Dec. 21st, 2012

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Henning Mankell"Italian Shoes" (Vintage)

Italian Shoes: A Novel by Henning Mankell


This is my first book by the author and it happens to be a non-Wallander related read, and thus isn't a crime fiction novel, it's a poignant, beautiful, sad, uplifting and evocative look at a man, his life, his mistakes and his redemption.


Frederick Welin is sixty-six years old, a former surgeon who has spent the last 12 years of his life, purposely exiled to the island home that his grandparents left him. He has carved out a life with his dog, his cat, and occasional visits from Jansson the postman. Woken just before dawn on a dark December morning, the sound of the "ice singing" evokes memories of his past - his father, his grandparents, his island, his professional and personal mistakes.

In a strange way he's not surprised then, when early in the New Year his past comes back to him in the form of a little old lady on a walker, making painful slow progress across the ice towards him. He had loved Harriet Hörnfeldt intensely, and he'd abandoned her abruptly in 1966. Dying of cancer, she has come looking for him. She wants answers, she wants Frederick to finally make good on a promise he made all those years ago. She wants to see the pool in the middle of the northern forest, where he talked of one joyous day with his father.

A road journey, in a beat up old car, in the harshest weather in decades, follows. Unsure if he can even find the pond, the two embark not just on a quest for the place, but also, in a touchingly clumsy manner, some understanding of how they both got to where they are now jointly and separately in their lives. They argue and bicker, rescue abandoned dogs, leave behind Frederick's own pets in a mildly distracting way, but find the pool. Frederick nearly loses his own life on the ice in the pond, Harriet saves him, they move on in the journey, to somebody, somewhere... but more would be telling too much.

ITALIAN SHOES is a moving, tightly drawn portrait of a couple of people who could seem, on the face of it, emotionally shut down and withdrawn. What Mankell does is draw you into the lives and thoughts of Frederick mostly, and Harriet to a slightly lesser degree as Frederick is forced to consider his past and how he wants his future to be. What Mankell has done is written a central character who it is really easy to dislike, and yet... A profoundly self-centred man, Frederick's life has been an odd combination of bravado and running away. He's a faithless lover, a haphazard animal owner, a brilliant surgeon whose arrogance led him to make a profound mistake - which he ran away from. A snoop, a bad-tempered man, a loner who regards the world with suspicion there's an awful lot to dislike about Frederick, and yet, Frederick is very human and his slow, hesitant steps to redemption, recompense, are profoundly touching in the main because of their simple humanity.

Quiet, intense, low key almost ITALIAN SHOES is a beautiful, glorious tale of confrontation, human frailty and redemption
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Mario Vargas Llosa "The Way to Paradise" (Faber)

The Way to Paradise by Mario Vargas Llosa



A fun book to read. More of a kind of historical fiction with Vargas Llosa alternating his chapters between the life of one Florita (Flora) Tristan and that of her grandson the very well known French impressionist painter Paul Gaugin. Flora after a disastrous marriage to a husband-(who's penchant for violence-kidnapping their children, instances of pedophilia and shooting of Flora in the chest and the French governments support of a husbands rights over that of a wifes) forces her to flee from Paris and back to her wealthy and aristocratic relations in Peru--later on returns to Europe with a vengeance having burned her bridges with those same very conservative minded relations. Flora reconstitutes herself as a social reformer arguing for womens and workers rights and setting out an agenda of a Workers Union traveling from French town after French town more often than not meeting open hostility from local authorities and Catholic church officials. One can't help but admire the plucky character (as rendered by MVL) of this woman who dies at the relatively young age of 41 in 1844 waging her lonely battle against the duplicity, ambition, greed and ignorance of a whole host of would be experts and authorities facing off against them head on and often as related in this novel anyway some of the exchanges are hilarious.

And on to the Gauguin chapters--as Paul having been brought up in Peru becomes a sailor first and then a stockbroker on a meteoric rise to the top only to be sidetracked by his friend Schuffenecker who for a hobby paints and initiates Paul into the burgeioning art world of the impressionists. His marriage falling apart--instead of dread he feels a weight being lifted off of him when the economic market collapses and he loses his job because now he can devote himself to his art. He feels a need to unleash the savage part of himself--to renunciate European civilization which leads him eventually to Tahiti and later on to his death in the Marquesas Islands.

Some time ago I wondered here whether or not MVL is deserving of the Nobel--actually I don't wonder much at all because he is a fantastic writer and stories such as this one are a joy (at least for me) to read and this one I would reccommend very strongly

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