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The Mosquito Coast (by Paul Theroux) and Darconville's Cat (by Alexander Theroux) are next to each other in the 99 Novels book and next to each other on their shelf at the library. They are not alike at all, except that they are both about ill-adjusted men whose intelligence is no consolation. Darconville's Cat is a big, noisy, goofy, Renaissance-inflected 3D labyrinth about a sweaty, loathing-lit young litterateur with trad-Catholic inclinations, who is also lithe and attractive to women, like Ignatius J. Reilly's most secret self-insert. While working on his own large grimoire of a novel, he realizes he needs money for food and whatnot, so he takes a job teaching English at an academically negligible women's college in Virginia. The descriptions of the American South and its culture are wonderfully, indulgently mean and musical. They are like someone read Nabokov On America and thought, "The problem with this guy is twofold: not enough adjectives and not enough contempt." This kind of thing is not going to be everyone's cup of tea, and it probably reflects well on you if it's not yours, but I enjoy a little mean music from time to time.

Darconville falls in love with a student, Isabel; she reciprocates, but the idyll is spotty, like most idylls, and doesn't last. When Darconville gets a surprise appointment to Harvard, she gets cold feet and doesn't join him as planned.

At Harvard, he meets an insane misogynist eunuch who lives in an attic, Dr. Crucifer, who may be a figment of his imagination/his doubts about Isabel made manifest. There's actually nothing to strongly support this interpretation as far as I can tell, but I thought it anyway just because he's so weird and shrill, and because that's the role he plays. Dr. Crucifer yells at Darconville about the sterility of love and the perfidity of women for about a million pages, with plenty of pungent inventiveness (and many a reference to Elizabeth I of England, the patron monster of the book, her bald head and spurious virginity). Isabel breaks up with him in an inconsiderate and embarrassing way; Crucifer tries to get him to kill her (one of the chapters is just a long, LONG list of gruesome murder methods, shrieked by Crucifer at the top of his lungs); he goes to Venice instead and dies of sadness and/or pneumonia. The summary doesn't do it justice, because it's not really a novel about a guy who has an ill-fated affair with his student, but a very long, deliberately fantastic, many-fingered jam session on the theme of The Girl I'll Never Understand. This is a deeply eccentric book by a guy who clearly doesn't mind you thinking he loves language better than people.

The Mosquito Coast is spare and lean and more or less contemporary, rather than early-modern, alchemical, and gouty. Allie Fox is an inventor who has always been on the outside of things, but it's not because he's a failure, it's SOCIETY that's the failure. He picks fights with hardware store employees about carrying imported goods - where's their Made In America tubes and hoses? He picks fights with every single retailer about their ridiculous prices, and prefers to shop at the local dump. He's convinced that America is going to be destroyed any minute and he, the last true man in America and possibly the last on earth - is going to have to start the whole world over again, his way this time. One day he buys a load of mosquito netting and some baseball caps (since the better hats are too expensive), and moves the family to Honduras, to a shabby port city and then upriver, where he bullies a few families into joining his icemaking scheme in the middle of nowhere. He declares to his family that anyway, America is destroyed now, there was a huge war just as they left, so now the wasteland is literal and there's no back to go. (Spoiler: America has not been destroyed in this book). For a little while, things are almost ok, in spite of the craziness of the plan. Then they aren't anymore.

Allie is a brilliantly compelling family-size monster who burns up all the oxygen in the book, so that the other characters in his orbit - Charlie, the wary and confused young narrator, his siblings, and their mother - barely have the chance to exist, and barely manage to do or feel anything except in reaction to him. This is both effective and a little frustrating. I found myself wishing that the mother in particular could have been more of a character - I wanted to know something about how she came to hitch her wagon to this dangerous and eternally disappointing star. But even if she'd wanted to talk about it to her kids, there was no opportunity. Mad Dad is always watching. There's a scene where they're on one of their duct-taped river boats, miles from anywhere they've ever been, and he dives under to fetch a boat part out of the mud. He's gone for so long that the family starts to panic, and so long after that that they start to talk about what to do next if he's dead. They'll have to find a town - they'll have to go home. Relief sneaks over each of them. Then he bursts out of the water, shouting, "Traitors!"

There are now only two books left of the 99 Novels - The Rebel Angels by Robertson Davies, which looks to be some kind of breezy campus thing, and my main man Norman Mailer's Egyptian shitstravaganza, Ancient Evenings.
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The End of the Rainbow

I finished Gravity's Rainbow on Monday night, over a couple of glasses of wine. The last thirty pages would have been breathtaking, if I hadn't been so exhausted by the first 850. Oh, well!

What I've Finished Reading

Dawn, first book in a series of (so far) beautifully upsetting tentacle tales by Octavia Butler. The people of Earth went and destroyed the world like they always seem to do, and a handful of survivors are put into suspended animation by a group of painfully earnest sapioculturists who are going to use the humans to enrich their own genetic diversity, and give them back their planet, more or less, in return. The catch is that they've controlled human fertility so that now the humans can only have part-alien children with alien assistance. Lilith, formerly of Earth, tries to resist for a while but there's only so much resisting to be done. The Oankali, the alien savior/captors, call what they're doing a Trade (with capital letters) and are convinced it's a biological imperative that they can't help; the humans feel rather that they're being tamed, and resent it without much efficacy.

What I'm Reading Now

I was hugely disappointed in the Library's section on Chinese Literature. The editorial essay by Robert K. Douglas can't refrain from ruminating about the virtues and defects of "the Chinese mind." National minds are one of the running themes of the anthology and of 1902 in general, to be fair, but here the editor's ideas seem to have prevented him from making any effort at all. He frets about the defects of Chinese poetry and dismisses all of Chinese fiction as creaky wooden morality tales that no Westerner could possibly enjoy, but provides no examples: instead, the entire literature selection following the essay consists of four pages of "selected maxims" because the editor thinks that "the Chinese mind" does maxims that much better than it does anything else. By contrast, [Ancient] Egyptian Literature gets over 120 pages of multiple genres of writing in multiple eras. Japanese Literature is not quite as long, but includes novel excerpts, drama, and several kinds of poetry. For the most part, I've been pleasantly surprised by the Library's attempt to cast a wide net - this laziness is maybe not totally unexpected, but still an unfortunate exception to the rule.

Finally finishing Gravity's Rainbow means I get to reward myself with William Dean Howells' My Literary Passions, the simple story of a man who loves books and would be delighted to tell you about some of the books he has loved in his life. I got it from the library yesterday and took it to the arboretum to read a couple of chapters next to a giant oak tree. Then, when it got too dark to read, I went inside and read a couple more. It's even pleasanter than I expected.

I shall try not to use authority, however, and I do not expect to speak here of all my reading, whether it has been much or little, but only of those books, or of those authors that I have felt a genuine passion for. I have known such passions at every period of my life, but it is mainly of the loves of my youth that I shall write, and I shall write all the more frankly because my own youth now seems to me rather more alien than that of any other person


I've barely begun The Mosquito Coast, one of four remaining 99 Novels but it, too, has been love at first sight. On the very first page there's a wary child narrator and a mad dad who took his kids out of school and keeps yelling about how he's THE LAST MAN because the toxic combination of civiization and (especially) Japanese electronics are killing all the brute virtues, oh dear. And there are woodcuts! It's nice to open a book and feel happy and excited to be reading it, instead of concrete-overshod and obscurely crawled-on.

What I Plan to Read Next

I'd completely forgotten, until it arrived at my door on Friday, that I'd pre-ordered Blood Heir by Amelie Wen Zhao, back when Zhao was for some reason getting bombarded by negative reviews all beginning "I haven't read this book, but. . ." So now I've got this big pseudo-Russian-looking YA fantasy book on my hands. Will it be good? Will it be bad? I'll probably find out reasonably soon.

There is also plenty more deeply uncomfortable tentacle action coming my way from Octavia Butler.

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