skygiants: a figure in white and a figure in red stand in a courtyard in front of a looming cathedral (cour des miracles)
[personal profile] skygiants
Javier Marias' Your Face Tomorrow: Fever and Spear (first part of a trilogy, or a three-part novel, or however you want to characterize it) is apparently in the running for a multitude of awards, which is why my roommate gave it to me!

So I started reading it, and promptly got bogged down in full-page stream-of-consciousness sentences about three sentences in.

(My thoughts at this point: "man, six months out of school and I have lost the ability to read hardcore literary fiction!")

But I forged on nonetheless, and made it through to the other end, with somewhat mixed feelings. On the one hand, Marias is writing a Book That Deals With Themes and he very much wants you to know it; very little actually happens (in this first section, at least) except a lot of musing on the general untrustworthiness of human beings, the importance of saying nothing that might give you away, the impermanence of human relationships, etc. Also I sort of felt there should be a drinking game for every time that the words "fever and spear" appeared in the text.

On the other hand, as I was reading through, I did occasionally pick up on the flashes of insight, of "yeah, that's right, he nailed it there" that good stream-of-consciousness does. Also, as I got more into the book, I did become continually more intrigued by the creepy-interesting concept - a secret organization set up just to observe people, to infer things from their faces and their movements, to make wild intuitions that turn out to be correct. I can tell that there's some kind of vast conspiracy of not-quite-coincidences being set up here around this organization and the Spanish Civil War, kind of like The Crying of Lot 49, and since it is technically only a third of a book it is probably not fair to judge it on how successfully it has managed to pull all that atmospherically together yet.

So I can see why it's been so praised. And I am glad I read it! (If nothing else, it is reassuring to keep my hand in at super-lit-fic from time to time.) Still, I'm not sure if I'm going to be reading the next two.

Date: 2009-01-21 09:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kiarasayre.livejournal.com
We have to read one of his books in Spanish for my Spanish class. When we started reading it, my professor told us (after she had assigned us seventy-plus pages, mind you) that we couldn't try to make sense of it and just had to go with it.

I'm really glad we're on Garcia Marquez now.

Date: 2009-01-22 01:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elspeth-vimes.livejournal.com
...Has that been translated before? I could swear I read about something very similar with a title like that about 2 years ago in the NY Times book review...

Date: 2009-01-22 02:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elspeth-vimes.livejournal.com
I knew it! I remember how much that review made me want to read it, I've had a little note in the back of my head for all this time.

Also, I just loved that picture.

And this shows how terribly lazy I am, not to have googled it myself. >.<

Date: 2009-01-22 03:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elspeth-vimes.livejournal.com
Haha, I have all these movies and books that I've read reviews of in the past few years and I can go "That's supposed to be good! ...Though I don't know from experience yet."

(I just saved it. And I think I'm adding this properly to my list.)

These are great truths.

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