Saturday 13 May 2023

Death & The Penguin by Andrey Kurkov

Death & The Penguin tells the story of a failed writer Viktor Alekseyevich Zolotaryov who lives a lonely life in Kviv, scraping by on selling short, very short, stories. He lives with Misha, a King penguin which he rescued from the local zoo because it could no longer afford to keep all its animals. Viktor is a lonely, melancholic character and Misha is no substitute for human friendship. Misha “brought his own kind of loneliness, with the result of two complementary lonelinesses creating an impression of interdependence rather than amity. 

The setting is Ukraine in the late years of the 20th century. Ukraine is throwing off the constraints of membership of USSR and trying to embrace the freedoms of The West but has become a corrupt and lawless society with most of wealth in the hands of a few. The bleak setting of the country is well-captured, with the novel offering a stark portrayal of life in a post-Soviet society.

Kurkov says that he chose a penguin for Victor's companion because they normally live in colonies, so to live in isolation is completely alien to them. In the same way the people of Ukraine after living a collective life organised by the state are suddenly cut adrift and have learn to live more isolated, individual lives.

Misha is a mirror of Viktor. The pengin roams around the flat, occasionally stopping and heaving a sigh, like an old man weary of both life and himself. At a funeral Viktor bends down and talks to Misha: Well Misha, he sighed stooping to the Penguin’s level, that's how we humans bury our dead. Turning at the sound of his master's voice, Misha fixed on him his tiny sad eyes.

Things look up for Viktor when he lands the job of writing obituaries of notable people for a national paper but very quickly we realise that all is not as it seems – Victor has to be anonymous. “In your own interest”, the chief editor says, and extra details for the obituaries are to be provided by the paper’s crime department. Nearly all the obituraies concern people with a nefarious past. When his boss sends him to Kharkov to meet a correspondent the man is murdered, and the dangers of Viktor’s new job become clear.

As the main plotline of the story develops everything becomes more sinister and threatening, but who is behind the threats is a mystery. Viktor is in the dark and so are we. He is told he has to disappear for a short time for his own safety and later even his boss has to flee. Viktor is shocked to be told he is indirectly responsible for the deaths he writes about, but how? When he confronts the editor with this news, he is told he is safe as long as he knows nothing -  “The full story is what you get told only if and when your work, and with it your existence, are no longer required.”

We get the impression of two sides at war with each other with Viktor, an unwitting pawn, caught in the middle. But who are the goodies and who are the baddies? All is not fully revealed until the end when Viktor reads his own obituary and knows the truth of his boss’s warning. 

The gloomy nature of the story, in which the sun rarely shines, is lightened by other characters.

Sergey the local militiaman becomes a friend and provides Viktor with an escape to a Dacha for New Year. But even here the safety and tranquillity are shattered by an explosion that blows a burglar to pieces and by the unexpected and shocking present of a gun that Viktor receives.

When one criminal character has to flee, he leaves his 4-year-old daughter Sonya in Viktor’s care, and together with Nina who Viktor employs as a nanny, she brings the normality of family life to his home. But poor Viktor struggles to shake off his habitual pessimism and inability to take control. 

“Friendship, something he has never had. Any more than a three-piece suit or real passion. Life had been pale, sickly, and joyless. Even Misha was down in the dumps, as if he too, knew only a pallid life devoid of colours, emotions delights and joyous splashings of the soul. 

Pidpaly, a penguin expert also provides some light relief yet he tells Viktor: You missed out on the time of abundance, you have, said the old man regretfully. Every century there is five years of abundance after which everything goes to pot. You won't see the next five I'm afraid, I certainly won't, but I did at least come in for one lot.

Viktor knows that somehow he is involved in a criminal operation, but he prefers to shrug his shoulders, gaze out of the window, drink vodka and carry on his normal life.

…he had made no effort to grasp what was taking place around him. Until recently, with the arrival of Sonia. And even now, life around him was still dangerously unfathomable, as if he had missed the actual moment when the nature of events might have been fathomed. 

And again:

Although he could not help thinking about it, he found it easier to do so every day, having recognised the complete impossibility of ever changing his life. Harnessed as he was, it was a question of hauling his load until he dropped. So he hauled.

But despite his pretence Viktor is trapped and this aspect of the novel makes for a melancholy read. Even at the end, although Viktor escapes to the Antarctic, we are left wondering what happens to him, to Sonya and Nina and above all to Misha. 

The novel is surreal, often bleak but full of black humour. A drunk fisherman sees Victor, Sergey and a penguin.

Eyes fixed on the Penguin, the fisherman shook his head. “Look”, he said at last, “is that a Penguin you've got there or am I seeing things?” “You're seeing things”, Sergey assured him firmly. “Christ”, he whispered aghast. 

Viktor asks about one of the victims: How did he die? Like they all do, tragically.

One of the strengths of the novel is its ability to combine humour with darker themes. The relationship between Viktor and Misha is often amusing, and the absurdity of Viktor's job as an obituary writer adds a touch of black comedy to the story. However, the novel is also full of poignant moments that explore the loneliness and despair that Viktor feels as he tries to navigate his difficult and dangerous life.

Death and The Penguin is a blend of humour, suspense, and social commentary. Kurkov's writing style is sharp and witty, with a dark undertone that keeps the reader on edge throughout the novel. The portrayal of Kiev's post-Soviet society is bleak and realistic, highlighting the corruption, poverty, and crime that were prevalent during this time. It is a satisfying and thought-provoking read.

Some Quotes

The poor and sinless did not exist, or else died unnoticed and with no obituary. The idea seemed persuasive. Those who merited obituaries had usually achieved things, thought for their ideals, and when locked in battle, it wasn't easy to remain entirely honest and upright. Today's battles were all for material gain, anyway. The crazy idea list was extinct survived by the crazy pragmatist…

“Drink up!" urged the Chief. "There's no escaping fate. Drink while the champagne lasts!” 

Life seemed easy and carefree, despite painful moments and less frequent scruples over his own part in an ugly business. But what, in an ugly world, was ugly? No more than a tiny part of an unknown evil existing generally, but not personally touching him and his little world. And not be fully aware of his part in that ugly something was clearly a guarantee of the indestructibility of his world, and of its tranquillity.

Something was wrong with his life, he thought, walking with downcast eyes. Or life itself had changed, and was as 

Life was a road, and if departed from at a tangent, the longer for it. And a long road was a long life - a case where to travel was better than to arrive, the point of arrival being, after all, always the same: death.

He looked into that future and saw so clearly as if for the first time in his life, everything that obstructed the peaceful path for him. It was, oddly enough all connected indirectly with his beloved Misha. Misha had drawn him into a mournful circle of people with an enhanced degree of mortality and now Misha alone could free him from them. 


Ukraine Context

During the recession, between 1991 and 1999, Ukraine lost 60% of its GDP and suffered from hyperinflation that peaked at 10,000% in 1993.The situation only stabilized well after the new currency, the hryvnia, fell sharply in late 1998 partially as a fallout from the Russian debt default earlier that year. The legacy of the economic policies of the nineties was the mass privatization of state property that created a class of extremely powerful and rich individuals known as the oligarchs.

From the political perspective, one of the defining features of the politics of Ukraine is that for most of the time, it has been divided along two issues: the relation between Ukraine, the West and Russia, and the classical left-right divide.[155] The first two presidents, Kravchuk and Leonid Kuchma, tended to balance the competing visions of Ukraine,[156] though Yushchenko and Yanukovych were generally pro-Western and pro-Russian, respectively. There were two major protests against Yanukovych: the Orange Revolution in 2004, when tens of thousands of people went in protest of election rigging in his favour (Yushchenko was eventually elected president), and another one in the winter of 2013/2014, when more gathered on the Euromaidan to oppose Yanukovych's refusal to sign the European Union–Ukraine Association Agreement. By the end of the 2014 protests, he fled from Ukraine and was removed by the parliament in what is termed the Revolution of Dignity, but Russia refused to recognize the interim pro-Western government, calling it a junta and denouncing the events as a coup d'état sponsored by the United States.[157][158][159]


Wikipedia entry for Andrey Kurkov: 

Kurkov has written 19 Novels: His books are full of black humour, post-Soviet reality and elements of surrealism.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrey_Kurkov 


Monday 8 May 2023

Eugénie Grandet by Honoré de Balzac

 


Who will marry Eugénie Grandet?

This short classic novel, set in the town of Saumur in post-revolution France, tells the story of a miser, Felix Grandet and the coming of age of his daughter Eugénie. She will inherit the miser’s millions and make her future husband a wealthy man.  Two young men are thrust forward by their families to compete for her favour, but the sudden arrival of her exotic cousin Charles from Paris, upsets their plans and brings Eugénie into conflict with her father.

Balzac sets the tone of the novel from the first sentence: “In certain provincial towns there are houses whose appearance arouses a melancholy as great as that of the gloomiest cloisters, the most desolate moorland or the saddest ruins”. The house of M. Grandet is “pale, grey, cold and silent” and Grandet is “like a serpent, impassive, cold and methodical”.  This oppressive atmosphere speaks of the insidious effect of avarice on the life of Felix Grandet. How his life, and the lives of those around him are blighted by greed, is a main theme of the novel.

Ten years after Balzac’s Felix Grandet, Dickens would create the character of Ebenezer Scrooge - a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner!  But unlike Dickens who uses supernatural visitations to bring Scrooge to a place of remorse and repentance, Balzac is no romantic:

Misers do not believe in an afterlife. The present is everything for them. This thought casts a terrible light on the present day, when, more than ever before, money dominates the law, politics and social behaviour. Institutions books men and doctrines all conspire to undermine the belief in a life to come which has been the foundation of the social fabric for eighteen hundred years.

Melancholy and gloom pervade the Grandet household, where the miser rations out the food for the day in the morning and allows only one candle to illuminate the darkness at night. Eugénie and her mother live lives of subservience and scarcely leave the house except to go to church. They are gentle souls who submit to the tyranny under which they live. Yet as the novel progresses Balzac challenges this mercenary outlook in the character of Eugenie. When her cousin arrives from Paris she knows for the first time what it is to fall in love and the experience is overwhelming, Her generous nature, long suppressed, is aroused and, she is completely at odds with her father, She calculates how much money her father has made from selling his wine and says:

"Then Father, you can easily help Charles.

The astonishment, the fury, the stupefaction of Balthazar when he saw Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin written on the wall, were as nothing compared to Grandet's cold rage when, having forgotten about his nephew, he found the young man lodged in his daughter's heart and calculations.

The novel is a masterful exploration of the themes of love, money, greed, and the corrupting influence of wealth. Balzac presents a vivid and detailed portrait of the world of 19th-century France, with its rigid social hierarchy, its obsession with wealth and status, and its hidden depths of cruelty and deceit.

His prose is rich, lyrical, and highly evocative, capturing the atmosphere of 19th-century France in all its glory and squalor. Eugénie Grandet is a timeless masterpiece of French literature, a work of profound insight and understanding that speaks to the complexities of the human condition. It is a novel that has stood the test of time and continues to captivate and enchant readers today.

The Painted Veil by Somerset Maugham

 

Lift not the Painted Veil which those who live call life.. Shelley


 "The Painted Veil" by Somerset Maugham is a novel published in 1925 that tells the story of  Kitty, a young socialite, who marries Walter Fane out of social pressure and a desire to escape her overbearing mother. Fane is infatuated with Kitty and blind to her indifference. He works in Hong Kong as a bacteriologist, and Kitty finds herself in a loveless marriage, lonely  and bored, and far away from the distraction of London’s social whirl. She starts an affair with a married diplomat, Charles Townsend, but Walter discovers the infidelity. He offers her two choices: to divorce him and marry Townsend, or to accompany him to a remote village in mainland China that is suffering from a cholera epidemic where hundreds are dying. Kitty quickly finds this is no real choice; there will be no divorce and she has to go to the village.

It is here that Kitty begins to confront her own flaws and starts to develop a sense of empathy and compassion for others. Walter sees the changes in his wife and their relationship begins to thaw. But Maugham does not allow any happily-ever-after ending, instead he plays out the complexities of Kitty’s life to the end of the book with an uncertain future before her.

One of the strengths of the novel is its exploration of the complex nature of love. Kitty's initial attraction to Townsend is based on shallow and selfish desires, but as she spends more time with Walter, she comes to understand his love for her, not romanticized, but instead shown as a complicated mix of devotion, jealousy, and a desire for control. Maugham portrays their relationship in a nuanced way that is both realistic and emotionally charged.

Although set in a bygone era, "The Painted Veil" is a compelling novel that offers a thought-provoking exploration of human relationships and the possibility of redemption. Its timeless themes of personal growth, self-discovery, and the transformative power of love make for a very satisfying read.


Lift Not the Painted Veil

Lift not the painted veil which those who live
Call Life: though unreal shapes be pictured there,
And it but mimic all we would believe
With colours idly spread,-behind, lurk Fear
And Hope, twin Destinies; who ever weave
Their shadows, o'er the chasm, sightless and drear.
I knew one who had lifted it-he sought,
For his lost heart was tender, things to love,
But found them not, alas! nor was there aught
The world contains, the which he could approve.
Through the unheeding many he did move,
A splendour among shadows, a bright blot
Upon this gloomy scene, a Spirit that strove
For truth, and like the Preacher found it not.


Percy Bysshe Shelley