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I must agree with another reviewer: this book was a waste of several hours. Rather than being a page-turner, at a few points I was sorely tempted to put the book down and never pick it back up, but the mysterious plot promised such a resolution that I grimly pressed on.
Imagine my disappointment when the promised resolution fizzled out to a nothingness which still somehow managed to strain the few stringy lines of credibility left. All that remained of the story for me, in the book's aftertaste, was a disjointed series of psychological disturbances huddled in the brain of the main character.
Lawrence is written as a highly credible character, a feat worth mentioning since little else in the book seems to be realistic. There are many references to him hiding things from himself. He hides an important phone bill underneath some disks on his bedside table. He somehow has misplaced his relationship with his own mother to the point that he no longer knows her address, but he doesn't remember how this came about. A professional therapist continuously presses him to tell her if he is sexually attracted to her. (If you know anything about the profession, you would know a real professional in the therapy field would very rarely utter anything similar to this.) A rank-smelling man camps out in Lawrence's office at the college, in a hiding place of which Lawrence is well aware, and what action does Lawrence (that reasonable, credible man) take? Does he rip open the hiding place and confront the man? Does he wait behind the door until the man comes in to slip into the hiding place, and then confront him? No! He hangs out in his office, thinking, reading, working in full view of the hiding place, and then, even better -- during his off-hours he wildly roams New York City trying to find clues about the fellow's existence and where he could possibly be. When a woman at the college expresses strong romantic interest in him and he later finds out she is in possession of a letter to her allegedly written by him, a letter which at one point is in the same room with him, does he utter the fact that he has not written her a letter? No! Although he feels no attraction to her and several times refers to her dumpy appearance, he goes about acting as though he did.
I DID like the main character's few ruminations on his wife (now separated), Carol. More would have been nice.
I don't want to spoil the ending (as if I could), but in the end nothing is explained except that some people unexpectedly have it in for Lawrence, and something highly implausible grows out of one of Lawrence's bodily appendages.
A disappointing piece of tight, implausible madness.
The story can be taken in many ways. Is Miller really at the focal point of a malign conspiracy? Or is he slowly going psychotic? The author circles around his characters and situations, peeling away layer after layer, revealing unsuspected depths of misery. Miller is more than a college professor going through a bad patch; he is a strangely oblivious man, a man who misunderstands social cues in a radical and frightening way, a man who seems oblivious to the wreckage he creates in those who try to relate to him. But is he more than this, maybe even a killer? Well, let the reader decide.
Author James Lasdun is a master of surrealistic prose, written in a disarmingly lucid and simple way. You think he is telling a simple story, then you find yourself confused, perplexed and horrified. What is really going on? The writing is beautiful, laden with symbolism and poetic nuance. The book is not for everyone but I found it well done and well worth reading.
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Essentially, the problem with translating Italo Svevo's work (if it is a problem) is that it was already been translated once from Austrian German thoughts (Svevo was born Hector Schmitz in Trieste, an Austro-Hungarian port city) into Italian. When you read Senilità (or its forerunner, Una vita - which is painful to read) you get an idea of how hypercorrect Svevo's writing was. This was not by accident, but rather through his desire to write perfectly in Italian. While this makes it an exceptionally easy read in Italian, if you translated it too closely, it would read more like Hemingway than anything else. In translations, I like the de Zoete translation (Bantam Modern Classics) because it is a little more fluid.
On to the merits of the book, whatever the translation or title, it is a masterpiece of Italian decadentism. The protagonist, Emilio Brentani is the last member of a dying family who must find a way to keep it going. He is getting on in years (which I guess early in the 20th century was mid-30s) and this is his last opportunity to do it. The book traces his battle with Angiolina, who is more element of nature than human, and the story takes him through a vortice vitale (the vortex of his life) into old age.
He carries out this battle against the background of caring for his sick sister Amalia and taking lessons from his libertine friend and sculptor Stefano Balli as they walk along behind the dog catcher. The time frame is Carnevale, the period before la Quaresima (Lent). The basic story is of his farewell to meat (so to speak) before the long fast that concludes his life.
I think this book makes a great introduction to Svevo and the svevian concept of "inept" man, and it is more focused than La coscienza di Zeno. I give it the thumbs-up.