This latest novel by the Chinese writer A Yi is a quick read, not
just because it's a bit over 200 pages, but because it's a crime
novel narrated by the killer himself, so...
I'm
always intrigued by stories like this, because writers can delve into
the psychologies of their main characters and dredge up some
qualities that we might see within ourselves. I'm thinking here, for
instance, about Highsmith's The
Talented Mr. Ripley
and Hughes's In a
Lonely Place.
And this is precisely what Yi does with his unnamed, muderous
teenaged narrator, bringing us into his mind as he plans and then
executes his crime.
Within a couple of hundred pages, Yi takes us from the narrator's planning stage, through the murder, and ultimately to the trial and sentencing. Yet, the entire time I was reading, I felt like I was waiting for something that never came. I wanted something more horrifying, more bizarre. But perhaps that was Yi's point- this unnamed teenager could be any teenager who has become so bored and disenchanted that only murder could make him feel alive. During the trial, after everyone has tried and failed to figure out why the narrator murdered his classmate, he finally explains, "I did it for a reaction."
Much
of the narration is unexceptional, but here and there, the narrator
suddenly waxes poetic, as when he's comparing himself to his retired
neighbor: "[w]e're both the lowest forms of trash, me and him, a
fate from which we can't escape. Every day we long for the planes in
the sky to throw out a rope and pull us up, to take us away somewhere
more fulfilling. Even if where they take us affords us no freedom.
But there are no such things as miracles, so instead we must endure
this aching passage of time." And then there's his bizarre
hallucinatory sequence in solitary confinement after he's captured,
when he imagines himself as a fictional character in someone's novel.
(After the trial ends, though, he declares "I was me, not some
fictional character.").
Most of the other characters in the book are two-dimensional, but we
could attribute that to the narrator's perspective, since he has
become so deadened to the world around him that everyone, even his
family, seems flat and uninteresting. And what about the title, "A
Perfect Crime"? When I see that phrase, I automatically think of
a crime that's been well covered-up. This teenager's murder of his
classmate, though, is the opposite of that. So what does "perfect"
mean here? A crime that is committed without hate or bitterness
toward the victim? But why would that make it "perfect"?
This novel left me puzzled and I'm not really sure what to do with
it. It would do well, I believe, under intense analytical scrutiny,
but on the surface-level, it's befuddling.
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