Thursday 17 December 2009

Roberto Bolaño: Monsieur Pain

I’m not really sure what to say about this latest read. This short book of Bolaño is about Monsieur Pain, a mesmerist who heals people with his hands, a veteran of the I World War. Madame Reynaud, an object of his affection and widow after a man whom Mr Pain didn’t manage to save, asks him one day to save another man’s life. Her friend’s husband, Vallejo, is dying of... hiccups. For some reason everything seems to be against Pain saving Vallejo – strange men, strange doctors...

At some points this all feels a bit like Kafka – people getting lost in weird places, people being followed and following others. You feel that there is something weird going on but you never find out what really happened. Lots of dark scenes and dark characters.

I heard that other Bolano’s books were good – 2666 or The Savage Detectives. I don’t know, I haven’t read anything by Bolano and I’m not convinced I will in the near future. And I’m happy to move on the next book! I’ll give it one heart though – it’s Christmas in the end!

Happy Christmas everyone and see you in the New Year.

My rating: YYYYY

Saturday 12 December 2009

Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go

This was not what I was expecting from Kazuo having read The Remains of the Day some time ago. You could call this book science-fiction but it wouldn’t give it justice. Even though the world portrayed here isn’t real it does feel as if it was. To just say that the book talks about cloning would be very unfair too.

If you’ve read The Remains of the Day you know the beautiful style of Kazuo’s writing – it is the same here. As you go through the slow paced and incredibly descriptive pages of the book you see all the places as if you were there, you like or dislike the people as if you’ve known them for ages. It’s definitely not the kind of book that you read very quickly to get to the end, it is a book you read slowly, enjoying the beauty of every single page. Which is probably why I haven’t posted anything here for a while...

So what would our lives look like if we were clones, or “students” as they’re called here, created only to provide organs for other people? We grow in a glass tube, then spend our early years in a farm until we are ready to become donors. Would anyone care about what happens to us in those early years before we are ready to serve the purpose we were brought to the world for more than we care about chickens for example? In Kazuo’s world the “students” are given a proper childhood, with education, friendship, love, rules that keep things in order and future they dream about. The only thing they do not know about is that their future has already been written and they have no chance of starting a family or getting an office job.

It is a truly scary vision and you do start to wonder if this will become a reality in future. Can a human take the right to become God and give life to people but not give them the right to live like people? Do the clones have souls like we do or are they just our back-up organs in human bodies? I do ask these questions to myself but the book doesn’t at all. It’s not a point of view on cloning, it just paints one possible way things could take and lets you live in this world for a while. Sad but beautiful world nonetheless. But I bet it will raise lots of questions in your head too once you’ve finished reading it.

I have really enjoyed reading Never Let Me Go, the subject of the book is disturbing though interesting, the characters are complex but clearly identifiable, the childhood at Hailsham seems so joyful. And I love the language Kazuo uses – simple but how beautiful. All this will stay in my head for a while I suppose.

And I think it's time to add The Unconsoled to my waiting list - it's been on my shelf for years now but always scared me away by its length. Given the varying reviews it got I think it may we worth a try!

My rating: YYYYY

Tuesday 1 December 2009

Wojciech Kuczok: Senność (Sleepiness)

My impression after reading the first twenty pages was that the way Kuczok describes the world around him seems to drag forever. I don’t think I’ve read many books where sentences are a page long! It was a bit tiring for a while and I thought about putting the book away and grabbing something else. And then the story suddenly became interesting, the characters more real and the attention to detail more fascinating.

The book takes us through three stories of three different people who do not know each other but who share a common theme – loneliness in the world full of people.

Adam, a freshly qualified doctor from a small village whose parents are oh-so-proud of his achievement and noble profession but will not accept his interest in the same gender.
Robert, a famous book writer with his lack of inspiration for his next award winning novel and with a very interesting family who are impatiently awaiting the novel to come out.
Roza, a billboard face and ex-actress with a husband who loves numbers and logic more than he loves her. It was logic that made him marry her and not love, so no surprise she doesn’t feel fulfilled in the relationship. To make things worse she suffers from an unusual illness – she falls asleep every time she gets excited.

After overcoming the initial dislike for Kuczok’s narrative I really started to enjoy the way he writes. He has a really good ear for the Polish language, its beauty, regional dialects, word games and, most of all, a spot on way of describing what happens inside the mind and soul of his main characters. You really get to know them, think the way they think, feel the way they feel.

The loneliness, the main theme of the book, can be felt on each page, heard in each sentence of any of the characters. Expressed by Robert’s passion for creating stories of people’s lives based on the observation of their legs when they walk by the window of his basement office. By Robert’s fater-in-law’s hectic desire to videotape each of his TV appearances. By Adam’s will to heal people. It’s overwhelming. It makes you realize that it is everywhere around you. Until you find someone to share it with. Kuczok says: “people can only live in other people, depression is nothing else but homelessness, depression only touches people who don’t have anyone to live in”. The ending may seem a bit cheesy with the “lived happily ever after” but I do recommend this book for its art of word and feelings.

Around the same time the book was published the movie based on the same script was released in cinemas. Directed by Magda Piekorz who also directed Pregi, another book based on Kuczok’s novel. I haven’t seen the movie – was it any good?

My rating: YYYYY