2007 books

Jan. 15th, 2007 10:50 am
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6) Pieter Frans Thomése, Shadow Child, 2003
A sensitive autobiographical account of the loss of an infant daughter to illness. It's often unsettling reading, detached and quite deliberately existentialist, and while there is little sentimentality there is in its place an abundance of very literate prose. But Thomése seems to be consciously avoiding any direct expression of grief, instead looking for the meaning of his daughter's lost life in words, oblique language and even literary precedents. Having once lost a child myself (by miscarriage) I can infer precisely where he is coming from, though his expression of those similar feelings is inevitably more complex and visceral, though still highly articulate.

2006 books

Jun. 13th, 2006 04:27 pm
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31) Cees Nooteboom, The Following Story, 1991
A Dutch teacher and classical scholar goes to sleep in Amsterdam and inexplicably wakes up the next morning in Portugal, in a hotel bed in which twenty years before he slept with another man's wife. But this Kafka-esque premise goes in a very sardonic direction and is delivered with a sharply observant humour, as the protagonist roams back and forth in his life seemingly searching for clues. The Following Story covers a lot of ground in its brief 97 pages but there seems to be no place at which you can say with certainty "ah, so that's what the author is getting at" as it is constantly moving on to the next thing, never chronologically, but evidently with Nooteboom's own sequential thought processes, perhaps making it an analysis of fulfillment by taking the reader through a game of join-the-dots in prose – one in which if you haven't arrived at a clear picture by the end, makes you want to start again for another try. Very enjoyable, despite Nooteboom's habit of disorienting the reader, which almost seems careless at times.

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