|
|
|
Your Face Tomorrow 2: Dance And DreamEditions
ReviewWith the publication last year of Your Face Tomorrow 1: Fever And Spear The second volume, Dance And Dream, confirms this. Jacques Deza is a Spaniard living in London. Because of his acute powers of insight into other people, he has been taken on by a mysterious MI6-like agency to evaluate other people. The narrative, if you can call it that, deals briefly with the visitor and then follows Deza to a nightclub with his boss, Bertram Tupra, and a client, where a shocking event occurs. That’s all. Except it isn’t, because what interests Marías is not the events themselves but how they can be predicted, or how any event or action can be predicted from a shrewd understanding of a person. How can you know how someone will behave? In the first volume he explored this through different kinds of secrecy and lies, relating in particular to the Spanish Civil War and the murder of Andreu Nin. The new volume picks up on these themes but extends further to illuminate the ways in which causal chains bind people, or remain latent within them. ‘They carry their probabilities within their veins, and time, temptation and circumstance will lead them at last to their fulfilment.’ ‘And even if there are things of which no one speaks, even if they do not happen, they never stay still.’ Marías’s writing is highly self-referential. The narrator refers on countless occasions to events and remarks from the previous volume, and from other Marías novels. (Deza originates from his first translated novel, All Souls As with Proust and Nabokov, you feel that Marías’s mind goes effortlessly to places where most of us rarely travel. It is thrilling to see what he brings back from there. Or, as Deza’s father says, ‘The really interesting and difficult thing is to continue thinking and to continue looking when you have the feeling that there is no more to think and no more to see, that to continue would be a waste of time. In that wasted time lies the truly important.’ From my review in the Spectator - review by John de Falbe |
|
John Sandoe [Books] Ltd |