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« Happy Bloomsday! | Main | #43 - Homicide, by David Simon » #42 - The Recognitions, by William Gaddis
The sun rose at seven, and its light caught the weathercock atop the church steeple, epiphanized in there above the town like a cock of fire risen from its own ashes. In the false dawn, the sun had prepared the sky for its appearance: but even now the horned moon hung unsuspecting at the earth's rim, before the blaze which rose behind it to extinguish the cold quiet of its reign. I know of no way to describe this prose that will do it justice. It is ecstatic, overflowing with both the grace and innovation of a genuine master. If all nine hundred and fifty-six pages had been as beautiful I would have sailed through this book in the kind of state many believe can only be achieved via massive doses of recreational chemicals or sex with super-models, or both at once. Maybe ten percent of the book is like this. The rest of it is inane pseudo-bohemian dialogue overheard at cocktail parties. I'm not exaggerating by very much. At one point Gaddis gives us nearly a hundred and twenty consecutive pages of cocktail parties, and I'm not even certain that's the longest such section. It's almost as though Gaddis knows of no other way to bring more than three people together in a room at one time. The dialogue is fragmentary, shifting from one speaker or location to another without giving any indication of having done so. Sentences are left unfinished, all predicate with no subject. Questions are asked five, six times before they are (unsatisfactorily) answered or given up on, and half the speakers can't decide if they want to use slang or quote from The Golden Bough. I think that part of the problem for me, as far as enjoying the book, was that most of the thematic heavy lifting is done at these cocktail parties. It's through all of these overheard and half-understood remarks that we realize how little in the book is authentic, how selfish and ignorant and vicious are even the best of these characters. And some of them (quite a few of them, actually) are demonstrably insane. In a recent interview, Charles Foran said this of Michel Hollouebecq: "I just sensed a smart and, yes, prescient, provocateur who has expelled his bile by page fifty or so—with another 300 pages left." I feel much the same way about Gaddis and this book, except that there were more like six hundred pages left by the time Gaddis made the switch from razor-sharp satire to the undignified thumping of a long-deceased horse. Not even his spectacular thrashing of Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People (at one point referred to as How to Procure for Friends and the Vanquishing of Everybody by a Spanish friar possessing only a passing familiarity with English) could save me from frustration at the endless unnecessary repetition. I almost wish I could say that I hated the book, but I didn't. While it truly had many of the same problems as DeLillo's Underworld (too much focus on secondary and tertiary characters, inconsistent quality of the prose, and far longer than it needed to be), it was ultimately not the messy failure that book was. There were so many hidden pleasures and serendipities and moments of genuine revelation and genius scattered throughout the book that I doubt I could call it anything less than a masterpiece—but with the caveat that it is a deeply flawed masterpiece, and not to be engaged with lightly or by the faint of heart. Next is Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, by David Simon. Posted by August on 06.22.08 at 8:38 PM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
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