the beautiful scion of a wealthy family, faces the threat of vengeance by the local mafia who resent Claude's attentions to one of their own young scions. Her poet friend, Gerald, suffers a lifelong injury inflicted by the very rural swamp-dwellers who form, to their great chagrin, the core of his poems. Helen, out of her stony northern element, treats these conflicts as challenges to be navigated. It's Nina, on the other hand, who shows up at the department store where Helen works and impulsively drinks from the Colored water fountain, inviting the attention and ire of witnesses. It's this boldness that both attracts and terrifies Helen.

I loved Fox's novel Desperate Characters, which takes place over a couple of days in Brooklyn, and has a kind of Sparkian slightness that you know I'm into. The God of Nightmares, with its larger cast, richer backdrop, and wider temporal scope, is a different kind of book entirely, and yet it has something of the same slightness, two qualities which I thought were rather at odds with one another. The novel evokes New Orleans less effectively, I found, than it does the spartan Hudson Valley of Helen's childhood. But the central triangle of Helen-Len-Nina is an effective and fascinating one, with Helen's aunt as a kind of star around which these planets orbit. The most interesting part, I thought, was actually the novel's slim "Part Two," which sees Helen, married to Len and living in New York, reencountering Nina for the first time in decades--only to understand for the first time that Nina and Len had had a brief affair all those years ago. That moment, where a whole history is upended by the slight turn of revelation, reminded me most of Desperate Characters.

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Falling Man by Don DeLillo

Every time she saw a videotape of the plans she moved a finger toward the power button on the remote. Then she kept watching. The second plane coming out of that ice blue sky, this was the footage that entered the body, that seemed to run beneath her skin, the fleeting spirit that carried lives and histories, theirs and hers, everyone's, into some other distance, out beyond the towers.

The skies she retained in memory were dramas of cloud and sea storm, or the electric sheen before summer thunder in the city, always belonging to the energies of sheer weather, of what was out there, air masses, water vapor, westerlies. This was different, a clear sky that carried human terror in those streaking aircraft, first one, then the other, the force of men's intent. He watched with her. Every helpless desperation set against the sky, human voices crying to God and how awful to imagine this, God's name on the tongues of killers and victims both, first one plane and then the other, the one that was nearly cartoon human, with flashing eyes and teeth, the second plane, the south tower.

Who else but DeLillo could write a novel about 9/11? In a way, he wrote one already with White Noise, the ultimate novel about disaster and mass destruction in modern America, a novel about how, even faced with the bare physical fact of our own destruction we are too wrapped up in the images and signs to really see. As television has failed to enable Jack to accept his own mortality--incarnated as a tower of black smoke--so television, and our primitive computers, failed to enable us to understand the crushing force of history. Even those who experienced it firsthand, like Keith in Falling Man, must live with the long life of the image, the video, the photograph, always keenly aware of the ways in which it does not quite match the horror that was not quite legible, even in the moment. 

Keith is a businessman who worked on a high floor of the first tower; after he escapes it he hitches a ride to the apartment where his estranged wife and son are living. His arrival is necessitated by circumstance--his downtown apartment is dangerous--but it also harkens to, perhaps, a rekindling of their relationship. That would be the easy story, and it's kind of DeLillo's, too, though he's too canny a writer to make it that simple. Keith comes back, but he's transformed, part of him has been left behind. He's carrying a briefcase that's not his own; when he returns it to the woman who does own it, they strike up a brief affair predicated on those stories about the falling tower which neither of them can share with anyone else. 

In the weeks and months after "that fateful day," people in the city begin to see a street performer called the "Falling Man", who hangs from a harness in the position of the famous photograph of a man plummeting to his death from the height of the tower's top floor. What's the man's intention with this? In a way, it reminded me of the Guilty Remnant from The Leftovers, whose gruesome antics are meant to remind people of the horrors they'd rather forget. But the man never speaks for himself. He's only an image; the image. Images are signs and portents, but they never speak for themselves, only within the eye of the beholder. This is, I think, something that sets DeLillo apart from some of his peers. Whereas a guy like Pynchon suggests that signs have no meaning, have become space for pure play, in DeLillo everything seems meaningful, though meaning itself is elusive. Keith's wife Lianne notes that "Keith stopped shaving for a time, whatever that means. Everything seemed to mean something. Their lives were in transition and she looked for signs." The Falling Man is another piece of, in the words of White Noise, "psychic data," of "waves and radiation," and the baffling inexpression of his image is only an emblem of the larger inexpression that is the attack.

What I thought was best about Falling Man, and most DeLillo, is the way that Keith and Lianne's son Justin interprets the events. He and a couple of neighbor kids invent a kind of mythos around the event: they search the sky with binoculars for planes, which they believe will return--there's a kind of cargo cult element to it--and finish the job, not understanding that the towers have already fallen. Their cult fixates on a figure called "Bill Lawton," who only belatedly Lianne and Keith discover is their mishearing of Bin Laden. Who can say whether their understanding, their ordering and sense, is any truer than ours?:

They talked to him. They tried to make gentle sense. She couldn't locate the menace she felt, listening to him. His repositioning of events frightened her in an unaccountable way. He was making something better than it really was, the towers still standing, but the time reversal, the darkness of the final thrust, how better becomes worse, these were the elements of a failed fairy tale, eerie enough but without coherence. It was the fairy tale children tell, not the one they listen to, devised by adults, and she changed the subject to Utah. Ski trails and blue skies.

The riskiest choice, perhaps, are three brief interludes written from the perspective of the attackers. These sections could have gone very wrong--through cultural chauvinism, poor research, whatever. Just look at how Updike biffed that book Terrorist that everyone hated. But DeLillo makes it work by keeping the language simple, and focusing on the ways that the attackers are themselves not so different from the people whom they target, having found in an apocalyptic form of Islam a kind of code or key to understanding the world. The final section in which--spoiler alert, I guess, if you've never heard of 9/11--the viewpoint attacker crashes into the tower and the point-of-view leaps into Keith is one of the most audacious things DeLillo's ever done. 

I have a vague sense that this book was not well-received when it came out. Even in 2007, I wonder if we were ready for a book like it. I think time will show that it's among DeLillo's best, because it speaks powerfully to our century's most pivotal moment. It's probably the most written-about day of our lifetimes, if not longer, and yet I think we are still struggling to understand what it meant, or what it means to say "what it meant." No one but DeLillo, I think, could speak so clearly about the anxieties, the mysteries, the interpretations, the images, that have agglomerated around it.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

Women of Sand and Myrrh by Hanan al-Shaykh

He sat up in bed, and to my surprise he announced that he'd been afraid of me the previous day and felt disgusted by me. My thoughts strayed back and I couldn't think of any reason. Was it because I'd bought another piece of jewellery, or told him that I preferred life in the desert to here? 'Why? Why?' I asked him, irritable in my curiosity to find out what sin I'd committed. He answered that I'd done things for my own pleasure like a man. When again I sifted through what had happened the day before and still couldn't guess what he meant, I shook my head questioningly, and he said calmly and gravely, "God created you to bear children, and to give pleasure to a man, and that's all.' I didn't understand. Perhaps I hadn't understood his English? Naturally I'd had children, and naturally a man enjoyed me just as I enjoyed him. Wide awake by this time, Maaz repeated seriously, 'God created woman to make children, like a factory. That's the exact word, Suzanne. She's a factory, she produces enjoyment for the man, not for herself.'

Suha is a Lebanese woman living in an unnamed Arab country where she must hide in a cardboard box from the religious police, always on the lookout for women who have committed the sin of having jobs. Nur is a local woman who longs for the brief freedom she experienced abroad, and who meets Suha at her lowest moment of profound need; Suha is shocked and troubled when their relationship becomes physically romantic, though Nur is not. Tamr is a woman who has been divorced many times, and who dreams of opening her own tailor's shop and hair salon, though she must rely on the legal permission of men to do so. Suzanne is a white woman who has fallen in love with an Arab man; her obsession with him is so strong she is willing to undergo any indignity, even longing to become his second wife.

Hanan al-Shaykh's Women of Sand and Myrrh allows each of these four women to tell their own story in a country where their lives are hidden and their voices muzzled. The country is not named, but it's certainly one of those Gulf petrostates like Qatar, Kuwait, or Bahrain--or, more likely, Saudi Arabia--flooded with money and luxuries that promise to soothe the sting of repression, but which can do very little. Each of the four women struggles in her own way with the stifling culture that keeps them little more than vassals to the men in their lives--husbands, brothers, fathers. Suha and Nur dream of returning to the places where they felt truly at home, Lebanon and London, though the possibility of leaving together seems to be one that is left totally unexplored; Suha cannot accept about herself what Nur can. Tamr, by contrast, tries her best to work within the system, carving out a space for herself and her business with a little deception, a little bribery, and a great deal of resolve.

The most interesting of these stories, I thought, was Suzanne's, who has arrived in this country as the wife of an (English?) petroleum engineer. Her narrative is the strangest, the wildest, and the least easy to understand; al-Shaykh manages to capture the mania, close to true madness, of a woman who would sacrifice her freedom so readily. Even Suzanne, willing to adapt and conform in ways the novel's Arab women struggle with, runs afoul of the contempt of men in her life; in the passage above, Maaz is disgusted by her compliance: it's not enough for her to submit to him; she shouldn't even be enjoying it. Maaz, of course, like the other men of the novel, is a child, reduced to an infantile understanding of women and relationships by the same repressive ideals that keep their thumb upon women's lives.

Now, I'm no expert in the Middle East, but it seems to me that in this novel, published in 1992, al-Shakyh captured something vital about the tension between the modernizing and fundamentalist impulses of the Gulf. There are echoes here of someone like Mohammad bin-Salman, a stunted child with too many toys, and of modern Saudi Arabia, a place where economic and technological explosions have done little to stem the effects of Wahhabism. And yet, al-Shaykh's characters feel not like allegories or parables, but real women.

With the addition of Lebanon, my "Countries Read" list is up to 90!

Saturday, April 6, 2024

Noli Me Tangere by Jose Rizal

"The government is terrified of raising its hand against the people and the people of the forces of the government. And out of that comes a simple game that seems like what happens to frightened souls when they visit lugubrious places. They take their own shadows for ghosts, and their echoes for strange voices. While the government has no real understanding of this country, it will not get out of such a relationship. It will live like those idiotic young men who tremble at their tutor's voice, though they seek his approval. The government has no dreams of a strong future. It is only an arm, the parish house is the head, and their inertia allows them to be dragged from one abyss to another. They end up as a shadow, they disappear as an entity, they are weak and impotent, and they entrust everything to mercenaries."

Don Crisostomo Ibarra has returned to his native Philippines after a lengthy education in Europe, and to his betrothed, the beautiful Maria Clara. The country is not as he left it; his father is dead, and the parish priest he once counted as a family friend has turned against him, spreading foul rumors about his father. Don Crisostomo has brought home a notion that his people might be elevated by the kinds of education and erudition he himself received in Europe, and begins to raise funds to build a schoolhouse. But the Spanish Catholic priests who actually run the country--using the weak colonial government as a limb to enact their own bidding--are suspicious of his efforts. They hatch a scheme to foment a popular rebellion, which they will blame on Don Crisostomo, and have him hanged. But in the meantime, the real rebels have also identified Don Crisostomo as a man who might champion their cause; the malevolent priests may find that they really have created a rebel after all.

Apparently, Noli Me Tangere is required reading for all high school students in the Philippines. Literally, by law. It captures an emerging spirit of Philippine nationhood, which develops as a reaction to the excesses of Spanish clerical rule. The cruelty and malicious of the priests is drawn with extremity--both the fiery Father Damaso, who hates Don Crisostomo because he is secretly Maria Clara's father, and the mild-mannered Father Salvi, who is secretly in love with Maria Clara, and who is the true animating force behind the scheme to kill Crisostomo. The Filipino people, by contrast, are presented as simple and earnest, the possessors of a culture that inherits both Spanish and Indigenous customs, which often sit in an uneasy tension with one another. The most comic and pathetic characters are those Filipinos who affect a kind of Spanish noblesse to which they are not born; one character is presented as having learned her Spanish poorly but also having had to abandon her Tagalog so that she is nearly unable to communicate in any language. Among this setting, Don Crisostomo emerges as a kind of avatar of the Filipino spirit, which claims an allegiance to European revolutionary principles at the same time it rejects European rule.

Noli Me Tangere is an interesting historical and cultural document. But I wish I'd read something else for my Philippines book. It has a familiar kind of late 19th century-ness: stagey, talky, over-reliant on the revelation of Dickensian secrets, like the true identity of Maria Clara's father, and women whose traumas make them go mad. (You never see women going mad anymore.) As for the Filipino schoolteachers, I can't imagine how they get their kids to read a 450-pp. book from 1887, no matter how patriotic its spirit.

That said, with the addition of the Philippines, my "Countries Read" list is up to 89!

Monday, April 1, 2024

Kudos by Rachel Cusk

To return to the subject of the college's award, he said, the name they had chosen for it was 'Kudos.' As I was probably aware, the Greek word 'kudos' was a singular noun that had become plural by a process of back formation: a kudo on its own had never actually existed, but in modern usage its collective meaning had been altered by the confusing presence of a plural suffix, so that 'kudos' therefore meant, literally, 'prizes,' but in its original form it connoted the broader concept of recognition or acclaim, as well as being suggestive of something which might be falsely claimed by someone else. For instance, he had heard his mother complaining to someone on the phone the other day that the board of directors took the kudos for the festival's success while she did all the work. In light of his mother's remarks about male and female, the choice of this fabricated plural was quite interesting: the individual had been superseded by the collective, yet he believed it still left the question of evil entirely open. Admittedly, despite extensive research, he had been unable to find anything to corroborate his mother's use of the word in a context of misappropriation. Could prizes be given to the wrong person, without malintent coming into it?

At one point in Kudos, the final book in Rachel Cusk's trilogy that began with Outline and continued in Transit, an interviewer tells Cusk's stand-in Faye that he is going to interview her as if he is a character in her books. We know instantly what this means, because we are reading one of "Faye's books": he's going to talk at length about some subject, social or philosophical, with a slightly elevated language, and a kind of erudition that seems to emanate from Faye herself rather than any interior source. The interviewer proceeds to spend his allotted half hour doing nothing but this, and in the end, Faye isn't even given a moment to answer any of his extemporizing "questions." This is, I think, a little joke on us: Yes, Cusk says, I know the characters in my books all sound alike, and that they don't exactly sound like real people. You might be thinking, she continues, how tedious and long-winded all these people are, but don't worry, so am I. Yet, it might be the highest kind of praise to note that Cusk's characters, like Shakespeare's and Austen's, all sound like their author and yet are manifestly different. The arrogant interviewer may sound like the bedraggled man in the next airplane seat, or the autistic teen who leads the tour group, but he is clearly not like them. These are variations within the same music.

What sets Kudos apart from the previous two novels--though to be honest, I don't remember them all that well--is its interest in children. Everywhere Faye goes at the literary conference that forms the book's setting (in some sunny but unnamed southern European city), people are talking about their children. It's remarkable, actually, how many of the people in this novel seem to have children with autism or developmental delays, or just hobbled personalities and limited social abilities. On the plane, the seatmate describes at length his shock that his autistic daughter turns out to be an oboe virtuoso; a depressive but much-lauded writer at the conference describes his despair at the shallow-mindedness of his own son, who does nothing but watch soccer and eat candy. Children in Kudos are the locus of the struggle between father and mother, man and woman; Faye's interlocutors are constantly describing their divorces and unhappy marriages. And of course, they always have intelligent, discursive things to say about What It All Means.

I wonder if, going back to the former two novels, I would find that Faye disappears quite as completely as she does here. Faye really is the "invisible eyeball" of Emerson; she floats through the conference recording the discourse of others, only offering her own response from time to time, and much more briefly. (After the interview with the man, Faye is interviewed by a woman, who is forced to talk and talk about marriage and literature in the same way the man was because the sound crew needs to test her microphone--but not Faye's. This is, I think, another joke, another aware wink.) All this children talk made me expect some final climax that involves Faye's own children. And when it comes, it's rather muted: her son calls, desperate because he has gotten in trouble at a local pool thanks to convoluted events mostly outside of his control. Faye assures him that he's done the right thing, and promises he can come stay with her when she's back from the festival. It's a moment that is surprisingly simple and sweet--OK, we see that you are the novel's one good mother--and shorn of the heavy psychic drama that seems to lay over all the other struggles shared by parents in the novel. More shocking and pointed is the novel's final scene--the trilogy's final scene, which is kind of amazing, when you think about it--in which Faye goes for a dip at the local nude beach, where a male stranger locks eyes with her and pees in the adjacent water. Symbolism.