Thursday, March 29, 2007

Modern Classics: Seize the Day


















Seize the Day (1956) is a novel by Saul Bellow charting a day in the life of 44 year old Tommy Wilhelm. Wilhelm lives at a New York City hotel with his elderly fater, Dr Adler, after having separated from his wife following an affair he had. He has also recentently been laid off his sales job. Another guest at the hotel, Dr Tamkin - who claims to be a psychologist and a poet - convinces Wilhelm to enter a joint stock market venture that would result in Wilhelm losing his money.
Although the novel is about 1 day we learn much of Wilhelm's past: He once tried to make it as a screen actor in 1930's Hollywood. His "scout" Maurice Venice turned out to be a pimp. We also learn much about Dr Adler's relationship with a son he does not or perhaps cannot understand. Dr Adler is a hard working Jewish professor. He is stern and at times difficult and refuses to help Wilhelm.
While looking for Dr Tamkin, Wilhelm goins into a chapel where a funeral is taking place. The novel ends with Wilhelm crying at the stranger's funeral.

Monday, March 26, 2007

Contemporary Reads: On Chesil Beach


















On Chesil Beach (2007) is Ian McEwan's latest novel. It is a short novel largely devoted to Edward and Florence's wedding night in the early 1960s. Through a series of analepsises (flashbacks) and the use of stream of consciousness, we soon understand the importance of that night for a couple of newlyweds who are only 22 y/o at that time. He, a recent history graduate from a rural background; she, a promising violinist from a typically academic and politically conservative Oxford environment.

Britain in the early 1960s was still a country pretty much sexually repressive were most youths would arrive to marriage being very naive about sex. McEwan takes us back to that time brilliantly. Even the likes of me who were born at a much later date very soon into the novel begin to understand what these two characters are going through that night.

Tragedy strikes when Edward comes too quickly and Florence - feeling guilty - runs off to the beach. What ensues is an argument in which she declares herself frigid and even suggests that they should have a sexless marriage. She even says that she would be happy for him to procure sex elsewhere. He finds the idea unbearable and that night they part for good.

On the last few pages we follow Edward's life as a singleton throughout the years and can even guess a certain regret at not having accepted Florence's offer.
Another doubtless triumph by Ian McEwan.
Other books I have read by the same author: The Cement Garden, The Child In Time, Enduring Love, Amsterdam, Saturday and Atonement.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Untranslated Lit: Où es-tu? (Where are you?)


















Où es-tu? (2001) is the sencond novel by Marc Levy. It is the story about two young lovers, Philip and Susan who are separated when Susan decides to move to Honduras to carry out humanitarian work. Only meeting occasionally at Newark airport, the young couple gradually grows apart.

Eventually, Philip marries journalist Mary and has a child, Thomas. Meanwhile, Susan also has a child, Lisa. When Susan dies during a hurracane, Lisa comes to the States to live with Philip's family.

On Lisa's graduation date, Susan reappears. We learn that she did not die during the hurracane. She decided not to bring her daughter back to Honduras as she thought she would have a better chance of growing up with Philip and his family in America.

Other books I have read by the same author: Et si c'était vrai (Just Like Heaven).

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Contemporary Reads: The Child In Time

The Child in Time (1987) is one of the early novels by Ian McEwan. It tells the story about how children's author Stephen and her wife, Julie, had her 3-year old daughter, Kate, kidnapped. How their marriage suffers and they only come to terms with it after their separation and Julie's new pregnancy.
We also learn about Stephen's parents' life in old age and as a young couple. And there is also the storyline about Stephen's first publisher, Charles, who later becomes a government minister and a favourite of the Prime Minister only to resign at the top of his game and retire to the countryside where he'll end up committing suicide.
This is a novel essentially about children and parenting but also a great reflection on Time and its passing.
I'm an inconditional of McEwan's and I am yet to read a book by him that would prove me wrong.
Other books I have read by the same author: The Cement Garden, Enduring Love, Amsterdam, Saturday and Atonement.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Plays: Doll's House

A Doll's House (1879) was Ibsen's first major success. It caused great scandal at the time due its ending: its protagonist Nora abandons her family after her husband discovers she had forged her dead father's signature to borrow money. She did it to finance a trip to Italy that would save her husband's life.

A realist play about women's role in Victorian society that shows Ibsen's concern with women's rights, or human rights in general.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Modern Classics: Tempest-Tost

Tempest-Tost (1951) was the first novel by Robertson Davies. It eventually also became the first in his Salterton Trilogy together with Leaven of Malice and A Mixture of Frailties. They are all set in the fictional town of Salterton in Ontario, Canada.

This novel is about an amateur theatre group which is trying to put together a summer production of Shakespeare's play The Tempest. Maths teacher Hector Mackilwraith falls in love with the young and beautiful Griselda Webster. When Hector is absent half way through the play and passes out backstage, everyone thinks he has tried to commit suicide.

This novel attempts to be comical without quite managing to do so successfully. However, I do look forward to reading later works by Davies, particularly The Dertford Trilogy written two decades later.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Plays: The Tempest

The Tempest (c 1610-1611) is one of the late romances written by William Shakespeare.

A shipwreck, magic, an island on the Mediterranean, spirits and assasination plots are all elements of this play with a happy ending here love and reconciliation are possible. Prospero with his magic controls the destinies of Miranda, Ferdinand, Ariel, Caliban, Alfonso, Gonzalo, Sebastian, Trinculo, Stephano and Boatswain. Thus, Prospero could be read as an autocratic playwright whose plotting and stage directions lead to a happily resolved endind.

"O brave new world, that has such people in't."

Other works I have read by the same author: Othello, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, Richard III.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Modern Classics: White Noise

This is the second or third time I have read White Noise (1984) by Don Delillo. It is a dark, tremendously funny, novel about the greatest human fear: death.

Part campus novel, part thriller, part family drama, this is the story of academic Jack Gladney and his fourth wife Babette and all their children. Jack is the man who introduced Hitler Studies to North America. Both Jack and Babette are afraid of death although they try to keep it from each other. Babette has been secretly exchanging sex for a new experimental drug with Willie Mink. The name of the drug is Dylar and its purpose is to combat the fear of death. Once Jack finds out, after the whole family suvives an "airborne toxic event", he shoots him.

I have tried with other works by Delillo like Underground and Cosmopolis but have not been able to finish either. White Noise, however, is one of the modern American novels I have enjoyed the most.



Sunday, March 11, 2007

Plays: Hedda Gabler

Hedda Gabler (1890) is a play by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. Its protagonist Hedda Tesman (née Gabler) is one of the most fascinating characters in literature I've ever come across. She is manipulative, intelligent, unpredictable, ambitious, dishonest and suicidal.
This play is one of the best ones I've ever read. There'll certainly be more Ibsen on this blog soon!

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Contemporary Reads: The Kite Runner

The Kite Runner is the first novel by Khaled Hosseini. I found the book interesting as I thought it explained quite well the contemporary history of one of the countries that has featured more prominently in the news since 9/11, Afghanistan.

One day, Afghan emigré to the USA Amir receives a phone call from his father's best friend, Rahim Khan, in Pakistan. This event prompts him to remember his childhood in Kabul, his fleeing to America via Pakistan after the Soviet invasion, his settling in America, his marriage to fellow Afghan Soraya, and the death of his father Baba. The most interesting part of his account is his relationship with his Hazara servant Hassan. Hassan and Amir were brought up together and were best friends. They are both motherless and raised by their fathers. Their friendship is nuanced by their different social class and ethnicity. Hassan grows up illiterate whereas Amir will eventually become a published author in the USA. The two "friends" are split after Hassan is raped by Hitler-admirer Assef while Amir witnesses hiding and does not intervened. Hassan and his father Ali leave the house in shame. Baba never does find out why.

Amir learns from Rahim Khan that Hassan was his half-brother and that he had left an orphan in Taliban-ruled Kabul. He rescues the child, Sohrab, from the twisted Assef who surely enough had ended up joining the Taliban. Amir adopts his nephew and with Soraya all three become a family in San Francisco.

Half way through the book we get a glimpse of the Afghan emigrant experience in the USA, which I found quite enjoyable too. However, what I most enjoyed about the novel are the first chapters that depict Amir's and Hassan's childhood in pre-Soviet and pre-Taliban Afghanistan.

I did not care much for the last chapters and the "not-without-by-nephew" saga which I found too much soap opera like for my taste.