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The plot of the book is that Giovanni Drogo, a newly-commissioned officer, sets out from his home for his first place of duty, Fort Bastiani, a place which symbolizes everyone's life and work. Disappointed at first by the loss of youth and innocence and the burden of manhood thrust upon him, Drogo at first wishes to leave. As time goes by, however, he sees the beauty of the fort and comes to enjoy his surroundings. On subsequent visits to his home town and family, he sees how alien his former world has become, spurring him to cherish the fort even more.
Fort Bastiani is a nearly-forgotten defense placed in a mountain range that looks over a vast wasteland, the steppe of the novel's title. The soldiers stationed there grow old waiting for an attack that never comes, representing the feeling that one's work ultimately means nothing. Towards the Drogo, an ailing old man, is taken away from the fort to a grey sea, representing Death. However, Buzzati's ending is a clever surprise that convinces the reader that hope is still possible.
The nature of this book may remind some of the works of Franz Kafka. Like in Kafka, THE TARTAR STEPPE takes place in an undefined time and place and is highly metaphorical. Nonetheless, I found this book much more tolerable than the depressing pessimism of Kafka. Whereas Kafka is obsessed with the idea that life is meaningless and inexplicable, Buzzati at least entertains the notion that glory is indeed possible
I cannot comment on this particular translation, having read the translation into Esperanto by Daniele Mistretta. Nonetheless, I believe that THE TARTAR STEPPE's good qualities come across not through the language of the novel, but rather through the characters and events. I'm pretty sure that this book would survive any translation relatively intact. Furthermore, the edition by Penguin Books offers a helpful introduction.
Although perhaps not a novel that must be read by all, THE TARTAR STEPPE is rather enjoyable and quick read. I'd recommend it if the plot seems interesting.
Sharing this sense of absurdity with Kafka and Camus, Buzatti creates an atmosphere within which not only the main character gets trapped, but also the reader. They both expect something that never actually occurs, and the tension this anticipation generates page after page makes the novel a compelling read.
The story of Giovanni Drogo, a simple man who attempts to make of his destiny something grand without really doing anything but live and wait and let go, is one of the most fascinating and moving stories in the 20th century literature.
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Each chapter is a bon bon that I savoured until it was over. Written by Buzzati, an award winning Italian journalist who was covering his first bike race, the book contains revelations and explanations that those who are unfamiliar with cycling will appreciate. For those who have descended twisting roads, at screaming speeds, from within the peloton, there are great tid bits. The dreams of the grisanti (the domestique) one day raising his arms in victory -- NOT! The crazy old one, leaving six hours before the riders start and finishing after dark, determined to conquer the entire course. Age defying time. The home town rider, "in crisis just two days before" who wins the stage in front of his teachers, his family, and the president of his local cycling club who once presented him with his first bike. Read this book! You'll either jump on your bike in fantasy or save for that next flight to Genoa. I am grateful it has finally been translated into English.
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Like Borges, Mr. Buzzati employs a relative simplicity of language to reveal and conceal the circularity and ineluctability of time and destiny. The longest story in the collection, ''Barnabo of the Mountains'', deals with the fate of a young man who funks his duty as forester and then lives on to the critical moment of reprise, only to discover that the honor he sought to recover has been absorbed in the undifferentiated wholeness of experience.
Another Borgesian device is the assumption that people and events are as well known to the reader as they are to the author. ''The inventor, the famous Aldo Cristofari'' is an invented inventor introduced with an air of universal familiarity.
Preoccupied chiefly with conscience and social decorum, the 14 tales could be described as parables, being short on narrative and long on moral suggestion. A middle-aged man flirts dangerously with the fantasies of childhood. Another story proposes that human imagination has as much to do with reality as any case-hardened fact. A story about a literary doppelg"anger once again demonstrates that one must be careful what one wishes for. And so on...