tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post1336019465792225557..comments2024-01-30T13:39:46.484+00:00Comments on The Bibliophilic Blogger: No, no, no: the McEwan problem that isn'tNicholas Murrayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07189263209323471368noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-1547415761033334872007-09-03T15:43:00.000+01:002007-09-03T15:43:00.000+01:00Just to copy & paste a bit of Pelevin that encapsu...Just to copy & paste a bit of Pelevin that encapsulates a little of what makes him at his best so exciting:<BR/><BR/>Watching the hot sunlight falling on the tablecloth covered with sticky blotches & crumbs, Andrei was struck by the thought of what a genuine tragedy it was for millions of light rays to set out on their journey from the surface of the sun, go hurtling through the infinite void of space & pierce the kilometres thick sky of Earth, only to be extinguished in the revolting remains of yesterday's soup. Maybe these yellow arrows slanting in through the window were conscious, hoped for something better- and realised their hope was groundless, giving them all the necessary ingredients for suffering.Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11708539533684206357noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-85636478611271396992007-09-03T15:23:00.000+01:002007-09-03T15:23:00.000+01:00I read quite recently though an early book of Coet...I read quite recently though an early book of Coetzee's, Youth, & there seemed no release from the bleakness- no room for catharsis. The final lines were, "One of these days the ambulance men will call at Ganapathy's flat & bring him out on a stretcher with a sheet over his face. When they have fetched Ganapathy they might as well come & fetch him(our hero) too."<BR/>And from very early on this seemed the irrevocable direction of the novel. It seemed to me to be an inherently bleak feeling for reality, the one other's of Coetzee's I've read being The MAster of Petersburg, & a much finer work but still essentially bleak.Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11708539533684206357noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-23331003851882526402007-09-03T14:56:00.000+01:002007-09-03T14:56:00.000+01:00Well, who would stand up to comparison with Dostoe...Well, who would stand up to comparison with Dostoevsky! I agree that Coetzee (whom I'll say something about when I've read the new one) is bleak in some respects but so is much of great literature and art. "Man must suffer to be wise," Aeschylus observed and maybe we have to stare into the abyss sometimes in order to appreciate the wonder of things a little better. I don't know. But thanks for the tip about Victor Pelevin. I'll look out for him.Nicholas Murrayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07189263209323471368noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-14381162243466225192007-09-03T14:12:00.000+01:002007-09-03T14:12:00.000+01:00I have to confess my couple of looks at Mc Ewan ha...I have to confess my couple of looks at Mc Ewan has had me give up after roughly on two pages, describing him somewhat negatively as "awful Mills & Boon of the mind shite." <BR/>I confess though to not being Coetzee's biggest admirer finding him quite joyless, very unlike the Dostoevsky whom he admires so much. However, I wouldn't deny the esential substance of his work.<BR/>As a sliver of positivity have you read the Russian writer Victor Pelevin whom could not too misleadingly as a kind of contemporary Aldous Huxley figure in certain respects?Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11708539533684206357noreply@blogger.com