THE LAST SAMURAI - HELEN DEWITT
I’d heard about this book for a while, it’s sort of a darkhorse best-book-of-the-21st-century candidate that you occasionally hear about, but the fact that DeWitt got back in the news for refusing an award that would have required her to go on some podcasts made me feel like I should tap-in and check out this novel. I don’t think it’s on the level of 2666 or the Neopolitan novels, but it’s really fucking good. The plot is pretty simple but the structure and pace of the book is masterful and the book, despite being almost 500 pages, flies by. Basically the novel follows a boy-genius named Ludo who is being raised by his mother Sibylla in London. Ludo doesn’t know who his father is and, as he grows older he becomes more obsessed with finding out the truth. By the second half of the book, he finds out who is father is and, disappointed, he then seeks out other genius men (though, they tend to be geniuses about different things, i.e. one is an engineer, one is a linguistic genius, one is a painter, etc.) as sort of father figures. The book takes its time going through the lives of these men. Pretty simple, but what the book is amazing at is the slow revelation about the exact dynamic between mother and son. At first, the book follows Sibylla, we learn about her background, genius runs in her family, and we see how she mothers Ludo. Basically, she teaches his languages like Japanese and Greek, then lets him read anything he wants and constantly watches The Seven Samurai (which was the original title of the book). Sibylla is a genius, but this genius is actually crippling and she can’t really function in the world, she has no money and her job is typing up copies of boring slop. As the book goes on, DeWitt does a great job of turing what is at first funny, Sibylla comes off as eccentric in the first half, before slowly transition to something really tragic and depressing (Sibylla is suicidal and not being able to function in the world really hurts). The genius men that Ludo encounters are more materially successful, they manage to turn their genius into prestige and/or financial freedom but they are also still beset with problems. You can’t be smart enough to wiggle out of life’s problems. You might have different issues as a genius, but you’re never really free. Likewise, this book does a great job of dealing with the classic issue of writing about the genius, i.e. how to portray a genius if you yourself are not one. Well, DeWitt might be a genius, who knows, she does a really good job of showing what Ludo knows and how he makes connections between things, and, most crucially, what sort of stuff he doesn’t know (like capitals) since he’s not in regular school. Overall, I found the book really fun and interesting to read, every time it would settle into a rhythm DeWitt would do something to break it up and keep things fresh. Every character was really well drawn and the slow dawning of pathos over the course of the novel was remarkably well done. In that sense it was sort of like one of my favorite books of all time, A Confederacy of Dunces, in which a hypersmart main character is shown trying to interact with a world he’s smarter than as the tone of the book shifts from something farcical and silly (tho CoD is much sillier than this book) to something tragic.