Des Lewis - GESTALT REAL-TIME BOOK REVIEWS A FEARLESS FAITH IN FICTION — THE PASSION OF THE READING MOMENT CRYSTALLISED — Empirical literary critiques from 2008 as based on purchased books.
Wednesday, September 12, 2018
Inner Europe – John Howard & Mark Valentine
Inner Europe – John Howard & Mark Valentine
TARTARUS PRESS 2018
My previous reviews of John Howard & Mark Valentine HERE and of their “Secret Europe’ HERE and of this publisher’s books HERE.
When I read this book, my thoughts will appear in the comment stream below…
THE ROSES OF RAVENNA by Mark Valentine
“So I have learned to look at them aslant, to absorb their salient features and character in a few caught moments.”
These are possibly the richest words with ‘caught moments’ of luxurious terrain and limned character by this author, words perhaps beyond even those of John Gale, depicting both gorgeous rapture and less amenable visions of humanity scarred by history and possible false belief. The rose-cult at the margins of the salt marshes around Ravenna, featuring a good-looking boy-man who is intent upon the riches hidden by the otherwise inimical memory of Nero and his would-be doppelgänger Heliogabalus. To transcend Baal. And the narrator’s view is of this ‘boy’ and also of a man called Lastingham perhaps appropriately named and deemed English for our current times, the last-named taking the ‘boy’ under his tutelary wing in search of Nero’s rose shrine with eventual dire regret following good intentions. (With not so much Death in Ravenna as there was in Venice, but certainly a hair-barber as its latent catalyst.)
“Nor was Lastingham any use to us. He could not remember much of the route they had taken and was always so tentative that we could hardly place any reliance upon the little he did say.”
HERE IS MY COUNTRY by John Howard
“The façade was apparently no more than strips of sleek white concrete and lake-clear glass, yet this defined a space within where space itself seemed twisted around, doubling the volume offered by the house it had replaced while conforming to the human scale of the houses still surrounding it.”
This optically deceptive text is given a clue there, I feel, arising from the history surrounding the place in 1948 that history once knew by several names, and still does, including that of Czechoslovakia, here centred on a specific town, then centred again on its library together with the characters fictional or historical who seem to convey my sense of the Unconsoled, the political machinations leading to these centres of sense and nonsense, the characters who had been Nazi collaborators, the good guys by comparison who hold that tiger by the tail, and today’s lodestar resistance against power during this my own real-time while reading it. Intrinsically, the text’s vision of water in the library held at bay by a magic membrane is most memorable. Indeed, another clue is in the other means of looking through glass as well as up at it, i.e. the Defenestration allusion in Czechoslovakian history towards the beginning of this wondrous work. It all comes together, then and now, there and here. “And all in plain sight.”
TREGARRION’S BEQUEST by Mark Valentine
“The delicate beads of purple and scarlet fuchsias, faded to ghostliness by the dusk, glowed in their window-boxes and urns like the half-asleep eyes of strange creatures.”
The window-boxes seem obliquely to be part of “Here is my Country”, and here is our country indeed, our inner Europe linked by legends of Cornwall and Brittany, never to break, as our representative or narrator wends that effulgent path, after a bequest from a friend who had also been intent upon such linkage, our narrator exorcising his fingertips’ blue-black ghosts of scrivenly drudging, avoiding Methodist disapproval, meeting a shy handsome lutenist in a Bar Tabac, absorbing vistas with which as readers we are imbued, too, no local nonchalance or brittleness suffered, as that linkage is consummated. Consummated not mundane-carnally, but Cornish-Bretonly as the singular spirituality of a sunset-mask. John Cowper Powys is perhaps reborn.
I read the next story in 2016 and below is what I wrote about it here:
=================================
ANOTHER SEA by John Howard
“…he didn’t realise how mighty, how interconnected everything truly was. He was a child sitting on a petrol pump with his eyes shut, and striking matches.”
And I feel like that immature child myself, tackling this story. Or I am the old friend brought in at the end with amber lenses… This, for me, is another version of Brexit in a wider sense within Europe, here being its Baltic states transmuted by name and geomantic position, in all its historic-Hanseatic and religious aspects, schisms, heresies and hopes, and despairs. It is a mighty work, one that will take you by the scruffs and sleeves of the land-mass soul. Beautifully couched. Substantive with “the mingling of awe, wonder, love, terror and sheer invigorating fright that he wished, somehow, to communicate as a believer in the real religion of our communities.”
THE FENCING MASK by Mark Valentine
“We followed him around the back wall, with its narrow windows. He peered in the dim light, not at the glass but at the wooden frames. At one he stopped and pushed his thumb into the damp timber,…”
A traditional ghost story with a twist in its grip. Three men, refugees from war, stumble, amid much previous emptiness and attrition, on a large abandoned house, inside of which, via that rotten fenestration, they find many artefacts of its previous inhabitants, including fencing-masks on the wall. One of which has that grip… A sort of obverse mask for this book’s earlier sunset in Brittany?
THE LIGHT OF ADRIA by John Howard
“No light shone from the windows.”
Previously water, now fire. This substantive story brought tears to my eyes. The Dalmatian coast, history’s politics of pro-Italian and Serbo-Croat student groups, an overarching professor who invites some of them to his seminar in the disused lighthouse. There is no way I can rehatch here the politics, the considerations involved, whether alternate or real, nor even hint at the goal of the borderless Final Empire, like a giant Vatican City without the religion. These concepts come naturally with the flow of the narrative, imparted subtly by dialogue and events, individual action and reaction, challenge and response. The hawling of a brazier to the top of the lighthouse, the voluntary arranging for the burning by the professor of his own life works as a beacon for the Final Empire, transcending what is happening to us today. A futile catharsis? Well, on a personal note, I have started in the last few weeks a sort of sacrificial, symbolic ‘burning’ by gradually transiting my books and their spirits to others. Including eventually this book itself that I just purchased.
“A fire, light, can work both ways, and mean more than one thing.”
“When it comes down to it, we are all so very small.”
THE CONCESSION by Mark Valentine
“The things glimpsed in the river, not quite floating, not quite sinking. He shook his head, placed his fingers on his eyelids.”
One must make no concessions to the past. Or to the future, come to that, this being one of those story accounts that works perfectly without the reader knowing quite why or how it does. I call it Proustian, but it spans more than just memory and time. It spans from China to Austria, in the former where our he with the eyelids — originally from Trieste — was Consul for the Austro-Hungarian Concession of visually assonant Tientsin, with its book-pedlars and origami boats. Now the latter as objective-correlatives sink or swim upon the tidal onset of the World War (the First as it happens) and he is praised in bringing back everyone safely to Austria during those upheavals… and asked to write an official account of that and his life. We watch him in real-time trial-and-error with writing the text of this account. As you do with with me writing this review. All ‘minor heroes’ subject to as-above-so-below. Fragile paper lanterns as the new celestial bodies. Or as words describing words.
ORIENT IMPERIAL by John Howard
“…something more than mere strung-out lines and complex knots of shining steel thread through regions and countries. That boy can see all Europe knitted together in a way that its politicians seem unwilling and unable to.”
That boy being the younger son of English Mr Soames (the narrator), a son who is obsessed in the 1930s with the trains and railway, Soames’ eldest son being more obsessed with the then new-fangled air travel. Soames meets King Boris of Bulgaria when visiting that country, the King who seemed to know already what Soames’ sons were interested in – so, perhaps the King had already read this story where this information is imparted to its readers, and its machinations already worked out to happen… and when you yourself read it, you will know what I mean and I have no need to forward-adumbrate it here, for fear not only of plot spoilers but also of the reversed happenstance that such spoilers might cause. It is a story with a narrative that is eloquently consuming, compelling, page-turning, and I cannot stress that fact enough. It is about the narrator’s journeys on the Orient Express throughout Europe (immediate history imbued with the tracks he necessarily follows) as a travel writer and journalist who meets kings and queens as well as those who defer to him, at times a flâneur or boulevardier, at other times, a mover or shaker, it seems, as he mixes with his “betters and inferiors” alike. There are chance windows of opportunity by facilitative signature or hypnotic transformation – among literal movers-and-shakers such as traindrivers or kings. Just as one example, the scene where Soames first meets King Boris is a classic in all literature, I suggest. I have such “‘instinct’ for a good story”, just like Soames does as a journalist.
THE ANTINOMY TO ZENO by Mark Valentine
I. The Master of Zatrikon II. The Song of Miriam III. A Wanderer In The Dark IV. At The Château Noir.
“I am a writer, a chronicler of the Old Quarter. I walk its ways waiting for encounters with the beautiful and strange.”
A free flow, as the way I have shown the sub-titles, almost a ritual journey pre or post Damian Murphy, whereby we follow the flow of the writer of the writer, the bet of the bet, a gamble with truth and understanding, never-ending like one of Zeno’s Paradoxes or Antinomies. But more a reverse Toynbeean challenge-and-response from or to Trebizond? Full of wondrous place names and inherent histories of Europe, Ottoman and Habsburg. Eugenics to create the master race versus acceptance of those who live in the city crammed but singing beautiful songs — and arcane objects passed hand to hand in methodical waywardness, for example a chess piece from a game played on a circular not square chess board, plus games of skill OR chance, but this story is, for me, a game of BOTH skill and chance, the forbearance of slums versus striving towards wider boulevards and (necessary or ruinous) clearance…a dilemma for our times. Break or heal, we probably need both. The Statistical Society is meeting in my house tonight. Be there, or be square. No-one knows what crucial action will create the necessary onward concertina or closing checkmate.
The Paradox or Antinomy to Zeno that I remember best: “Suppose I wish to cross the room to meet Zeno. First, of course, I must cover half the distance. Then, I must cover half the remaining distance. Then, I must cover half the remaining distance. Then I must cover half the remaining distance…and so on forever. The consequence is that I can never get to Zeno.” The same with my memory that halves each half as I grow older. And I am reminded that the above story is half of another story first published in 2009: one entitled ‘The Seven Treasures of Bucharest’ by Mark Valentine and Geticus Polus that I reviewed here at that time: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com/2010/08/18/265/ … The free flow in that earlier version of the story: I. The Master of Zatrikon II. The Song of Miriam III. A Wanderer In The Dark IV. Electricity V. The Heart of the White Ambassador VI. At The Château Noir VII. The Bearer of Peacock Plumes. [The 2009 book also published UNDERGROWTH (of books and literature!) that first appeared in NEMONYMOUS (Zencore) in 2007.]
SUN VOYAGER by John Howard
“But I can grasp the idea behind them more than I can that we first came from somewhere where there’s no sea, rather than Norway and Denmark.”
…being the Icelandic narrator’s thoughts about the source of who he really is and where he lives. Iceland I had never thought before as part of Europe. But it has certain links of trade and Schengen unity, I see. Somehow I ponder it as an Island Empire, to match an Inland Empire that this book embodies as Inner Europe, expressions that seem to resonate with the title of a David Lynch film. Here, we have mixed for us: Icelandic art as sculpture, the legends, movers and shakers like earthquakes and volcanoes, skylit aurora, and finance as a crypto-currency rather than solid money. All in the ironic form of things like sculpture, and coins, that embody a soul of belief. As it happens, today, before reading this, I watched ‘Fake or Fortune?’ about a Giacometti sculpture while, now, this story’s eponymous sculpture is a mutation of a ship or shipwreck or Giacometti’s typical attenuating figures… just like the Englishman visiting Iceland for its sculptures: Lewis Bell, riven by debt from the world banking crisis, and he sees the Icelandic banks as what helped ignite that debt… a complex story that has its own inner empire of substance as imagination and vice versa, of that substance made real by belief in its intrinsic value or bartering power. Mixed in with a vague sense around him of sexual guilt or jealousy as the wife follows her husband who is the Icelandic narrator semi-obsessively following, in turn, Lewis Bell to the museum with the eponymous sculpture. An English name that rings true. And that Englishman’s need to get his own back, as it were! “Something to get hold of.” A clever story of attenuating graspabilities. Or of imperial weight.
THE DRAGONS OF MEDEA by Mark Valentine
“We do not need omens to tell us what they mean.”
A word-rich and luxuriant descrying of Medea and her part in history’s sorcery, with telling shades of history’s more attritional grey. The yellow smoke of cigarettes, too. And books in painted signs and books that seem blank. Boy messengers. And golden filigrees of dragon scales. The Narrator works in a post office and sends off letters with postage stamps worthy of John Howard — letters returning to him with palimpsest carbon imprints whereto they were sent. There are many references, arcane and clear, historical and mythic, in this text, and they still teem within my brain. My particular concern today is that the work preternaturally and tellingly links with the planet Saturn that (differently?) imbues my concurrent review of VULGAR THINGS today here. In that book prevails the Latin of Virgil and Petrarch. Here in the Valentine, the skeins of Ancient Greek. The mutual synergy is striking. Including the ‘silent geometry’ of mundane and celestial architecture…
“Certainly, yellow Saturn is throwing its vast influence like a sulphurous fog across us all.”
I forgot to mention probably the most important thing about the above story for me. The way that books assume the character of where they have been and who has read them, viz. the spirit of this quote with which I have lived for many years – “Every book has a soul. The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it. Every time a book changes hands, every time someone runs his eyes down its pages, its spirit grows and strengthens.” —from ‘The Shadow Of The Wind’ by Carlos Ruiz Zafon And the way I have been recently sending my own books into this perfect circle of soul (described in my review above of Howard’s ‘The Light of Adria’) — and now we find in this Medea one by Valentine: “Perhaps one day these books of mine, these travelled books, will be found and studied, and it will be known that there was one in the city who did what he could.”
THRESHOLD by John Howard
“He was truly alone — islanded.”
Another substantive short story that should endure in the realms of great literature. This one tells of Count Philipp von Stern in his large and stately, if not entirely beautiful, house in East Prussia, following the Great War. The house (for him not only built from brick but memories) has now hit harder times and is in unstoppable entropy, poignantly, evocatively and eloquently described, a great director’s cinema masterpiece of an atmospheric film never made, but here made by Howard for our inner Europe of the mind, telling of Stern’s possible dementia in talking to the ghosts of his wife and of an old gardener-mentor, still playing his boyhood conjuring tricks, transposing coins from his hand to other places, a prestidigitation that links with the hyper inflation of the time, and with many of the currency and (non-)substance themes of ‘Sun Voyager’, and the books in the house’s library, one missing, but another there he did not expect to be there. With the themes of the sharing of books by burning beacon or shared passage that I just adumbrated above as a postscript to the previous review. The keeping of the library for others to inherit. And a perfect ending that will resonate, making you wonder what or whom had been conjured back, or conjured away.
THE LOST GONFALON by Mark Valentine
“The hinterland is no affair of ours.”
An intriguing apocryphal coda by flag or emblem to a book of the English narrator’s official travels and descriptions published in 1914, a collusively couched, teasing-out of his visit to the little harbour of Perasto, a distant outpost of the Venetian Republic, at the end of his travels along the Dalmatian coast. A mix of a genius-loci past-its-glory and a visualisable formal dinner where he had booked to stay as a chronicler, but mistaken by his hosts to be a consul. A sense that he had slowly slipped piecemeal into a slice of alternative Napoleonic history or that his hosts (a young woman among them to whom he feels himself attracted) are suffering from pretentious dementia… Venice as a psychologically spurned hinterland of a Republic, if such a thing can be imagined, as if it is or was or will be an Inland Empire without borders on the coast. Only my fencing-mask needs taking off for me to tell you with whom you have been sparring story to story inside a book that has no borders or coasts or hinterland. Most of its individual stories, when fenced-off from each other, should never be forgotten as islands of literary craft, nor prevented, for their own discrete sakes, from escaping my attempt at Gestalt. But, then again, maybe they should be brought together again in a book, passed to other reading hands, as a mighty inner strength that they always were. Ever halfway there, ever halfway back. end
Tartarus Press
“So I have learned to look at them aslant, to absorb their salient features and character in a few caught moments.”
These are possibly the richest words with ‘caught moments’ of luxurious terrain and limned character by this author, words perhaps beyond even those of John Gale, depicting both gorgeous rapture and less amenable visions of humanity scarred by history and possible false belief. The rose-cult at the margins of the salt marshes around Ravenna, featuring a good-looking boy-man who is intent upon the riches hidden by the otherwise inimical memory of Nero and his would-be doppelgänger Heliogabalus. To transcend Baal. And the narrator’s view is of this ‘boy’ and also of a man called Lastingham perhaps appropriately named and deemed English for our current times, the last-named taking the ‘boy’ under his tutelary wing in search of Nero’s rose shrine with eventual dire regret following good intentions. (With not so much Death in Ravenna as there was in Venice, but certainly a hair-barber as its latent catalyst.)
“Nor was Lastingham any use to us. He could not remember much of the route they had taken and was always so tentative that we could hardly place any reliance upon the little he did say.”
“The façade was apparently no more than strips of sleek white concrete and lake-clear glass, yet this defined a space within where space itself seemed twisted around, doubling the volume offered by the house it had replaced while conforming to the human scale of the houses still surrounding it.”
This optically deceptive text is given a clue there, I feel, arising from the history surrounding the place in 1948 that history once knew by several names, and still does, including that of Czechoslovakia, here centred on a specific town, then centred again on its library together with the characters fictional or historical who seem to convey my sense of the Unconsoled, the political machinations leading to these centres of sense and nonsense, the characters who had been Nazi collaborators, the good guys by comparison who hold that tiger by the tail, and today’s lodestar resistance against power during this my own real-time while reading it.
Intrinsically, the text’s vision of water in the library held at bay by a magic membrane is most memorable. Indeed, another clue is in the other means of looking through glass as well as up at it, i.e. the Defenestration allusion in Czechoslovakian history towards the beginning of this wondrous work. It all comes together, then and now, there and here. “And all in plain sight.”
“The delicate beads of purple and scarlet fuchsias, faded to ghostliness by the dusk, glowed in their window-boxes and urns like the half-asleep eyes of strange creatures.”
The window-boxes seem obliquely to be part of “Here is my Country”, and here is our country indeed, our inner Europe linked by legends of Cornwall and Brittany, never to break, as our representative or narrator wends that effulgent path, after a bequest from a friend who had also been intent upon such linkage, our narrator exorcising his fingertips’ blue-black ghosts of scrivenly drudging, avoiding Methodist disapproval, meeting a shy handsome lutenist in a Bar Tabac, absorbing vistas with which as readers we are imbued, too, no local nonchalance or brittleness suffered, as that linkage is consummated. Consummated not mundane-carnally, but Cornish-Bretonly as the singular spirituality of a sunset-mask. John Cowper Powys is perhaps reborn.
=================================
ANOTHER SEA by John Howard
“…he didn’t realise how mighty, how interconnected everything truly was. He was a child sitting on a petrol pump with his eyes shut, and striking matches.”
And I feel like that immature child myself, tackling this story. Or I am the old friend brought in at the end with amber lenses… This, for me, is another version of Brexit in a wider sense within Europe, here being its Baltic states transmuted by name and geomantic position, in all its historic-Hanseatic and religious aspects, schisms, heresies and hopes, and despairs. It is a mighty work, one that will take you by the scruffs and sleeves of the land-mass soul.
Beautifully couched. Substantive with “the mingling of awe, wonder, love, terror and sheer invigorating fright that he wished, somehow, to communicate as a believer in the real religion of our communities.”
“We followed him around the back wall, with its narrow windows. He peered in the dim light, not at the glass but at the wooden frames. At one he stopped and pushed his thumb into the damp timber,…”
A traditional ghost story with a twist in its grip. Three men, refugees from war, stumble, amid much previous emptiness and attrition, on a large abandoned house, inside of which, via that rotten fenestration, they find many artefacts of its previous inhabitants, including fencing-masks on the wall. One of which has that grip…
A sort of obverse mask for this book’s earlier sunset in Brittany?
“No light shone from the windows.”
Previously water, now fire. This substantive story brought tears to my eyes. The Dalmatian coast, history’s politics of pro-Italian and Serbo-Croat student groups, an overarching professor who invites some of them to his seminar in the disused lighthouse. There is no way I can rehatch here the politics, the considerations involved, whether alternate or real, nor even hint at the goal of the borderless Final Empire, like a giant Vatican City without the religion. These concepts come naturally with the flow of the narrative, imparted subtly by dialogue and events, individual action and reaction, challenge and response. The hawling of a brazier to the top of the lighthouse, the voluntary arranging for the burning by the professor of his own life works as a beacon for the Final Empire, transcending what is happening to us today. A futile catharsis? Well, on a personal note, I have started in the last few weeks a sort of sacrificial, symbolic ‘burning’ by gradually transiting my books and their spirits to others. Including eventually this book itself that I just purchased.
“A fire, light, can work both ways, and mean more than one thing.”
“When it comes down to it, we are all so very small.”
“The things glimpsed in the river, not quite floating, not quite sinking. He shook his head, placed his fingers on his eyelids.”
One must make no concessions to the past. Or to the future, come to that, this being one of those story accounts that works perfectly without the reader knowing quite why or how it does. I call it Proustian, but it spans more than just memory and time. It spans from China to Austria, in the former where our he with the eyelids — originally from Trieste — was Consul for the Austro-Hungarian Concession of visually assonant Tientsin, with its book-pedlars and origami boats. Now the latter as objective-correlatives sink or swim upon the tidal onset of the World War (the First as it happens) and he is praised in bringing back everyone safely to Austria during those upheavals… and asked to write an official account of that and his life. We watch him in real-time trial-and-error with writing the text of this account. As you do with with me writing this review. All ‘minor heroes’ subject to as-above-so-below. Fragile paper lanterns as the new celestial bodies. Or as words describing words.
“…something more than mere strung-out lines and complex knots of shining steel thread through regions and countries. That boy can see all Europe knitted together in a way that its politicians seem unwilling and unable to.”
That boy being the younger son of English Mr Soames (the narrator), a son who is obsessed in the 1930s with the trains and railway, Soames’ eldest son being more obsessed with the then new-fangled air travel. Soames meets King Boris of Bulgaria when visiting that country, the King who seemed to know already what Soames’ sons were interested in – so, perhaps the King had already read this story where this information is imparted to its readers, and its machinations already worked out to happen… and when you yourself read it, you will know what I mean and I have no need to forward-adumbrate it here, for fear not only of plot spoilers but also of the reversed happenstance that such spoilers might cause. It is a story with a narrative that is eloquently consuming, compelling, page-turning, and I cannot stress that fact enough. It is about the narrator’s journeys on the Orient Express throughout Europe (immediate history imbued with the tracks he necessarily follows) as a travel writer and journalist who meets kings and queens as well as those who defer to him, at times a flâneur or boulevardier, at other times, a mover or shaker, it seems, as he mixes with his “betters and inferiors” alike. There are chance windows of opportunity by facilitative signature or hypnotic transformation – among literal movers-and-shakers such as traindrivers or kings. Just as one example, the scene where Soames first meets King Boris is a classic in all literature, I suggest. I have such “‘instinct’ for a good story”, just like Soames does as a journalist.
I. The Master of Zatrikon II. The Song of Miriam III. A Wanderer In The Dark IV. At The Château Noir.
“I am a writer, a chronicler of the Old Quarter. I walk its ways waiting for encounters with the beautiful and strange.”
A free flow, as the way I have shown the sub-titles, almost a ritual journey pre or post Damian Murphy, whereby we follow the flow of the writer of the writer, the bet of the bet, a gamble with truth and understanding, never-ending like one of Zeno’s Paradoxes or Antinomies. But more a reverse Toynbeean challenge-and-response from or to Trebizond? Full of wondrous place names and inherent histories of Europe, Ottoman and Habsburg. Eugenics to create the master race versus acceptance of those who live in the city crammed but singing beautiful songs — and arcane objects passed hand to hand in methodical waywardness, for example a chess piece from a game played on a circular not square chess board, plus games of skill OR chance, but this story is, for me, a game of BOTH skill and chance, the forbearance of slums versus striving towards wider boulevards and (necessary or ruinous) clearance…a dilemma for our times. Break or heal, we probably need both. The Statistical Society is meeting in my house tonight. Be there, or be square. No-one knows what crucial action will create the necessary onward concertina or closing checkmate.
The free flow in that earlier version of the story: I. The Master of Zatrikon II. The Song of Miriam III. A Wanderer In The Dark IV. Electricity V. The Heart of the White Ambassador VI. At The Château Noir VII. The Bearer of Peacock Plumes.
[The 2009 book also published UNDERGROWTH (of books and literature!) that first appeared in NEMONYMOUS (Zencore) in 2007.]
“But I can grasp the idea behind them more than I can that we first came from somewhere where there’s no sea, rather than Norway and Denmark.”
…being the Icelandic narrator’s thoughts about the source of who he really is and where he lives. Iceland I had never thought before as part of Europe. But it has certain links of trade and Schengen unity, I see. Somehow I ponder it as an Island Empire, to match an Inland Empire that this book embodies as Inner Europe, expressions that seem to resonate with the title of a David Lynch film. Here, we have mixed for us: Icelandic art as sculpture, the legends, movers and shakers like earthquakes and volcanoes, skylit aurora, and finance as a crypto-currency rather than solid money. All in the ironic form of things like sculpture, and coins, that embody a soul of belief. As it happens, today, before reading this, I watched ‘Fake or Fortune?’ about a Giacometti sculpture while, now, this story’s eponymous sculpture is a mutation of a ship or shipwreck or Giacometti’s typical attenuating figures… just like the Englishman visiting Iceland for its sculptures: Lewis Bell, riven by debt from the world banking crisis, and he sees the Icelandic banks as what helped ignite that debt… a complex story that has its own inner empire of substance as imagination and vice versa, of that substance made real by belief in its intrinsic value or bartering power. Mixed in with a vague sense around him of sexual guilt or jealousy as the wife follows her husband who is the Icelandic narrator semi-obsessively following, in turn, Lewis Bell to the museum with the eponymous sculpture. An English name that rings true. And that Englishman’s need to get his own back, as it were! “Something to get hold of.” A clever story of attenuating graspabilities. Or of imperial weight.
“We do not need omens to tell us what they mean.”
A word-rich and luxuriant descrying of Medea and her part in history’s sorcery, with telling shades of history’s more attritional grey. The yellow smoke of cigarettes, too. And books in painted signs and books that seem blank. Boy messengers. And golden filigrees of dragon scales. The Narrator works in a post office and sends off letters with postage stamps worthy of John Howard — letters returning to him with palimpsest carbon imprints whereto they were sent. There are many references, arcane and clear, historical and mythic, in this text, and they still teem within my brain. My particular concern today is that the work preternaturally and tellingly links with the planet Saturn that (differently?) imbues my concurrent review of VULGAR THINGS today here. In that book prevails the Latin of Virgil and Petrarch. Here in the Valentine, the skeins of Ancient Greek. The mutual synergy is striking. Including the ‘silent geometry’ of mundane and celestial architecture…
“Certainly, yellow Saturn is throwing its vast influence like a sulphurous fog across us all.”
“Every book has a soul. The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it. Every time a book changes hands, every time someone runs his eyes down its pages, its spirit grows and strengthens.”
—from ‘The Shadow Of The Wind’ by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
And the way I have been recently sending my own books into this perfect circle of soul (described in my review above of Howard’s ‘The Light of Adria’) — and now we find in this Medea one by Valentine: “Perhaps one day these books of mine, these travelled books, will be found and studied, and it will be known that there was one in the city who did what he could.”
“He was truly alone — islanded.”
Another substantive short story that should endure in the realms of great literature. This one tells of Count Philipp von Stern in his large and stately, if not entirely beautiful, house in East Prussia, following the Great War. The house (for him not only built from brick but memories) has now hit harder times and is in unstoppable entropy, poignantly, evocatively and eloquently described, a great director’s cinema masterpiece of an atmospheric film never made, but here made by Howard for our inner Europe of the mind, telling of Stern’s possible dementia in talking to the ghosts of his wife and of an old gardener-mentor, still playing his boyhood conjuring tricks, transposing coins from his hand to other places, a prestidigitation that links with the hyper inflation of the time, and with many of the currency and (non-)substance themes of ‘Sun Voyager’, and the books in the house’s library, one missing, but another there he did not expect to be there. With the themes of the sharing of books by burning beacon or shared passage that I just adumbrated above as a postscript to the previous review. The keeping of the library for others to inherit. And a perfect ending that will resonate, making you wonder what or whom had been conjured back, or conjured away.
“The hinterland is no affair of ours.”
An intriguing apocryphal coda by flag or emblem to a book of the English narrator’s official travels and descriptions published in 1914, a collusively couched, teasing-out of his visit to the little harbour of Perasto, a distant outpost of the Venetian Republic, at the end of his travels along the Dalmatian coast. A mix of a genius-loci past-its-glory and a visualisable formal dinner where he had booked to stay as a chronicler, but mistaken by his hosts to be a consul. A sense that he had slowly slipped piecemeal into a slice of alternative Napoleonic history or that his hosts (a young woman among them to whom he feels himself attracted) are suffering from pretentious dementia…
Venice as a psychologically spurned hinterland of a Republic, if such a thing can be imagined, as if it is or was or will be an Inland Empire without borders on the coast. Only my fencing-mask needs taking off for me to tell you with whom you have been sparring story to story inside a book that has no borders or coasts or hinterland. Most of its individual stories, when fenced-off from each other, should never be forgotten as islands of literary craft, nor prevented, for their own discrete sakes, from escaping my attempt at Gestalt. But, then again, maybe they should be brought together again in a book, passed to other reading hands, as a mighty inner strength that they always were. Ever halfway there, ever halfway back.
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