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"Life Of Pi" - Yann Martel

July 7th 2008 12:29



Yann Martel’s novel tells the story of a 16-year-old Indian boy who is shipwrecked in the Pacific and survives 227 days at sea in the company of a Bengal tiger. Since this fact is now well known, as well known as the fact that the book won the Booker Prize when it was released, Life of Pi risks being shrunk to the monad of its narrative ‘premise’, like any Hollywood concept movie. Doubtless, people will choose to read it insofar as they can tolerate this premise. And the reduction of the novel to its magic realist challenge would not be unfair, since the book is constituted of little other than this singular story, and moreover is explicitly – that is to say, theoretically – about the inevitability of the magical in storytelling. Martel’s novel is evangelical in its defence of the shimmeringly implausible. ‘If you stumble at mere believability, what are you living for?’ the survivor asks, once he has found land and is being interviewed by two investigators who do not credit his tale. According to Lisa Jardine, who chaired this year’s Booker judges, Martel has described his novel as one ‘that will make you believe in God’. Life of Pi is proud to be a delegate for magic realism, and wears a big badge so that we don’t forget it.


Of course, in a proper paradox, this magical story is made plausible, and vivid and dramatic, only by the careful application of conventional realist techniques. If we do indeed come to believe this story of survival, if we hardly ever feel that our credulity is being taken for a reckless voyage, it is because Martel patiently builds his narrative case: ensuring that no detail is too tiny for examination; quietly folding in a vast amount of research (largely zoological and botanical); taking care to observe the laws of physics and the natural world; and generally grounding his watery tale in the loam of the likely. Martel proves, by skilful example, that realism is narrative’s great master, that it schools even its own truants. He reminds us in fact that realism is already magical, an artifice-in-waiting.


The novel prepares its plausibility by solidly introducing its protagonist and narrator, Pi Patel. The first hundred pages of the book concern Pi’s childhood in India, and are full of charm. Pi’s father is the director of a zoo, so his son grows up with a wide understanding of animals. He tells us – this will be important – that animals do not really crave large open spaces, but need above all to know the borders of their habitat, however small, and to know who is the leader of the pack. Pi (shortened from Piscine, teased at school as ‘Pissing’), who is now grown up and living in Canada, recounts his Indian life with a childlike ingenuity. Characteristic of the book’s easy and likeable spirit is the way that Pi tells us about his early pan-religiousness. A Hindu by origin, he stumbled one day into a hill-town church and was captivated. A friendly priest led the little boy to Christ, and ever after, Pi tells us, he could not help thanking Lord Krishna for sending Jesus his way. A similar encounter in a mosque rendered Pi a worshipper in three different traditions. He tells us that since then – and despite the ordeal of the shipwreck – he has been a believer; Martel is already announcing his real theme: ‘It is not atheists who get stuck in my craw,’ Pi says, ‘but agnostics. Doubt is useful for a while. We must all pass through the garden of Gethsemane . . . but we must move on. To choose doubt as a philosophy of life is akin to choosing immobility as a means of transportation.’

Most of this Indian section, which like the rest of the book rides on a great deal of research, is smoothly convincing; we sanction it without quarrel as the prelude to the real event, the shipwreck. If Martel’s writing falters here, it is occasionally in its nervous abundance, as if, ironically enough, he were afraid that we didn’t always believe him. These are moments when he over-loads the book with his acquired Indian exotica. Thus when Pi tells us all the reasons he is a Hindu, we feel oppressed by the unnatural bulk of his list and feel it to be the blazon of an outsider:

I am a Hindu because of sculptured cones of red kumkum powder and baskets of yellow turmeric nuggets, because of garlands of flowers and pieces of broken coconut, because of the clanging of bells to announce one’s arrival to God, because of the whine of the reedy nadaswaram and the beating of drums, because of the patter of bare feet against stone floors down dark corridors pierced by shafts of sunlight, because of the fragrance of incense, because of flames of arati lamps circling in the darkness, because of bhajans being sweetly sung, because of elephants standing around to bless, because of colourful murals telling colourful stories, because of foreheads carrying, variously signified, the same word – faith.

A similarly aesthetic list by an Indian novelist about a Canadian Episcopalian would almost certainly sound ridiculous; Westerners are too easily entranced by lovingly lacquered ‘Indianness’.

Pi Patel grows up during the troubled 1970s, and eventually his father, an ardent despiser of Mrs Gandhi, decides to move the family to Canada. They take passage on a Japanese cargo ship, along with some of the zoo’s animals, which have been sold to institutions around the world. The ship’s sinking is swiftly, almost sketchily done, as if Martel were acknowledging that the real business of his story lies just ahead, and that he will not be tediously sequential. So, suddenly the ship is sinking, the animals appear to have been let out of their cages and are stampeding, and Pi is thrown into a lifeboat. There seem to be no other survivors. Pi is alone in his large boat – along with a tiger, a wounded zebra, a hyena and an orangutan.

The next two hundred pages, the gist of the book, concern life on this boat. The hyena quickly consumes the zebra and the orangutan, and is in turn eaten by the tiger. And then the reader settles down to the familiar pleasures of a survivor story. We expect, and are granted, vivacious descriptions of storms; the beating of the sun and the lashing of the rain; the desperate search for food and water once the boat’s rations expire; spiritual distress and febrile hope; the sighting of a ship which of course sails right past the lifeboat; the firing of flares; and a brief respite on a tiny island. The only peculiarity is that these conventions are entwined around the story of a man and a tiger, and much of Martel’s talent is employed in bringing to life this unlikely relationship.

At first Pi cowers at one end of the boat, while the tiger dozes at the other end under a tarpaulin. But soon it becomes clear to Pi that he will have to master the animal or become its victim. In essence, he re-creates the atmosphere of the zoo, feeding and watering a beast whose habitat he controls not by metal bars but by authority – he uses his SOS whistle like a circus-master, to keep the tiger in its lair. A relationship develops, one made of love and dependence and fear. If Pi becomes something of an animal during his ordeal, then the tiger becomes something of a person, the companion that Pi needs and cherishes.

Survivor yarns, like prison stories, gain their narrative power from the fetishising of the minimal. Suddenly the banal – eating, defecating, cleaning, sleeping – is of life and death importance; thus, ideologically, tales of survival represent the triumph of the domestic. They are the most bourgeois form of story and hence the natural ally of conventional realism. They are adventure stories which are largely comprised of the most unadventurous elements. Notwithstanding the presence of a tiger, or rather because of the presence of a tiger, Martel labours to reproduce for us the daily struggle of Pi’s existence.

Again, a great amount of research is compacted into fictional form. We learn, through the narrator, how to catch a sea-turtle and how to drink its blood and eat its flesh (we also discover what this blood tastes like). We learn how to catch flying fish, and that a dorado in its death-throes flashes different colours in rapid succession (‘I felt I was beating a rainbow to death’). In addition, we are witnesses at the killing of a shark, a short-tailed shearwater and a ‘masked booby’ (a bird). It is indeed a wondrous tale, unflaggingly compelling and always controlled by accountable prose. Here, Martel describes lightning at sea:

Suddenly a bolt struck much closer . . . There was an explosion of hot air and hot water. For two, perhaps three seconds, a gigantic, blinding white shard of glass from a broken cosmic window danced in the sky, insubstantial yet overwhelmingly powerful. Ten thousand trumpets and twenty thousand drums could not have made as much noise as that bolt of lightning; it was positively deafening. The sea turned white and all colour disappeared. Everything was either pure white light or pure black shadow. The light did not seem to illuminate so much as to penetrate. As quickly as it had appeared, the bolt vanished – the spray of hot water had not finished landing upon us and already it was gone. The punished swell returned to black and rolled on indifferently.

In such a passage, the writing manages its vividness not by flouncing into Fine Writing but by combining a literary register with Pi’s simpler, earnest voice (‘it was positively deafening’). Still, although Pi certainly has a voice, the literary cost of his boyish naivety is that he is somewhat empty as a character. Of course, the story holds him in its tight structure, and binds his motives to the mast: what we know about him is that he has to survive and will survive, and for a long time this is enough to be going on with. But not for ever, and if Life of Pi finally feels, for all its marvels, like a rather slight book, it is because Pi is rather slight, too.

One difficulty is that Pi retains, throughout his torments, the jaunty tone of the novel’s earlier, Indian section. For instance, when he finds the lifeboat’s survival manual, written by a Royal Navy commander, he tells us: ‘The injunction not to drink urine was quite unnecessary. No one called “Pissing” in his childhood would be caught dead with a cup of pee at his lips, even alone in a lifeboat in the middle of the Pacific. And the gastronomic suggestions only confirmed to my mind that the English didn’t know the meaning of the word food.’ Well, very cute, but hardly the tone in which a teenager, alone in the middle of the Pacific, would frame his thoughts, nor likely to be the tone in which a middle-aged Canadian would recall those experiences. In order to represent anguish, it is necessary for representation – i.e. language – to become anguished, as William Golding in Pincher Martin knew. Pi never stops being charming.

More damaging to Pi’s integrity as a fictional character is that, having been established as a boy with an omnivorous spiritual hunger, he hardly ever thinks of God while at sea. There are passing references to daily prayers, and a reference to spiritual distress, but essentially the matter of religion is dropped until the end of the story. We are not privy to any theological anguish or questioning. The experience of losing his entire family and being abandoned to sharks seems not to stir Pi to religious rebellion. Just before he reaches land, he delivers this bland closure: ‘High calls low and low calls high. I tell you, if you were in such dire straits as I was, you too would elevate your thoughts . . . It was natural that, bereft and desperate as I was, in the throes of unremitting suffering, I should turn to God.’ Or turn away from God? It is not Pi’s theological conclusion – his religious fidelity – that puzzles so much as his oddly formulaic, empty method of reaching it. Martel certainly ensures that his tale feels real, but there is a sense in which Pi does not. And so we tend to credit the plausibility of the story rather than believing its reality.

The absence of real religious discussion during the survival story is all the more odd given the novel’s coda, which is explicitly about faith and belief. Two Japanese civil servants are dispatched to Mexico, where Pi has washed up. They interrogate him about his experiences, and make it clear that they don’t believe a word of it. Martel reproduces a transcript of the conversation, and the novel ends with the investigators’ official report, which suggests that they have finally come round to Pi’s story. The reader is bristlingly on Pi’s side, and agrees with him when he objects to the investigators that we all believe in many things that seem implausible – like love and God. ‘Be excessively reasonable,’ Pi warns, ‘and you risk throwing out the universe with the bathwater.’ The scientists, however, insist that Pi tell them the truth. But wouldn’t the truth just be another story? Pi asks. ‘Isn’t just looking upon this world already something of an invention . . . Doesn’t that make life a story? . . . I know what you want. You want a story that won’t surprise you. That will confirm what you already know. That won’t ask you to see higher or further or differently.’

Thus the novel sermonisingly makes its Postmodern pitch. It is indeed true that the way we believe in stories is similar to the way we believe in God (though there is an important difference between the idea that believing in God is like believing in a story and the idea that God is only a story). Fiction has a theological dimension, and magic realism might be said to be merely a branch of Scripture fixated on the acceptance of miracles. But it is the unexceptionable nature of Pi’s theorising, its commonplace and modish ordinariness, that so disappoints. Hundreds of days at sea and this is what Pi is talking about, as if he were at an editorial meeting of Social Text? (Ironically enough, Pi’s speech is also wildly implausible; Martel again seems to have forgotten that his survivor is still only 16.)

Nothing marks Life of Pi as a contemporary Postmodern novel more strongly than its theological impoverishment (for all that it seems to scream theological richness): instead of being interested in the theological basis of Pi’s soul, it is really interested only in the theological basis of storytelling. The former is or could be a day to day, lived reality; the latter is only a piquant but now familiar contemporary abstraction.

Martel seems to want us to think of Defoe – he secretes a mention of Robinson Crusoe in the first part of the book. But the invocation is risky. Defoe’s story is an anguished inquiry into questions of predestination and election, freedom and theodicy. To be shipwrecked, for Defoe, is in some way to be theologically shipwrecked: a strenuous journey of spiritual reconstruction awaits. Life of Pi, by contrast, prefers whisperingly to raise the possibility of such an inquiry – it is a novel about our capacity to believe, the jacket promises – only to bury this notion in the softer and more cosily recessed questions of storytelling and credulity. Martel has something (but only something pretty ordinary) to say about the reader’s credulity; but Defoe would have taken such discussion for granted and would have concentrated instead on Pi’s credulity, a much deeper inquiry. It is fine to tell contemporary readers that their God is or should really be Story; most of them think that anyway. But who is Pi’s God? That is the deeper, and unanswered question. After all, it is by experiencing Pi’s credulity that our own credulity might have been not only seduced but engaged and challenged. I fear that Yann Martel has only seduced ours and then in effect congratulated himself for doing it so vividly.
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In early 2006 Richard Dawkins presented a documentary on Channel 4 entitled "The Root of All Evil?", a "discussion" on what he sees as the negative influence of religion on society as a whole. I was slightly disappointed with the result, as it seemed nothing more than an often repeated attack on extremists, and didn't seem to address the main point of religion itself being the problem. J had expected his latest book "The God Delusion" to be simply a continuation of this, and didn't bother to pick it up for a good year after it had been released. What finally made me give it a read was the amazing number of negative reviews I read criticising the ideas he put forward... anything which offends so many people so much has to be worth a read, in my opinion. (The title comes from one of Dawkins' opening quotes from Robert Pirsig's "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance that "when one person suffers from a delusion it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion it is called religion", and that belief in god qualifies as a delusion, defined as a persistent false belief held in the face of strong contradictory evidence.)

The God Delusion compiles arguments that Dawkins has expounded in the past, but is distinguished by its heightened concern for the position of atheists. Dawkins relates horror stories about their pariah status in the US, such as a reported remark by George Bush Snr that atheists should not be considered citizens. His invective against agnostics and "the Neville Chamberlain school of evolutionists" who seek an accommodation with religion shows that, to those inside the embattled atheist camp, such unbelievers are free-riders evading the costs of unbelief.

In its mission to deny that religion has any redeeming features, The God Delusion also jeers at theologians, depicts the God of Abraham as a monster, suggests that religion is a kind of mental parasite, dismisses it as a source of morality, argues that labelling children by religion is a form of child abuse, and of course denies the existence of God. When there's as much on the agenda as this, and passions are running high, arguments are compressed and rhetoric inflated. The allusion to Chamberlain, implicitly comparing religion to the Nazi regime, is par for the course.

The charge of parasitism is of a different order. Dawkins has always insisted that what is should not be confused with what ought to be. To say that a kind of behaviour is adaptive, in the evolutionary sense, is not to say it is good. If religious behaviour arose because it was adaptive - because those practising it thereby left more offspring than those who did not - that should make no difference to our judgment of its virtue. Killing rivals might also be a way to increase numbers of offspring, but we should still now call it murder.

Nevertheless, Dawkins includes an argument that religion is not adaptive for practitioners; the benefits, he maintains, go to the ideas. The costs of obligation, denial, ritual, punishment and all the other burdens of the supernatural are borne by believers in order to provide conditions that favour the replication of the religion "memes". If this is what has happened, in every known society throughout history and, from what we can make out, deep in prehistory, religious ideas are surely the ultimate parasites. They make the pathogens behind the Spanish flu and Black Death look like Sunday amateurs.

But another, perhaps simpler, explanation for the universality and antiquity of religion is that it has conferred evolutionary benefits on its practitioners that outweigh the costs. Without more discussion, it isn't clear that Dawkins's account should be preferred to the hypothesis that religion may have been adaptive in the same way that making stone tools was.
Dawkins argues that scientists, particularly Einstein, shouldn't be seen as believers just because they drop God's name. He notes how some fudge the issue by nodding towards a generalised awe in the face of the universe, which allows them to assume a religious mantle without believing in anything supernatural.

Turning to agnosticism, he dismisses it as a principle and reaches for Bertrand Russell's teapot: an imaginary celestial object said to orbit invisibly between Earth and Mars. This move is something of a reflex among atheists: they should adopt the teapot as their symbol. Their point and Russell's was that not being able to disprove the existence of such an object does not warrant belief in it; their implicit message is that gods are also trivial human artefacts. God is thus detached from the terrible and exhilarating question of why anything should exist at all.

Instead, Dawkins recasts agnosticism as a humdrum matter of probability captured by a spectrum of opinion-poll responses. But it is possible, along with Dawkins, to be a de facto atheist who lives on the assumption that there is no God, while remaining awed by the possibility that we cannot begin to comprehend how far beyond our comprehension the question may be. Our minds are adapted to solving problems on this planet, not the problems of the universe. Dawkins reflects upon this - but his reflections lead him to speculate that, through science, there may prove to be no limits to human understanding. To infinity, and beyond!

Yes, this book is un-erringly one-sided, and yes, Dawkins wastes a lot of space, and his readers' time, flogging the corpses of sacred cows - despite his pious promise not to attack soft targets, that is precisely what he does, at some length. American evangelicalism, which for some reason he regards as the Christian norm, gets a relentless beating. No real psychological benefit is allowed for religion. Never mind philanthropy, repentance itself is discounted: on planet Dawkins, if murderers become saints, that has nothing to do with religion. Religious rapture, he maintains, has anatomical causes (as if that refuted anything). Dawkins rightly calls to task those Christians who would claim Einstein or Hawking for the theist cause, so how on earth can he himself invoke Dostoevsky in the atheist one?

There are limits that cannot be passed. The premature death of Douglas Adams released Dawkins to write the most affecting words he has published. They are echoed here when the pangs of loss provoke the book's most arresting moment. He breaks off to address Adams directly - "Douglas, I miss you..." - as if the dead man were still alive. The loss of his friend is so keenly felt that he is compelled to speak of it as if he believes in the supernatural, and thus to affirm that such beliefs do bring a unique solace.

It's an isolated moment. Dawkins does not admit sympathy for believers, or acknowledge the extent to which religion may constitute their sense of identity. He disregards the risk that attacking a people's religion may amount to an attack on them as a group. Some comments and quotes in this respect are reckless. The most shocking quotes, though, are all from the Bible. His greatest polemical asset is having that particular God on his side.
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"The Book Thief" - Markus Zusak

July 3rd 2008 09:29
thiefcover


How do you write a fresh story about the Holocaust? Australian novelist Markus Zusak has cracked it with The Book Thief, which sailed to the top of the New York Times bestseller list, where it caught my eye, causing me to seek it out at my nearest Borders, and I was not disappointed.

Like other fiction which has successfully crossed the divide, such as The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, this is essentially a book for the younger reader that adults might also enjoy. While ambitious and knowingly post-modern - it includes typographical symbols, illustrations and handwritten passages - The Book Thief has an innocent sensibility. There are no real hidden depths and it wears its heart on its sleeve, which feels entirely appropriate for a novel about a child.

In 1939, nine-year-old Liesel is being taken to live with foster parents in Molching, a town outside Munich on the road to Dachau. All we know about Liesel's parents is that they are communists, and within pages, Liesel's small brother dies on the train journey and Liesel is cast as a survivor, "an expert at being left behind".
A plucky heroine who sometimes steals and lies, Liesel soon settles into life on the ironically named Himmel (Heaven) Street. In this poor district, the children play football, drill in the Hitler Youth and receive daily drubbings from parents, teachers and each other. The relationships are well drawn, from Liesel's friendship with lemon-haired Rudy who idolises the black athlete Jesse Owens, to that with her foster parents, the Hubermanns. Built like a small wardrobe, harridan Rosa takes in washing for local residents. Her husband, Hans, is a housepainter who comforts Liesel through her nightmares and shows her how to roll cigarettes.

Zusak gives us all you would expect in a novel about wartime Germany: hungry children pinching food, book burnings and bombing attacks, but the real trick of this novel is making Death his narrator. Not a million miles from Terry Pratchett's Grim Reaper in the Discworld series, Death is wry, tender - and overworked. War, he complains, is like having a new boss who expects the impossible, constantly nagging "Get it done, get it done." In 1942, he can hardly keep up. "Forget the scythe, God damn it, I needed a broom or a mop."
But Death has a heart and is haunted by the terrible things humans do. "For me, the sky was the colour of Jews," he says. No point in seeking explanations. "God never says anything. You think you're the only one he never answers?" By having Death commenting on the action and offering pithy asides, this Holocaust story becomes everyone's story. This isn't just about them. It's about us. And in case we don't get it, Death reminds us in the very first paragraph:
"HERE IS A SMALL FACT
You are going to die."

Initially Death notices Liesel when he comes for her brother. And it's at her brother's burial that the girl first steals - a gravedigger's handbook dropped in the snow. Although she cannot read, the book represents Liesel's last connection with the sibling and mother she will never see again. Using this manual the gentle Hans teaches Liesel to read.
Ten books make up Liesel's story and all mark important moments. Liesel saves one volume from the smoking remains at a public book burning and steals others from the personal library of the Mayor's wife - a withdrawn woman still mourning her dead son. Mein Kampf plays an unlikely role in helping a young Jew in his struggle to survive. Max arrives at the Hubermanns' bearing the tome and is hidden in their basement for two years. The last of all the books is the one 14-year-old Liesel is writing about herself on the fateful night of the final air raid.

In Hitler's Germany, Liesel comes to understand the power of words. Being able to read them empowers her, but it empowers others, too. "Without words, the Führer was nothing. There would be no limping prisoners, no need for consolation or wordly tricks to make us feel better. What good were the words?"

The Book Thief is full of visually strong moments: a snowball fight in the basement, the young Jew's fantasy boxing match with Hitler; the literal whitewashing of a "bad" book (Mein Kampf) into a good one (painting over the pages to write a new story for Liesel). But it could be much tighter. While some images are spot on (the dying Max: "The colder he became, the more he melted"), some struggle too hard to be profound and end up meaningless ("a septic truth bleeds towards clarity").
This is a moving work which will make many eyes brim. Zusak shows us how small defiances and unexpectedly courageous acts remind us of our humanity. It isn't only Death who is touched.


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Once, Irvine Welsh novels were the epitome of cool, outrageous literature and did just what they said on the cover. Trainspotting made geeks of a generation, reciting the "choose life" speech like a mantra. Marabou Stork Nightmares profoundly disturbed the sleep patterns of all who read it. Porno was - well, Porno


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"Kill Your Friends" - John Niven

June 30th 2008 08:40
Kill Your Friends – John Niven

Killyourfriendscover

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