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stanley_nolan_blog's reviews
407 reviews
The Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk
4.0
Unless one were to cheat and do quick research into the content’s reality in the fictional novel, The Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk, it would take reading 700 pages to return to the ambiguous conclusion of, maybe? Although that middle ground of uncertainty is troubling, that is the skill to which the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature winner wrote his premier post-laureate bestseller.
In a page out of the frame narratives of the accomplished historical fiction writers, Pamuk’s center of gravity in Innocence lies in binaries: fiction v. reality, east v. west, passion v. pain, etc. The bulk of the novel takes place in Istanbul from 1975 to 1984 following the first-person accounts of Kemal Bey and his love/obsession over Füsun. In short, after taking Füsun’s virginity and starting an affair behind his fiancé’s back, Kemal became obsessed with Füsun, which was turned into torture after Füsun ghosted him following his engagement party. After a year (about 120 pages) of Kemal souring his personal and professional relationships because of his addiction to her memory, they are grimly re-united again, but with Füsun now married to a fat film director. To get back into her life, Kemal, a businessman with a healthy profit, agreed to finance her husband’s “art film” that would star Füsun.
Taking a detour into the Turkish film industry of the late 1970s, the Yeşilçam era was coming to an end due to increasing political violence and competition of television. The era was dominated by blockbuster stars and higher quality films over time, which is the world into which Kemal, Füsun, and her husband embedded themselves: upper class film stars dining at trendy industry spots in the Beyoğlu district. For half a dozen years (a couple hundred pages), Kemal performs a balancing act of keeping Füsun in limbo between domesticity and industry gossip by making their presence known at Füsun’s family house and industry dinners. This took a strain over time as Füsun never became a film star. And like the Yeşilçam era coming to an end at this time, Füsun’s loveless marriage tuckered out. Thereafter, Füsun opened up the way for Kemal’s engagement to her. But upon being engaged and taking a road trip to Paris, the couple get into a car crash killing Füsun and sending Kemal into a months-long coma. After becoming coherent again, and in order to maintain his fragile sanity, Kemal put the rest of life’s work into building a museum of pride over his love with Füsun that includes all the objects that remind Kemal of her.
And this is where, at the final chapter (83, page 702 in the English-language paperback) it takes a meta-turn that sustains the action beyond its traditionally designated ending point with the death of the main love interest. The narrator reveals that he employed the family-friend Orhan Pamuk to tell the story of Füsun and his love for her, which was certainly accomplished in great detail.
In describing the reasons for the creation of the museum, Kemal via Pamuk describes visiting many thousands of museums (mostly in Europe and the U.S.) in his lifetime, coming to the conclusion that these museums of the West were about having pride in something enough to adorn it behind a glass case forever. And so Kemal chooses his obsessive love for Füsun to be the thing to have pride for, which brought him more pain in this life than anything.
On a deeper level, as Pamuk readers learn early on, is his consistent literary theme of East and West, in this case Turkey/Istanbul and France/Europe. In my (westernized) reading before the climax, I found that Kemal’s obsession with and display of Füsun’s hyper-romanticized and timeless objects akin to European museum’s obsessions with historical pan-Asian objects from the Levant to the Mekong. Whether it’s the Ishtar Gate in Berlin or the Code of Hammurabi at the Louvre, European excavations and colonial conquests from the 18th century onwards placed importance on certain objects with highly-charged meaning that were proudly put on display in prominent cities. Although the comparison is not perfect, it becomes more relevant when Pamuk describes his reasons for placing a westernized museum-like pride on certain objects.
Reading through The Museum of Innocence comes with its difficulties because of the length of nearly singular subject matter but overall works in conveying to the reader how uncomfortable Kemal was on a day to day basis with this obsession. If you were also uncomfortable with reading hundreds of pages about the same material, good.
In a page out of the frame narratives of the accomplished historical fiction writers, Pamuk’s center of gravity in Innocence lies in binaries: fiction v. reality, east v. west, passion v. pain, etc. The bulk of the novel takes place in Istanbul from 1975 to 1984 following the first-person accounts of Kemal Bey and his love/obsession over Füsun. In short, after taking Füsun’s virginity and starting an affair behind his fiancé’s back, Kemal became obsessed with Füsun, which was turned into torture after Füsun ghosted him following his engagement party. After a year (about 120 pages) of Kemal souring his personal and professional relationships because of his addiction to her memory, they are grimly re-united again, but with Füsun now married to a fat film director. To get back into her life, Kemal, a businessman with a healthy profit, agreed to finance her husband’s “art film” that would star Füsun.
Taking a detour into the Turkish film industry of the late 1970s, the Yeşilçam era was coming to an end due to increasing political violence and competition of television. The era was dominated by blockbuster stars and higher quality films over time, which is the world into which Kemal, Füsun, and her husband embedded themselves: upper class film stars dining at trendy industry spots in the Beyoğlu district. For half a dozen years (a couple hundred pages), Kemal performs a balancing act of keeping Füsun in limbo between domesticity and industry gossip by making their presence known at Füsun’s family house and industry dinners. This took a strain over time as Füsun never became a film star. And like the Yeşilçam era coming to an end at this time, Füsun’s loveless marriage tuckered out. Thereafter, Füsun opened up the way for Kemal’s engagement to her. But upon being engaged and taking a road trip to Paris, the couple get into a car crash killing Füsun and sending Kemal into a months-long coma. After becoming coherent again, and in order to maintain his fragile sanity, Kemal put the rest of life’s work into building a museum of pride over his love with Füsun that includes all the objects that remind Kemal of her.
And this is where, at the final chapter (83, page 702 in the English-language paperback) it takes a meta-turn that sustains the action beyond its traditionally designated ending point with the death of the main love interest. The narrator reveals that he employed the family-friend Orhan Pamuk to tell the story of Füsun and his love for her, which was certainly accomplished in great detail.
In describing the reasons for the creation of the museum, Kemal via Pamuk describes visiting many thousands of museums (mostly in Europe and the U.S.) in his lifetime, coming to the conclusion that these museums of the West were about having pride in something enough to adorn it behind a glass case forever. And so Kemal chooses his obsessive love for Füsun to be the thing to have pride for, which brought him more pain in this life than anything.
On a deeper level, as Pamuk readers learn early on, is his consistent literary theme of East and West, in this case Turkey/Istanbul and France/Europe. In my (westernized) reading before the climax, I found that Kemal’s obsession with and display of Füsun’s hyper-romanticized and timeless objects akin to European museum’s obsessions with historical pan-Asian objects from the Levant to the Mekong. Whether it’s the Ishtar Gate in Berlin or the Code of Hammurabi at the Louvre, European excavations and colonial conquests from the 18th century onwards placed importance on certain objects with highly-charged meaning that were proudly put on display in prominent cities. Although the comparison is not perfect, it becomes more relevant when Pamuk describes his reasons for placing a westernized museum-like pride on certain objects.
Reading through The Museum of Innocence comes with its difficulties because of the length of nearly singular subject matter but overall works in conveying to the reader how uncomfortable Kemal was on a day to day basis with this obsession. If you were also uncomfortable with reading hundreds of pages about the same material, good.
Dance of the Infidels: A Portrait of Bud Powell by Francis Paudras
3.0
Earl “Bud” Powell was undisputedly one of the greatest jazz pianists of all time, if not the best according to Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, and the author of this book, Francis Paudras.
Monsieur Paudras, French by birth, idolized Bud throughout his formative jazz piano training. After learning of Bud’s European tour in 1959, Paudras had his chance to see Bud and when the night came, he went AWOL from military service to watch Bud. Nobody can doubt his musical dedication. After more shows, Paudras dared approaching Bud after his set, bought him a beer, and continued meeting in this fashion until the two formed a true, formidable friendship. Eventually becoming Bud’s best friend in Paris, Paudras lent him a spiritual helping hand through the many hardships of Bud’s life, providing him with much needed compassion and respect.
Bud’s hardships would be too long to list, but the genesis of many began when Bud was 20 years old. One night in New York after a set with his “spiritual brother” Thelonious Monk, two officers arrived and started harassing Monk. Bud intervened when the situation escalated, was struck on the head by the officer causing a major concussion and taken to the police station without being treated. He suffered from constant migraines, so was sent to a hospital where he received medical care in the form of experimental drugs and electroshock treatment. After two years it resulted in a mentally handicapped man declared incompetent by the state.
Home life afterwards didn’t help. He was stuck in a drug induced prison by an overbearing witch: the drug, Largactyl, which was for schizophrenic patients when Bud actually had something like an epileptic disorder akin to Dostoevsky; produced impotence, numbness, suggestibility, memory loss, submissiveness, and indifference. The witch, too offensive to even name in my opinion, kept Bud in this state for years until Paudras broke the spell and rescued him. For the next six years, Paudras acted as official caretaker of Bud and got him on as clean a path as possible; this is where his narrative draws itself.
Upon reading the adventures of Bud and Paudras, the material clearly becomes more first-person memoir than third-person objective accounting, hagiography more than biography. The Paudras bias is pronounced throughout the book with exaltations of Bud’s genius, attacking any small criticism, good or bad, that was told about Bud during his life, especially in the jazz magazines. Bud’s genius can be heard without being forced. For sake of brevity in reducing redundancy, Paudras could have shaved a considerable amount of text glorifying Bud, clumsily name-dropping, etc., and still making the story coherent and all-encompassing. Perhaps a co-writer would have helped in this regard. More information, research, and analysis would have been appreciated about Bud’s time not with Paudras; we only learn of a handful of stories from Bud’s youth, which could have received much more attention for sake of rounding out Bud’s life story. Lastly, Paudras detailed many superfluous events of his own life unrelated to Bud that was uninteresting.
Notwithstanding all that criticism, Paudras is able to flesh out a Bud Powell that we can easily imagine, hear, play piano, or sit in silence and contemplate his complicated position in life. We feel Bud, feel for his situation, and that is the best a narrative can accomplish.
Monsieur Paudras, French by birth, idolized Bud throughout his formative jazz piano training. After learning of Bud’s European tour in 1959, Paudras had his chance to see Bud and when the night came, he went AWOL from military service to watch Bud. Nobody can doubt his musical dedication. After more shows, Paudras dared approaching Bud after his set, bought him a beer, and continued meeting in this fashion until the two formed a true, formidable friendship. Eventually becoming Bud’s best friend in Paris, Paudras lent him a spiritual helping hand through the many hardships of Bud’s life, providing him with much needed compassion and respect.
Bud’s hardships would be too long to list, but the genesis of many began when Bud was 20 years old. One night in New York after a set with his “spiritual brother” Thelonious Monk, two officers arrived and started harassing Monk. Bud intervened when the situation escalated, was struck on the head by the officer causing a major concussion and taken to the police station without being treated. He suffered from constant migraines, so was sent to a hospital where he received medical care in the form of experimental drugs and electroshock treatment. After two years it resulted in a mentally handicapped man declared incompetent by the state.
Home life afterwards didn’t help. He was stuck in a drug induced prison by an overbearing witch: the drug, Largactyl, which was for schizophrenic patients when Bud actually had something like an epileptic disorder akin to Dostoevsky; produced impotence, numbness, suggestibility, memory loss, submissiveness, and indifference. The witch, too offensive to even name in my opinion, kept Bud in this state for years until Paudras broke the spell and rescued him. For the next six years, Paudras acted as official caretaker of Bud and got him on as clean a path as possible; this is where his narrative draws itself.
Upon reading the adventures of Bud and Paudras, the material clearly becomes more first-person memoir than third-person objective accounting, hagiography more than biography. The Paudras bias is pronounced throughout the book with exaltations of Bud’s genius, attacking any small criticism, good or bad, that was told about Bud during his life, especially in the jazz magazines. Bud’s genius can be heard without being forced. For sake of brevity in reducing redundancy, Paudras could have shaved a considerable amount of text glorifying Bud, clumsily name-dropping, etc., and still making the story coherent and all-encompassing. Perhaps a co-writer would have helped in this regard. More information, research, and analysis would have been appreciated about Bud’s time not with Paudras; we only learn of a handful of stories from Bud’s youth, which could have received much more attention for sake of rounding out Bud’s life story. Lastly, Paudras detailed many superfluous events of his own life unrelated to Bud that was uninteresting.
Notwithstanding all that criticism, Paudras is able to flesh out a Bud Powell that we can easily imagine, hear, play piano, or sit in silence and contemplate his complicated position in life. We feel Bud, feel for his situation, and that is the best a narrative can accomplish.