Financial Times Weekend 22-23Feb2020

(Dana P.) #1
10 ★ FT Weekend 22 February/23 February 2020

flat. As it turns out, the personal is polit-
ical,but the personalis also exasperat-
ingly petty. Duringthe 2017 Women’s
March, Cate“is extremely unhappy
with the new president andfired up to
be marching”, but spends most ofthe
protest assessinghowbest todistance
herselffrom the“pussy hats”and
graphic posters shefinds distasteful.

RightAftertheWeatheralso conjures
thefutility ofsocial media warriors, and
duringitsfiner moments exudes the
narcissistichumourfoundin Kafka’s
diary entry. Cate’s ex-husband Graham
spends most ofthe book infront ofthree
large screens, absorbingthe news cycle.
Ye tdespitehis obsession withthe mach-
inations ofthe USgovernment and sur-
veillance capitalism,he remains comi-
cally egotistical.“I should havegone and
talked with each ofthem,”he says of
Trump voters, as though healone could
havemade themrealise “thevalue of
immigrants,how muchbetter it is to

Books


I


n 1997, Rami Elhanan’s 14-year-old
daughter Smadar was killed by two
Palestinian suicide bombers in
Jerusalem. Tenyears later in Anata,
aPalestiniantownunderIsraeli
occupation in the West Bank, Bassam
Aramin’s 10-year-old daughter Abir was
killed, shot with a rubber bullet fired by
an Israeli soldier.
These are terrible stories; true stories;
twofatherswhohavebothlost beloved
childrentoviolence.But theintractable
nature ofthat violence — the conflict
over the territories of Israel and Pales-
tine — would seem to mean that these
men couldneverbe unitedin theirloss,
only divided.
And yet, in the course ofColum
McCann’s new novelApeirogon,the
reader comes to inhabit their lives,to
see how fracture can be repaired at least
in part. This remarkable, complex
noveldemonstrates whathasbecomea
tenet of its author’s work: “One story
becoming another,”as he writes.
McCann is adept at transforming his-
tory into fiction in a way thatbringsthe
reader to view thathistory anew;heisa

writer whoforges connections that
would otherwise go unseen.Let the
GreatWorldSpinpivots around Philippe
Petit’s 1974 tightrope walk between the
Twin Towers of the World Trade Center,
but itsfocus is the many lives lived
underneaththe wire.TransAtlantic
begins with the story of John Alcock and
Arthur Brown, who made thefirst
transatlanticflight in 1919, but that
novelalso takesintheabolitionistFred-
erick Douglass’s visit to Ireland in 1845,
as well as US senator George Mitchell’s
work brokering the 1998 Good Friday
peace accords in Northern Ireland. Both
Petit andMitchellreappear inApeiro-
gon,a further interweaving of lives
within lives.
WithApeirogon,thisboldnovelist
enters fraught political territory with
courage and imagination. There is no
simple way to approach this kind of
material, and so McCann takes the
novelform and cracks it open: the book
is composed of1,000 chapters, some
only a single line long. They are num-
beredupto500before heading back
down to one again — recognition that
stories suchas those of Elhananand
Aramin can have no linear trajectory.
Yet McCann ensures that as the novel
expands and folds back in on itself, the
reader neverfeels lost: one ofthe
book’sfeats is the way that clarity of
exposition is combined with formal
experimentation.
Itbegins in 2016, withRami —his yel-
low licence plate indicating that he is an
Israeli — riding towards the separation
barrier that divides EastJerusalemfrom
theWestBank.Itwillbe awhilebefore
thereaderlearnswhereheisheading,
butMcCann’sconfidentnarrativedraws
us in, revealingthelandscape as Rami
swerves throughit onhis motorbike:
“Twoanswersforoneswerve: Giloon
one side, Bethlehem on theother. Geog-
raphy here is everything.”

Apeirogon: A Novel
by Colum McCann
Bloomsbury £18.99/
Random House $28,
480 pages

Everything — and yet not enough.
What, thereader may ask,cananovel
such as this bring to our understanding
ofRami and Bassa’s lives, their situa-
tions andthoseoftheirfamilies? Much
has been written about the friendship of
the two men, who met through the Par-
ents Circle, a joint Israeli-Palestinian
organisation founded in 1995 that now
consists ofmore than 600families, all of
whom have lost an immediatefamily
member to the conflict in the region.
The answer is that the bestfiction per-
mits a level ofempathy thatfew other
forms of writing allow. Rami calls him-
self“a graduate ofthe Holocaust”,his
father having escapedfrom the camps.
As a young man, Bassam served a seven-
year sentence in an Israeli prisonfor
throwing ahandgrenadeatamilitary
jeep; while in prison, he watched a docu-
mentary about the Holocaust and
rejoiced at the deaths ofthose he
regarded as his enemy.
McCann reveals, with plain-spoken
delicacy, the hearts ofthese men, and
how they will find their way to forgive-
ness and understanding.
But thisis a bookthat containsmulti-
tudes: the stories ofits real-life prota-
gonists and theirfamilies are threaded
throughwithmeditations onbird
migration, the work ofcomposers John
Cage and Philip Glass, the story ofthe

19th-century Irish priest Christopher
Costigan, whofirst explored the Dead
Sea. McCann traces the technology of
violence: the manufacture ofrubber
bullets; the last walk ofa suicide
bomber; the production of Zyklon B,
the gas used in the death chambers at
Auschwitz.
What remains most imprinted in the
mind, though, is beauty. The descrip-
tion ofthe white dove that settled on
Philippe Petit’s balancing pole when he
walked on a wire between East and West
Jerusalem in 1987; the love ofthese two
fathersfortheir lost children.
Apeirogon:a shape with a countably
infinite number ofsides.“Countably
infinite” — the counting of the elements
in the set will takefor ever but you will
get to any particular element in afinite
amount of time. An apeirogon may look
like a circle, curling back upon itself,the
number ofits sides so vast that the eye
perceives the figure as round, softened
and perfected.
It’s a clumsy titlefor a novel, one
might argue, a title requiring explan-
ation. Still, this remarkable book rises to
embody thegeometric form, foldingan
uncountablenumberof storieswithin
itself, the lives ofPalestinians and Israe-
lis, stretchingback into the past and off
into thefuture. It is a daring, humane
achievement.

Acrossthedivide


EricaWagneron a real-life Israeli-Palestinian friendship forged in grief —


now transformed into a novel of remarkable complexity and humanity


Becky Strange

Me,myselfandwhy


Impotentliberalangstclashes
withtheself-centredimpulse

oftheindividualinTrump’s
America.ByJoHamya

T


hegreat upheavals rarely
sustain a satisfactory sense
ofdrama. Real life happens
in thegapbetween thegrav-
ity ofsuch events and the
mundanity in whichthey occur — take
Kafka in 1914:“Germany has declared
war on Russia. Went swimming.”
Carol Anshaw’s latest novel,Right
After the Weather,has its protagonist
register two incidents ofterrible signifi-
cance:the result ofthe 2016 US presi-
dentialelection, anda violenthome
invasion. In the aftermath ofeach,
Anshawdepicts a charactercalculating
the enormity ofthese experiences
alongside thefact that her day-to-day
life remains largely unaltered.
Cate is a stagedesignerlivingin Chi-
cago. An acutely 21st-centurytugofwar
between“wokeness” andmoreselfish
impulses suffuses most ofher thoughts:
in light ofclimate change, she tries not
to be“viscerally thrilled”by an unsea-
sonably warmday; when sheworkson
an LGBT play that shehates, sheleaves
it offher CV butfinishes thejob in order
to pay“respect togay history”. For Cate,
the value ofthe quotidian is elevated
always throughagrander sociopolitical
lens, though seldom to any useful end.
In this way, withits near-constant
mode ofthird-person present tense,
RightAftertheWeathertaps into thefrus-
trations oftoday’s liberalism. Though
Anshaw’s characters worry about cur-
rent affairs, their response oftenfalls

Right After
the Weather
by Carol Anshaw
Fig Tree £14.99/
Atria Books $27,
288 pages

There is no simple way to


approach this material, so
McCann takes the novel

form and cracks it open


An acutely 21st-century tug


of war between ‘wokeness’
and more selfish impulses

suffuses Cate’s thoughts


consider races andgenders equal”.No
matterhow socially aware Graham
becomes, his emphasis remains on“I”.
Such anticlimax pervades the novel’s
first halfvia snapshots ofthe ineffectual
moralrectitude its characters express.
When, duringaliveperformance,a
door sticksonastage set that shehas
designed, Cateframes the mishap in the
context of“everythinggoingwrongina
larger sense”with America. Hergirl-
friend sympathises — but theirjoint
solutionistoruna bath.
BathosisRight After the Weather’s
strongest suit, and the bookfalters once
thedeviceisshedinfavourof amorecli-
mactic approachfor its second half.
Anshawbuilds towards the homeinva-
sion in a series ofcutaway scenes involv-
ingChicago’s homeless community. The
overlapbetween these passages and
Cate’s cosseted life is made with a point-
edness that screamsformoraloverture.
Regrettably, thedenouement is con-
fused: once thehomeless characters
havefulfilled their plotfunction, their
snippets ofnarrative cease, without
having said much — Cate, meanwhile,
oscillates betweenherformernarcis-
sism anda PTSD-inducedcrisis, neither
ofwhich is developed convincingly
enough to come offas anythingother
than annoying.
“In the middle ofeverythingscary
and tricky, I’m tryingto live my one
life,”she pronounces near the end, and
onegets the sense that thereisaless
twee, earnest takeaway tobehadin
that — about Trump’s America, about
the trickiness ofthe accountability of
individual citizens.ButRightAfterthe
Weatherends up worsefor waveringin
its chief observation:thatasense of une-
ventfulness is the thingto watchfor in
any major event.

Ai AN l

R t b F A 2

Writing someone


else’s story is


a risky business


Nilanjana Roy


Reading the world


T


he review copy ofJeanine
Cummins’AmericanDirt
arrived brimmingwith
endorsements. Aglossy
postcard announced that
the novel was an Oprah’s Book Club
pick; Stephen Kingdefied anyone to
read thefirst seven pages and not
finish the book;Don Winslow called
it“aGrapesofWrathfor our time”.
Ofall the books published each year,
only a very few will receive this sort of
care, planningand marketing. From
the summer of 2019 ,AmericanDirtwas
signposted as a major work of fiction.
I’mglad I read the book before the
furious debate began over whethera
white American novelist with some
Puerto Rican ancestryhad done justice
to the stories ofmigrants struggling to
reachandcross the US-Mexicoborder.
AmericanDirtis easily summarised.
Lydia Quixano Pérez, a bookstore
owner, has toflee Acapulco with her
eight-year-old son Luca after her
husband is murdered by drug cartels.
Lydia andLuca join the migrants
boarding La Bestia, the trains to the
north, andface terrifying challenges.
Ithas thebreathless pace andtone
of a soap opera; Cummins is not John
Steinbeck, andAmericanDirtisasfar
from being this generation’sGrapesof
WrathasI am from being Gigi Hadid.
The plot moves with electrifying twists
andturns, thecharacters are separated
into heroes and villains, neatly
identifiable and rarely shaded in grey.
Ifyou know nothing about the long
history of migration in the region, the
bookisauseful explainer — it delivers
up the messiness ofmigrant struggles
andUSbordertensionsinaneat
package. But ifyou’re a migrant, ifyou
knowmore, you mightunderstandthe
fury of critics such as the Chicana
writer Myriam Gurba, who called
AmericanDirt“trauma porn that wears
asocial justice fig leaf”.
It seemed to me,as an outsider to the
US andto Mexico, that Cumminshad
the best of intentions, but that she
wrote as a well-intentioned outsider
to the lives ofmany ofher characters,
whoarerendered one-dimensional.
The reader is never in doubt that the
novelwillendon a note ofepiphany,
as soap operas and telenovelas must.
That same week, I read Deepa
Anappara’sDjinnPatrolonthePurple
Line.I approached it first with caution,
wondering ifthis was another Indian
novel miningpoverty as its source
material,but then withdeepening
delight. This storyfeatures nine-year-
oldJai and hisfriends,slum-dwellersin
asmoggy, unnamedcity that resembles
Delhi, whoform their own“djinn

patrol”to investigate the unnerving
disappearances ofother slum children.
Jai is a wonderful narrator, fully
imagined — “I’m scared of JCBs, exams,
djinns that are probably real, and
Ma’s slaps”— and in Anappara’s hands,
hisworld takes shape with care yet
withoutsentiment,from the ghostof
the ragpickers’ boss to the fear that
bulldozers will raze their homes.
Anappara is in herforties, and made
herdebutlate as a novelist; asa
journalist she has worked on the
impact ofpoverty on children, and
bringsbothknowledge andrespect to
her fiction.Her characters are free to
make terrible mistakes, unshackledto
the necessity of a neat ending.
Part ofthe power ofliterature is that
anyone can write anyone else’s stories.
This generation’s debate over cultural
appropriation is a fresh version of an
older argument about postcolonial
literature —doyouhave a righttotell
those stories? And, as novelist and
essayist Alexander Chee asks,“Why do
you want to tell this story?”
To these questions, I would add one
more: can you be sure that youfully
inhabit and empathise with the lives of
people whose race, or class, or caste,
backgrounds and life experiences, are
vastly differentfrom yours? Ifso, go
ahead; if not, proceed with care.
Much ofthe anger aroundAmerican
Dirtandits reputedlylarge advance
has to do with unequal power in the
publishing marketplace. Some critics
have askedwhy a non-Mexican writer
should profit when major publishers in
the US have historically ignored Latino
authors who tackledthe same subjects.
BothCumminsandhercritics claimto
havefaced threats, as the argument
grows ever more heated on and offline.
Novelists should have the right to tell
other people’s stories — but they don’t
have a righttobe uncritically reviewed.
None of us want to say to another
author that as a non-Mexican,she can
never write about Mexicans; or that if
you are Hindu, you can’t write about the
Christian or Muslim experience; none of
us wants to shutdoors.
And yet the writer’s job is also to be
aware ofyour own limitations — can
youdo justice toexperiences sofar
outside your own? Cummins earnestly
explains the lives ofmigrants, in a
wildlymelodramaticbut ultimately
unconvincing novel; Anappara took me
effortlessly into the alien world ofa
slum in an Indian metropolis, and
helped me see it through a child’seyes.
Anyone can try to tell someone else’s
stories. Gettingit rightismuchharder
than it seems, and ifyou take sucha
risk, expect also to take theflak.

F


ebruarybeingthelovey-dovey,
hearts-and-flowersValentine
month, there’s a specialfocus
on romance in thelatest crop
ofyoungadult novels.
Justkidding— in YA, every month
brings its crop ofbook-length romantic
propaganda instructingpredominantly
teenagegirls, and afewgay boys, that if
youjust meshwiththeone,lifeisgoing
to turn outfine. But lurkingin the heap
areafewtitles seasonedwitha dashof
originality or reality, and every so often
there’sevenanofferingthat dares to
messwith therules and subvert the
genre altogether.
Of CursesandKissesby Sandhya
Menon(Hodder & Stoughton, £7.99)can
beforgivenfor takinga straightforward
lineonromance. Jaya Rao, princess ofa
fictional Indian kingdom, is a newgirl at
St Rosetta’s, an elite co-ed boarding
school in Colorado. It’sanunrecognisable
establishmentwhere the headteacher
humbly asks wealthy pupils ifshe can be
ofservice, and agirl’s valuable ruby pen-
dantisnotconfiscated on sight.
Jaya has one aim: to break the heart of
Grey Emerson,fiendish scion ofa Brit-
ish aristocraticfamily that has been the
sworn enemy ofher own since the days
ofthe Raj.Greyisgigantic, described as
both lupine and bearlike(on the same
page), with hands likened to paws. It’sa
strangewaytodescribethelove inter-
est, untilyou twigthat this is a revamp
ofBeautyandtheBeast.
Grey has been brought up in terror of
thefamily curse, laid by Jaya’svengeful
ancestor, so he’shighly resistant to her
regal wiles. It’s pure,fantastical escap-
ism witha tiny critique embeddedin the
privilege that it sojoyfully describes.
“Every happy teenagegirl is the same,
while every unhappy teenagegirlis

miserable in her own special way.”
Jenny Lee’sAnnaK(Penguin, £7.99)is
another textualrevamp, this time
mashingup Tolstoy’s classic ofdoomed
lovewithCrazyRichAsians—the stra-
pline“Young. Rich. Crazy in Love”is
entirelydeliberate.
Lee transposesAnnaKareninatoNew
Yorkin adensely texturedtale witha
highcharacter count andendless prod-
uct placement.“He pretty much ruined
Hermèsfor me. Likeforevs,”says one
lovelorn younglady. F illedwithnear-
impenetrable teenage slangand refer-
ences, it risks collapsefrom thefirst,
bathetic line:“The whole thingwas a
f***ingdisaster.”
However, it soonbecomes clear that
Lee can spin a narrative atbreakneck
pace andfill it with irresistibly witty dia-
logue. Half-Korean Anna K is a wise 17-
year-oldwhoadvisesher peers andeld-
ers on affairs ofthe heart until a dashing
boy nicknamedCount Vronskymakes
offwithherown heart. What about the
train? Ihear you ask.Nospoilers!
MeanwhileKatinDiaryofa Confused
Feministby Kate Weston(Hodder,

£7.99)manages to tumble to theground
right infront ofHot Josh,flippingher
skirt overherhead,thusbaringher
knickers anduntrimmedpubichair.
What’s worse, her Mooncup rolls out of
her bagtowards hisfeet. Kat refuses to
be period-shamedorbody-shamed,but
beingan ardentfeminist in today’s
mixed-up worldentails many problems
andcontradictions.
Kathas that oldstandby, agaybest
friend, and twofemalefriends whose
emotionalinconsistencies continually
knock Kat’s confidence. Weston,a
former stand-up comedian, chucksgags
around likefireworks until the story
takes adarker turn, tacklingsocialanxi-
ety, depression and low self-esteem.
However, thejacket photo ofthe
author’s cat playingwith a Mooncup is
enoughto cheer up anyone.
Jamie is anotherhopelessklutz, man-
agingto knock over a shop display of
tangelos and later, a tablefull offood ata
Ramadanfast-breakingdinner. These
incidents tendtohappen wheneverheis
in the vicinity offormerfriend Maya.
Their interactions, eager onhis side,
surlyonhers, aredescribedin alternat-
ingchapters ofYesNoMaybe Soby
BeckyAlbertalliand Aisha Saeed
(Simon & Schuster, £7.99).
JewishJamie andMuslim Maya are
brought together by the timely device of
a post-Trump politicalcampaigntogeta
Democrat electedto a traditionally
Republican seat in the US House of
Representatives. The pairbuilda touch-
ingfriendship by canvassing, initially
reluctantlybut withgrowingurgency as
the Republican candidatebegins to
show a cloven hoofofreligious and anti-
gay bigotry. Since happy ever after is
rarelythe outcome when it comes to
politics, thank Godfor romance.

Escapismwithatwist


GENREROUND-UP


YOUNGADULT


By Suzi Feay

Free download pdf