One of my favourite pastimes is browsing around bookstores and pick up
books randomly. Forest Dark was one of the books that I picked up when I visited Kinokuniya a couple of months ago.
Krauss describes Jules Epstein as someone who could not abide the idea of being taken advantage of.
'Belief, with its passive trust, required putting oneself in other hands, and as such it made one susceptible to the worst sort of insidiousness. Epstein saw it everywhere. ...'
Jules 'had believed in very little that he wouldn't see, and more than that, he'd had something against belief. Not just because of its grand potential for error. '
At 68, in the wake of his parents’
deaths, Jules Epstein, once an ambitious and driven lawyer abruptly divorces
his wife and starts relinquishing his possessions by giving away much of his
art collection and money that he had spent a lifetime accumulating. He attends
a dinner of American Jewish leaders with Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the
Palestinian Authority but he has reached a point where all the empty,
obligatory talk about peace no longer means anything. He is getting tired of it all – tired of the hot air and
lip service. He departs New York for the Tel Aviv Hilton.
‘When his son Jonah, trying not to appear driven
by self-interest, tried to dissuade him from further philanthropy, Epstein told
him he was clearing a space to think. If Jonah had pointed out that his father
had been a rigorous thinker all his life, Epstein might have explained that
this was thought of an entirely different nature : a thinking that didn’t
already know its own point. A thinking without hope of achievement. But Jonah –
who had so many chips on his shoulder that one evening, on a private tour of
the new Greek and Roman galleries at the Met, Epstein had stood before a
second-century bust and seen his firstborn in it – had only answered him with
injured silence. As with everything Epstein did, Jonah took his father’s
deliberate draining of assets as an affront , and yet another reason to feel
aggrieved. ‘
The Substation Gallery, Singapore |
In Nicole's voice,
‘ Opening to the first page of Kafka’s
Parables and Paradoxes, I began to
read :
Many complain that the words of the wise are always merely
parables and of no use in daily life, which is the only life we have. When the
sage says, “ Go over,” he does not mean that we should cross to some actual
place, which we could do anyhow if the labor were worth it ; he means some
fabulous yonder, something unknown to us , something too that he cannot
designate more precisely, and therefore cannot help us here in the very least.
I felt a little upswell
of frustration. When I thought about Kafka at a distance from his books, I
almost always forgot this feeling……….
Here is another snippet in Nicole's voice.
I find the following passage from the review written by
Anna E. Clark
(click) quite aptly describes Forest Dark.
The prose by Nicole Krauss click is clever while the story is infused with humour and insightful narrations. Forest Dark is not an easy read. It is definitely a commendable read.
'Yes , I
decided, my father would have been the most obvious and cogent leader of the
search party, whereas my mother, in her distress, would have been disorganized
and largely useless. Surely my children would not yet have been told anything.
As for my husband, I really had no idea how he would have responded to the news
that I’d disappeared : it was very possible that he might have felt ambivalent,
and perhaps even relieved at the prospect of being able to go through the rest
of his life without me looking skeptically over at him.'
‘ Krauss’s
novel propels its protagonists toward somethings that also manage to be
nothings. Both Nicole and Epstein travel to Israel in an attempt to reconnect
with their familial pasts; both stay in the Tel Aviv Hilton; both are briefly
conscripted by mysterious men on Zionist missions; both get caught up in other
artists’ creative projects. Yet, all these signs of plot flame up only to
sputter out. Novels have trained us to imbue coincidences with significance,
but Forest Dark creates them only to insist on their randomness.’
The prose by Nicole Krauss click is clever while the story is infused with humour and insightful narrations. Forest Dark is not an easy read. It is definitely a commendable read.
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