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In Slow Emergencies, linguistic and structural sophistication is a canvas for the unfolding of timeless conflicts - between divine gifts and mortals, and between favoured mortals and society. Lin, the heroine of this book, does not choose. She is chosen. The novel presents a protagonist who, after much struggle to remain "normal" and to conform to the diktats of society, surrenders to her beckoning destiny. This is the thematic backbone of Slow Emergencies: we do not choose art - it chooses us. Fighting the honour of the gods is lethal. The only way to survive is to heed the calling. However, neither is there any quixotic notion of a blissful surrender into a joyous dance with the muses. Giving birth to Art (hence, all the conception and birth metaphors) is an agonizing process. The chosen ones are haunted, tormented with burning pain which drives them to the point of insanity, insists on claiming the body, reorganizes its cells and opens them up to the seeds of divine inspiration. Yes, Lin does make a choice, but not between career and family. She chooses life over death.
This book analyzes the effects of such a choice without apologizing for it. The society at large does not understand artists. It cannot, for they are different beings - half human, half divine messengers. Thus, once Lin escapes her suffocating normalcy, the spotlight of the book shifts away from her. Hence we are focused on her all-too-human abandoned family in Small Town, USA. We glimpse the great artist in sporadic tortured-blissful flashes. Humanity exists on the periphery of Inspiration. It is awed, dazzled and frightened by the distant, unfamiliar landscapes of Art. Except this artist happens to be a woman. And when the artist is a woman, humanity also condemns: "in these postfeminist times, it's a daring choice to write with tenderness about a woman who abandons her babies for her art." Was the critic reproaching the writer or the protagonist?
Nancy Huston's prose is subtle, elegant and has long been lauded and revered in Europe. Finally, she is being "discovered" here. Tolstoy, once penned the following in his journal, it is very apropos, both to the subject matter and to the writer of Slow Emergencies: "(Art) is a fire sparking up in a human soul. This fire burns, gives warmth and provides light. There are some people who experience the heat, others feel mere warmth, yet a third group only sees the light, and a forth group doesn't sense anything, not even the light. However the majority- the horde - the judges of (artists), don't feel the burning or the warmth, they only see the light. All of them think that the aim of (art) is only to enlighten. People, who think so, become (artists) themselves and walk around with a torch, illuminating lives... Others understand, that the essence is in the warmth, and they artificially warm up that, which is easily warmed ... But a real (artist) cannot force anything. Cannot help anything. Cannot orchestrate anything. He is ablaze, suffering, and he enflames others. And that is the crux of it."
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"Prodigy" is highly recommended! And I promise you that the story's simple beauty will leave you enthralled!!!
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"Dolce Agonia" is a very well done book and an excellent introduction to a new writer. Enjoy!
Those were my feelings after finishing "Dolce Agonia" and writing the above review. The review was based on my initial reaction to the author's writing style and narrative device. Those aspects of the novel I genuinely enjoyed. However, immediately after writing the review, I felt conflicted, uneasy with the review but comfortable with what I'd said. I returned to the novel to reread specific sections that I'd marked with post-it notes. Slowly, the sources of my conflict begin to surface. I had been distracted by style, technique and an all too willing surrender of a critical eye to the all powerful all knowing narrator. Upon second reading and some reflection, I begin to realize that at the seat of my discontent with Huston's text is her use of black characters and symbolism to evoke meaning based on stereotypes about race. The black characters may not be the only one's in the novel that fell victim to the author's race-constrained imagination but I was particularly bothered by her unconscious assault on the African American race. Case in point. The first black character that is introduced in the novel is Charles. The author describes him as "an elegant black man" immediately. A poet, well learned, well known yet distanced from his race. We learn through the narrator that Sean, the evening's host, took an immediate liking to Charles because, "though celebrated from coast to coast . . .", Charles "refused to teach a course in African American poetry". His refusal was not to teach only African American poetry, but "a course". The fact that teaching African American poetry is completely rejected by an African American poet serves to separate Charles immediately from the race to which he belongs. It appears to me that here Huston is unable to imagine a renowned, African American poet, teaching African American poetry. As if the inclusion of this genre of poetry lessens the accomplishments of the would be teacher. Only a few sentences later, we learn perhaps, why Charles' separation from his race is needed: he's married to a white woman. Although I find nothing problematic with the marriage, I find it interesting that the author reveals Myrna's (wife) race not directly through the narrator (e.g. "an elegant black man), but through another black character. Within the span of fifteen lines, the author portrays an angry, bitter, revengeful Myrna. "I'm gonna throw the book at you!" . . ."You murdered me!" . . . "You murdered my love for you!" . . ."Its over!" . . ."You're a dead [expletive] duck!" These are the statements bulleted through the telephone to her husband, a clear measure of Myrna's rage and pain. What, you may ask, could Charles have done to evoke venom of that magnitude? " . . . a single afternoon spent in a hotel room exploring the luscious brown body of Anita Darven. . .". With this single sentence, I knew immediately that Myrna was white. In this case, Huston uses racial coloring and "sinful but delicious sensuality"* to not only justify Mryna's furry but also to inform the reader of Mryna's race. For what other reason would Anita need to be "luscious and brown"? Why is Anita's color important here? Why doesn't the narrator directly inform us of Myrna's race as he does with Charles'? Why is the author withholding Myrna's race, only thirty some pages into the novel, but reveals it directly much later in the book? These are the types of inquiries that deserve contemplation by the reader and self-examination by the author. Charles wrestles with internal racial conflict throughout the novel in much the same way that Huston struggles with conveying her black characters - moments of clarity, periods of confusion. I've thoroughly documented many instances (much worse than this example) in the novel of Huston's race constrained imagination as far as black characters are concerned. Unfortunately the analysis is too long for Amazon.com review requirements; however, I will send the entire critique to whoever request it. I can be contacted at mauricewms@aol.com. While I do take Huston to task on the workings of her literary imagination, I do realize that she operates within a fully racialized world where stereotypes abound. It is challenging to free the imagination in such an environment but I give a nod to Huston for at least including a racial diverse cast of characters and wrestling with portraying those characters realistically. A really ironic aspect of the novel is that Charle's youngest child is named after Toni Morrison because "Myrna, unlike Charles, revered the novelist Toni Morrison." Even though Huston acknowledges Morrison in the text, its obvious she is not informed by her literary critic titled "Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination" *. It is precisely this essay that prompted me to read below the surface of good writing and clever technique.
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The seemingly simple style of this story could make some readers believe that it's just a 'pulp romance' novel -- there are, however, layers of psychological levels to the characters and a complexity in the way setting and storyline are entwined together that make this novel far from being simplistic or a 'pulp romance' novel. Saffie, the female protagonist, is a difficult character to read -- and agreeably unpleasant at times -- and that's why makes the story even more intriguing; we are not dealing with nice and 'normal' cardboard cut-out characters, where everything is beautiful and everyone holds hands at the end of the story.
This book is not a lovely love story, but a character study on how war tears down the fabric of human nature, how it effects everyone for years to come, even for genertations to come -- it a story about confusion, betrayal, jealousy and revenge. Nancy Huston has done a wonderful at showing how difficult it can be to deal with the world around us, and how sometimes human behaviour can be misinterpreted by those who live in a protected world.
'The Mark of the Angel' is a disturbing tale of passion and survival, which makes the reader reflect on the humand condition long after the book has been read. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
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