"F is for family. F is for fortune. F is for fraud. F is for
fate."
And
F,
my friends, is for FREAKIN' FANTASTIC.
I
had never read Daniel Kehlmann before, so I came to F
with no preconceived notions or expectations. But I was richly
rewarded. It is a strange book, with a narrative that always keeps
you slightly off-balance. Each of the sections are told from a
different perspective (Arthur Friedland, his three sons, and a mix
of voices at the end), and by the time you read a few sections, you
realize that you've "witnessed" the same important scene
several times already.
That last point it particularly important for this novel because
Martin, the oldest son, is a champion Rubik's Cube player. Just as he
manipulates the various sides and colors of the cube, so
Kehlmann manipulates our perspectives on a single scene, offering it
to us in a variety of ways as if giving us a kind of omniscience.
F
is the story of one man's actions and the consequences for the next
generations of his family. When Arthur Friedland takes his three
young sons to a hypnotist's show one afternoon, he doesn't expect to
become the main attraction. Nevertheless, the hypnotist calls him up
on stage and leads him to admit that he really wants to be a famous
writer, not the detached father and husband who writes things that
never get published.
When
Arthur drops the boys off at Martin's mother's house (the other two
boys have a different mother), he disappears from their lives,
emerging years later as a successful author. We subsequently learn
what Martin, Eric, and Ivan have done with their lives: the first
became a priest, despite not believing in God; the second became a
financier mired in fraud and potential scandal; while the third grew
up to be an art dealer specializing in the provenance of forged
paintings (well, not really forged-
it's complicated).
In
each section, Arthur puts in a brief appearance, generally acting
like his usual cryptic, detached self.
In F,
we are asked to think about how one generation influences the next,
and how despite the very different paths we take from one another as we age, we can never truly escape the bonds of family.
No comments:
Post a Comment