"A deep insight into a person"
Otto de Kat's novel is a "stream of consciousness" novel.
It doesn't have a plot like the more common novel.
Instead, it is commentary of what the narrator thinks,
revealing some of the narrator's memories and impressions.
There are other characters in the book, the narrator's
father, his mother, brother, several friends, some
identified by names, some by code letters, but the narrator
is by far the main character. The narrator has a lot to
say about his father, whom he loved very much. Otto de Kat
writes in the first person, which makes one think the novel
is autobiographical, but the publisher listed it as
fiction. Perhaps this book is partly autobiographical,
partly fiction. Either way, there is a theme in it, a
point of view the author wants to get across. The
publisher calls this book "a hypnotic novel, told with a
cinematic cross-cutting that suspends the reader in the
cobwebs of memory and longing that haunt the narrator." I
can see that it's going to be hard to find the theme. Otto de Kat studied theology and literature in Europe. He
published poetry and worked as a literary critic before
writing this, his first novel. Otto de Kat's poetic side
shows in some very vivid scenes worded in a way that makes
you almost see what he is describing. The best scene is a
description of the narrator, his father, and brother ice
skating along a frozen river near their home. I can still
see the image: three of them bent over and silent, their
hands behind their backs, single file, taking long rhythmic
strokes so much in unison that the narrator could easily
have placed his hand against his father's hand. The
narrator misses his father terribly. His father died
young at fifty-nine years old. The narrator says that,
through the years, there grew an almost imperceptible
desire to cling to his father, like coral to a reef. The
narrator realized "His desire to become lost in somebody
else was becoming relentless. A form of immaturity." He
felt a similar way with his friends and, sometimes, with
beautiful women he encountered. This novel is not very
cheerful. It shows an unfulfilled side of the narrator, a
gloomy, pessimistic view of life. The narrator touches on religion in a way that makes it
obvious he does not believe. That, coupled with his
feeling of emptiness, prompts one to wonder what is the
driving force in the narrator's mind (or what is the
author's theme). The narrator says he feels like "a
vanishing speck in the terror of infinite space." He would
like to melt into the crowd. "Nothing he believed suited
him." Concerning religion, the narrator said that when he put on
his black gown, at Cambridge, to say the Latin grace, he
thought "It was a sarcastic mockery. A masquerade." The
narrator and his friend, Roy Dawson, when discussing
Protestant earnestness, concluded "that the clank of
billiard balls hitting one another was more edifying than
the psalmody of a professional parson." The narrator
remembers how rankled his father became hearing in a sermon
that the rich young man "who had been so keen to follow
Jesus should have been sent away, sorrowful, told to sell
everything he possessed." The narrator opines:
"Religion tries to lull us to sleep, science tries to keep
us awake and art has gone completely off the rails." The
narrator thought that prayers were empty, like the
incantations of a rainmaker, nothing but words reaching
into the dark: "Father, I am here, where are you?" Strange that someone who studied theology should express so
little understanding about God. This theme is typical of
modern Western thought. I can sympathize with the
narrator's anguish. Many people feel the same way. The
narrator quotes the story of the rich young man in the
wrong sequence. The young man was not sent away and then
told to sell everything he possessed. He was told to sell
what he possessed and then come with Jesus. Would a man
like the narrator, who has a relentless desire to become
lost in someone else, who felt nothing he believed suited
him--would he have been willing to sell everything he
possessed and go with Jesus? Otto de Kat's novel tells the journey of a wounded soul,
longing for immortality, for communion with his departed
father, for something to cling to like coral to a reef.
One thought that occurred to me is that what the narrator
longs for has already been offered, if only he could
recognize it.
Reviewed by Maurice A. Williams
Posted April 14, 2003
|