Friday, December 29, 2017

Les Misérables

Les Misérables is a huge, powerful, magnificent, and quirky book.  It is rich in vividly portrayed human emotion: love (Marius and Cosette), pluck and humor (Gavroche), callous villainy (Thénardier) and tragedy (Fantine and Éponine). I thought I knew the main story line from the musical: the relentless pursuit of the still-wanted but reformed criminal Jean Valjean by the obsessive and righteous Javert.  But I was surprised to realize that the novel actually concentrates on the transformation and redemption of Jean Valjean.
The book which the reader has before him at this moment is, from one end to the other, in its entirety and details ... a progress from evil to good, from injustice to justice, from falsehood to truth, from night to day, from appetite to conscience, from corruption to life; from bestiality to duty, from hell to heaven, from nothingness to God. The starting point: matter, destination: the soul. The hydra at the beginning, the angel at the end.
 When Valjean spares Javert’s life, it is but one of several critical steps on his road to salvation and peace, but this act of mercy by a “hardened criminal” disrupts and devastates Javert, who is unable to understand or accept it, and ends his life.  Javert’s story is Valjean’s turned upside down:  Valjean's early encounter with a saintly bishop starts his transformation from a bitter, hate-filled man consumed with revenge, into a humble and loving human being, whereas Javert's late-life encounter with the now merciful and generous Valjean, shatters Javert’s rigid belief in The Right, and destroys his sense of himself.  Are we marked by fate or able to control our destiny?  What are we to make of the superhuman integrity and benevolence that Valjean is able to achieve versus the seemingly inescapable damnation that Javert’s life of stringent rectitude dictated for him? 

A quirky part of the book is the insertion, at intervals, of lengthy discourses on subjects with a glancing relationship, or no relationship whatsoever, to the story: a detailed analysis of the Battle of Waterloo, the different kinds of convents in 18th century France, the history and meaning of slang, a virtual treatise on the development of the sewer system in Paris.  Some of these were pretty interesting! (But not all). 

A wonderful, compelling story line, tremendous empathy for the downtrodden, and a fiery commitment to human dignity and liberty.  An unforgettable read.
-->

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Between the World and Me - Ta-Nehisi Coates

I recently finished reading Ta-Nehisi Coates’ “Between the World and Me.” It is a very poetic, powerful, and personal look at what it means to grow up as a Black boy and live as a Black man in America. His story is framed as a letter to his son, warning him about the dangers of living in a society run by White people, whom he terms “Dreamers.” This “Dream” is the society in which we all live, where the fantasy of White supremacy has been reified by violence. Through the Dream, Whites have access to what we commonly call “The American Dream,” while Blacks are excluded from opportunity and security - penned into ghettoes and the prison system, and terrorized and murdered by the police. Coates is full of anger at the unfair system that claims the lives of so many Black men, and the heat of his fury is palpable, but his tale also has another side, which is his pride in and love for the power of Black culture and community. Definitely a heart-wrenching book, but an important one. Would recommend to all!