Fiction Chronicle
By HIRSH SAWHNEY
THE LAKE
By Banana Yoshimoto.Translated by Michael Emmerich.
Melville House, $23.95.
By Banana Yoshimoto.Translated by Michael Emmerich.
Melville House, $23.95.
Yoshimoto’s
13th work of fiction attests to the power of emotional intimacy to help even
the most “ridiculously fragile people” overcome trauma and grief. Chihiro, a
mural artist, loses her mother and finds consolation staring out the window of
her Tokyo apartment. Her neighbor, a lanky stranger named Nakajima, begins to
wave at her. After a year of fond gazing and brief encounters, he starts
spending the night. A withdrawn yet strangely candid genetics student, Nakajima
helps Chihiro make peace with her upbringing in hierarchical small-town Japan,
and she provides him relief from memories of his painful, mysterious past. He
invites Chihiro to accompany him to a picturesque lake to confront two old
friends, a “not normal” brother and sister. This gloomy but dignified pair
possess paranormal abilities, and they provide insight into Nakajima’s horrific
childhood. Terse truisms occasionally bog down Yoshimoto’s prose: “When there’s
a plus, there’s always a minus. If there’s a powerful light, the darkness that
is its opposite will be just as strong.” But much of the action unfolds through
artful dialogue and a nimble fusion of romantic and existential reflection. The
author is particularly astute about what it’s like to be an artist in a world
where people keep “their true opinions to themselves” while chasing “tiny
profits.”
KAMCHATKA
By Marcelo Figueras.Translated by Frank Wynne.
Black Cat, paper, $14.95.
By Marcelo Figueras.Translated by Frank Wynne.
Black Cat, paper, $14.95.
Dark days
descend on Buenos Aires, home to this novel’s narrator, a sixth grader obsessed
with comics and American television and films. He witnesses the gradual
disappearance of his parents’ colleagues, victims of the country’s “Dirty War”
(1976-83), in which a military junta, with the tacit support of high-ranking
United States government officials, murdered tens of thousands of trade
unionists, journalists and Perón sympathizers. The narrator and his activist
parents abscond to the city’s outskirts, where they assume false identities.
The boy renames himself Harry, after his newfound idol, Houdini, and his
areligious parents teach him the fundamentals of Catholicism to help keep their
cover. Young Harry considers the politics of the time “something that got
people all worked up about nothing, a sport that was as loud as it was
pointless, a bit like football.” He spends his days removing dead toads from
the house’s putrid swimming pool and reading up on being an escape artist. He
and his father play countless games of Risk, during which Harry always takes
possession of Kamchatka, a remote Russian region that comes to have metaphoric
meaning. In tumultuous times, Kamchatka gives him the security of “being far
from everything, unreachable, amid the eternal snows.” The author, an Argentine
screenwriter, vividly evokes a child’s reaction to a world beleaguered by
violence. But he hasn’t devoted enough attention to plotting or the development
of secondary characters, and the novel’s whimsical tangents often distract from
its hopeful message about the healing powers of imagination and love.
OIL ON WATER
By Helon Habila.
Norton, paper, $14.95.
By Helon Habila.
Norton, paper, $14.95.
In this
absorbing novel about the oil-rich Niger Delta, an insurgent group is believed
to have kidnapped a British woman, the wife of a petroleum company executive.
Rufus, a greenhorn reporter, and Zaq, a renowned but washed-out newsman, delve
into a maze of rivers and swamps in pursuit of her. Voyaging through surreal,
war-ravaged landscapes, they come across “dead birds draped over tree
branches, their outstretched wings black and slick with oil,” and encounter
characters who paint an indicting portrait of petroleum politics. A ruthless
army major captures the men and explains that “freedom fighters” are actually
“crooks,” asserting that “the best thing is to line them up and shoot them.”
The pair has several run-ins with the insurgents, who claim not to be “the
barbarians the government propagandists say” they are, but rather “for the
people,” on a mission to save their communities and the environment. Right and
wrong are ambiguous here, but what’s clear is that the region’s indigenous
people, their waterways and farmlands poisoned, have “borne the brunt of the
oil wars.” The British hostage eludes the journalists, though they eventually
unravel her complicated story. Despite its neat and tidy ending, this novel,
Habila’s third, reminds us how a mixture of poverty, frustration and greed can
engender militancy, and illuminates the cruel, overlooked effects of
globalization on the developing world.
THE SENTIMENTALISTS
By Johanna Skibsrud.
Norton, $23.95.
By Johanna Skibsrud.
Norton, $23.95.
Napoleon
Haskell, a recovering alcoholic, lives alone in a Fargo, N.D., trailer park,
chain-smoking in his “library” and using his computer to blow money on the
stock market. His solitary days come to an end when his daughter, this first
novel’s narrator, re-enters his life. Concerned about her father’s health, she
and her sister pack his things and drive him to Casablanca, a small Canadian
town near the New York border. The family used to spend summers there with
Henry, a kindhearted paraplegic whose government house now represents
Napoleon’s “last and only option.” It turns out Napoleon is dying, and he lives
out his final months in Henry’s lakeside home, returning to booze, completing
crosswords and conversing with his daughter. She slowly uncovers the connection
between her father’s four-year disappearance during her childhood and his
suppressed memories of the Vietnam War. Napoleon witnessed atrocities: his
platoon massacred innocent civilians; his good friend, Henry’s son, was
mysteriously executed, perhaps by an American officer. Skibsrud, an
accomplished poet, elucidates sorrow, hanging “as though it was a separate
object,” with admirable subtlety. Her metaphors can be blatant, but they’re
usually resonant. An entire town, for example, lies submerged beneath Henry’s
artificial lake, this sunken world a reminder of the enduring nature of
supposedly bygone days. The narrator earnestly questions her ability to
understand the “inexplicable presence” of the past, especially when the
simplest events seem like “the most complicated puzzles.” But this novel
suggests she shouldn’t doubt herself. A hypnotic meditation on memory, it
reaffirms the potential for storytelling to offer clarity and redemption.
Hirsh Sawhney, the editor of
the anthology “Delhi Noir,” writes about books for The Times Literary
Supplement and The Guardian of London.
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