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November 28, 2007

Of Dodos, Nightingales, Silver Chairs, and a Golden Compass

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“Pity those—adventurers, adolescents, authors of young adult fiction—who make their way in the borderland between worlds. It is at worst an invisible and at best an inhospitable place. Build your literary house on the borderlands, as English writer Philip Pullman has done, and you may find that your work is recommended by booksellers as a stopgap between installments of Harry Potter, to children who cannot (one hopes) fully appreciate it, and to adults, disdainful or baffled, who “don’t read fantasy.”
Michael Chabon

Books of Fantasy and the imagination are not only timeless, they also hold appeal for all readers whether young or old. Fantasy writers like Garth Nix, Cornelia Funke, and Patricia McKillip, working in a tradition that includes well know authors like Susan Cooper and less familiar writers like George McDonald, have added to the rich vein of literature available to discerning readers of all ages. Philip Pullman had authored numerous books for children and Young Adults before turning the literary world on its head several years ago with the publication of The Golden Compass, book one of the “His Dark Materials” trilogy. There is some question whether this series even qualifies as Children’s literature, with its dark, Miltonian undertones. It is a long and sweeping narrative, running 1300 pages with weighty themes and theological concepts that merit serious discourse and debate. Book 3 of the series, The Amber Spyglass, won both the Guardian Award and the Whitbread Book of the Year Award, the first time a book ostensibly written for children had ever been considered for either. The book has generated some controversy (though nothing like that which followed the publication of Harry Potter), and widespread critical acclaim.

Trying to distinguish between children’s books and adult books is a little like trying to determine when childhood ends and adulthood begins. I doubt if anyone would call Alice in Wonderland a serious book. It was written for children—or at least for a child (Charles L. Dodgson’s niece), but it is hard to think of it as strictly a child’s book. It contains word games and logic puzzles that the most astute reader will appreciate. A plucky little heroine and the most wonderful ensemble of characters this side of the land of Oz make this a book that can be read again and again. What began as an innocent children’s book, The Hobbit; or, There and Back Again, grew into a mythically-charged opus, “The Lord of the Rings,” under the pen of another Oxford Professor, J.R.R. Tolkien. It wasn’t until midway through the first book, The Fellowship of the Ring, that it occurred to Tolkien that children were no longer his primary audience. Susan Cooper was quoted in an interview as saying that she did not write for any particular age group; it is the publisher who decides how they will be marketed.

Even if Pullman is not writing for children, it is clear that he is aware of a responsibility to offer children a clear and in his word “republican” view of the place that Fantasy can have in their lives. He even takes jabs at Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, contrasting the artificiality of the Shire, for example, with a great “republican” fairy tale like “Jack and the Beanstalk.” “The difference,” he writes, “is the connection, or lack of it, with the everyday.” In this he comes across like Chairman Mao extolling the virtues of proletarian labors over the affected tastes of the bourgeois elite. It seems the real problem with writers like Lewis and Tolkien is that their work is escapist (in fact, Fantasy is often branded with this label). C.S. Lewis escapes into his Christian tautology and Tolkien into an “idealized modest English landscape full of comfortable hobbits who know their social place,” which he compares to “an Old English Theme Pub.”

While I am a great admirer of Philip Pullman and consider “His Dark Materials” one of the most exciting literary achievements of recent times, I am troubled by his cosmology. While the majority of religions view life on earth as a preliminary to some sort of afterlife, what Pullman seems to be saying is that what’s being served here on Earth is the main course, and it is our obligation to savor it more fully. “Joy,” he says, equals heaven. His republican view of heaven, where human beings are responsible for their own destinies, is no better than traditional religions when it comes to explaining why everyone isn’t getting an equal portion at the feast. At least in the latter view there is a promise that things will even out in the end: “But many who are first will be last, and the last first.” In theological terms, we rely on our Maker, however he/she is called, to give us the strength to survive. In the Republic of Heaven, we must rely on ourselves. And each other. That’s not a bad ideal but given our track record over the past couple of millennia, we don’t seem to be equal to the task. Still it’s an interesting concept and brilliantly presented. One thing I do agree with Pullman about: he suggests that to look for evidence of what the republic of heaven might look like, we should begin by looking at stories. “And one of the few places we can be certain of finding stories these days is in books that are read by children.”

“All mystery resides there,” picking up where we left off with the excerpt from Michael Chabon’s review, “in the margins between life and death, childhood and adulthood, Newtonian and quantum, serious and genre literature. And it is from the confrontation with mystery that the truest stories have always drawn their power.”

Sources quoted:

Review “His Dark Materials” trilogy, by Michael Chabon. TheNew York Review of Books, v.LI, 5 (March 25, 2004)

"Paradise Reshaped,” by John Rowe Townsend. Hornbook, v.LXXVIII, 4 (July/August, 

November 06, 2007

The Spanish Bow

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The Spanish Bow

Andromeda Romano-Lux

 

Thou were not born in vain!
Hast not lived in vain.
Suffered in vain.
What has come into being must perish.
What has perished must rise again.
Cease from trembling.
Prepare thyself to live.

Gustave Mahler, Second Symphony

 

            Who among us has not made bad choices, or at least things we might have done differently?

            We live with regrets—coping in our way, or not coping very well at all. Was it Alexander Pope who wrote how each of us has an allotted span of years but how many of us are truly alive during that span?

            The attacks on September 11, 2001 served as an inspiration for any number of artistic works but  The Spanish Bow must surely be one of the most unusual. Andromeda Romano-Lux was a journalist working on a biography of Pablo Casals when the tragic events of 9/11 caused her to question her modus vivendi. Like many Americans, she was jerked awake. “If I could do only one more thing with my life,” she pondered, “if I could write about one more thing—what would it be?”

            As she tried to piece together an answer to these questions she found that she had the necessary materials already at hand: the life of Casal and another Spanish musician, pianist Isaac Albeniz. Their fictional counterparts in The Spanish Bow—cellist Feliu Delargo and pianist Justo Al-Cerraz—bear only superficial resemblances to the real life figures who inspired them. Casals, like Feliu, was born in Catalan and had pro-Republica views. He also possessed a gem-studded bow. Delargo’s bow features a sapphire presented to the cellist while he served at the cort of King Alonso and Queen Ena in the days before the monarchy was toppled in a military coup. The Queen herself, granddaughter of Queen Victoria, presented Feliu with this keepsake for his dutiful service to her and her husband, and along with the bow it became the one possession he retained throughout the turbulent years to come. For the years of political anarchy in Spain paved the way for the rise of Franco. As elsewhere in Europe, Fascism in Spain threatened to destroy everything that stood in its way, especially artists and the intelligentsia.

            Music is an all-encompassing passion for Feliu Delargo. Ever since the bow arrived at the Delargo household among the effects of his dead father when he was a young boy, Feliu knew that he was destined to play the cello. It brought him advancement, from his obscure origins in a dusty, seaside town, to an academy in Barcelona, and finally to the Cort in Madrid, where he became one of the Queen’s favorites. Whatever his surroundings he played with passion, losing himself to time an space. His collaboration with Al-Cerraz, who had a prodigious talent not just for his chosen instrument but for survival, enabled the duo to get by in the anarchic years following the abdication of the throne. Until, with the rise of Franco, they were forced to flee.

In Paris their musical skills brought them worldwide renown. In fact so great was Delargos’ fame that Hitler and Goerring were devoted fans. In the novel’s denoument, Delargo agrees to play at an historic meeting between Franco and Hitler, though it is against everything he stands for, in order to facilitate the escape of Al-Cerraz and the woman they both love, an Italian violinist who is also Jewish, named Aviva. She dies attempting to escape and Al-Cerraz vanishes. Feliu spends the remainder of his life in obscurity living in exile in Cuba, until Aviva’s son, who was taken from her at birth, tracks him down and gets him to relate his story. It happens that Feliu has been holding another secret, an unpublished musical manuscript by his old partner, Justo Al-Caerraz.

Throughout the novel the author poses the question, also born from the events of 9/11, but applicable to any time when the earth appears to stay poised on its axis and the forces of darkness and light compete for dominance: in difficult times, is art an indulgence or a necessity? Delargo and Al-Cerraz offer point-counterpoint to the question, but it is the author who offers the final word. When the Museo de Musica in Madrid opened after the monarchy is restored in Spain in the mid 70’s, Delargo’s bow is received into the collection. At the same time, Al-Cerraz’s triumphant Spanish Piano piece is played for the first time in public. This climax, along with the recurring motife from Mahler’s Second Symphony, “Prepare thyself to live,” are clear affirmations of the importance of art in the most troubled times.