So after a week of reading about Indonesian un-dead, ghosts
and folk-lore, I thought a visit to Argentina would be in order, a bit of South
American fiction, translated from the Spanish, I delved into the world of César
Aira. The back cover has a quote by Rivka Galchen from Haper’s “Aira’s worlds
are like slim cabinets of wonder, full of unlikely juxtapositions. His unpredictably
is masterful”. Not having delved into any of his fifteen previously translated
works from an oeuvre of over eighty published works, it was time I jumped on
the Aira train. And wasn’t I in for a wild ride…
Dinner is a very
short work, running to just 108 pages, but it is definitely not a flimsy work.
Our story opens with our first person narrator discussing memory and his
earliest childhood memories containing pits:
This recurrence of memories of
pits, so primitive and maybe purely fantastical, had maybe come to symbolize “holes”
in memory, or rather holes in stories, that not only don’t exist in the stories
I tell but that I am always filling in to stories others tell me. I find fault
in everybody else’s narrative art, almost always with good reason. My mother
and my friend were particularly deficient in the respect, perhaps because of
their passion for names, which prevented the stories’ normal development.
Our narrator is bankrupt, no assets and living with his
mother off of her pension. They dine at a friend of his place where miniature toys
are collected and displayed. The night ends with photographs being taken of our
narrator wearing a huge elephant mask, surely this will be relevant later on….
Upon returning home, listening to his mother’s grumbles, our
narrator decides to channel surf and comes across the local television station broadcasting
live, they are riding their motorbikes to the local cemetery where corpses are
returning from the dead:
Anyway. They were on their way to
the Cemetery, because they’d been told that the dead were rising from their
graves of their own accord. This was as improbably as an adolescent fantasy. It
was, however, true. The guard who sounded the alarm first heard some rustling
sounds that kept getting louder and spreading across the graveyard. He came out
of his lodge to take a look and hadn’t even made it across the tiled courtyard
to where the first lane of cypresses ended when, in addition to the worrisome
rustlings, he began to hear the loud banging of stone and metal, which seconds
later spread and combined into a deafening roar that reverberated near and far,
from the first wing of the wall of niches to the rows of graves extending more than
a mile. He thought of an earthquake, something never before seen on the serene
plains of Pringles. But he had to dismiss this idea because the paving under
his feet could not have been stiller. Then he managed to see, by the light of
the moon, what was making the noise. The marble gravestones were moving,
lifting from one side and breaking as they came hurtling down. Inside the crypts,
coffins and iron fittings were cracking open, and the doors themselves were
being shaken from the inside, the padlocks were bursting open, and the windows
were shattering. The covers on the niches were being forced off and crashing
loudly to the ground. Concrete crosses and stucco angels flew through the air,
hurled by the violent opening of the crypts.
Our sleepy village of Pringles in being invaded by zombies,
and they are sucking the endorphins from the brains of the living, they are
topping up on our happiness:
There was something diabolically
efficient in their timing. If what they wanted were endorphins, the little
drops of happiness and hope secreted by the brains of the living, there was no
more propitious time than Saturday night, when the worries of life are set
aside and people temporarily indulge in the needs for socializing, sex, food,
and drink, which they abstain from during the rest of the week. In their
depressing existence in the afterlife, the dead had developed a true addiction
to endorphins. It was a glaring paradox that the Cemetery Road and become the
Endorphin Road.
Besides the bizarre story, the vivid language also portrays
the scene perfectly, you are draw into the Saturday night scene and chaos in
Pringles, the tension is not just because of a horde of endorphin sucking
zombies, it is also the settings that bring the tale to life:
El Manco, on the other hand, was
up there alone, but he wasn’t any less confused. He had to admit that the view
was splendid and defied the imagination; beyond that, everything was ambiguity.
The full moon spread its white light impartially over the darkness of the town,
seeming to make it rise to the surface, like the checkerboard skin of and
antediluvian sperm whale. The plain stretched out and beyond, as did the
phosphorescent ribbon of highway distorted by the curvature of the horizon. The
sector he was watching was much closer, though he was well aware that at night
the illusory plains of contiguity could become stuck together, like the pages
of a book. His attention separated the pages, and there the aberrations of
nocturnal vision coincided with the monstrous fantasies of nightmare.
Our linear narrative is strange, to say the least, and my
early thoughts about connections between miniature toys, gigantic dolls and
elephant masks continued to play on my mind as the ritual of the undead
continues through the whole town. As per usual, I’m not going to give away any
endings or connections, you’ll have to read this yourself to see if the zombies
are defeated.
A work that explores a number of themes, probably more than
I picked up, however the overarching concept of our names dictating our
identity resonates throughout, we are known by our names the only thing that accompanies
us to the grave. There is a very early reference (page 1) to our narrator’s
mother enjoying names…”she was the one who most enjoyed the conversation – and it
was the only thing she enjoyed that evening – because there was a constant
mention of the names of the town’s families, magic words that distilled her
entire interest in life.”
Our work also ends with a very uplifting beautiful soliloquy,
a page that is worth buying the book for that revelation alone.
So I’ve gone from Indonesia undead to Argentinian zombies,
what a journey…a reflection on our times? The era of undead tales? I think my
next book choice will be a little more sedate….I think I might read about a cat…
Review copy courtesy of New Directions.
3 comments:
I have fallen behind on my Aira so have not read this one. It sounds typically delirious. And delicious - it is a treat to read about it. Is the cover a closeup of a slice of mortadella?
Oddly, Aira' unpredictability becomes more predictable the more you rad him, or at least the more I read him.
Thanks for stopping by & commenting Tom. I will be reading more Aira, especially when I want a bizarre break from the tedium. I'm not sure about the cover, you look to be correct. This one isn't released until next month so you're not that far behind.
I've also fallen behind with my Aira reading (I must get his short stories!).
This sounds just as wonderfully mad as ever.
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