February was the cruellest month - Mari Biella
Goodbye and
good riddance, February 2016. You were a hideous month, a month that robbed us
of two great writers: Umberto Eco and Harper Lee.
I’m not
going to attempt a critique of Eco’s and Lee’s respective contributions to
literature – that’s already been done, and done far better than I could do it.
This is just a very small personal tribute to two writers who made a big
difference to me. It’s a small, belated ‘thank you’ to two people I’ll never be
able to thank in person.
Umberto Eco. Image credit: Bogaerts, Rob / Anefo | Wikimedia Commons |
I gobbled
up Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose
in just a few sittings. It was for this mediaeval murder mystery, of course,
that Eco was best known, at least in the English-speaking world. The novel was
an instant, international success, and I like to believe that this was – at
least in part – because Eco, in these dumbed-down times, never underestimated
his readers’ intelligence. He was an unabashed intellectual, a professor of
semiotics at Bologna University; he frequently commented on political and
cultural life in Italy, and his remarks were always pertinent, always
enlightening in some way. A living encyclopaedia, his books drew upon a
dizzying range of cultural, historical and philosophical influences.
St Michael's Abbey in Piedmont, supposedly the inspiration for the monastery in The Name of the Rose. Image credit: Elio Pallard | Wikimedia Commons |
I also
devoured Eco’s second novel, Foucault’s
Pendulum, in which Eco – a rationalist who nevertheless found the occult
and the arcane irresistible – invoked secret societies, cabals and conspiracy
theories – several years before Dan
Brown’s The Da Vinci Code romped up
the bestseller charts. It’s a dense, rich, almost insanely erudite novel;
Anthony Burgess famously suggested that it needed its own index. Some find Foucault’s Pendulum a more-or-less empty
exercise in symbology and cryptology; others, like me, love it, both as a
satirical take on conspiracy theories, and as a dazzling mystery-thriller in
its own right.
For all his
intellectual prowess, Eco delighted in the ephemeral and in pop culture,
gleefully deconstructing cartoons and comic books, believing that no cultural
artefact should be denied exegesis (Italy, unlike the Anglo-Saxon world, does
not generally observe rigid demarcations between high-brow and low-brow
culture). He impishly pointed out that one day Harold Robbins might be
considered a greater novelist than Umberto Eco; but then Eco always downplayed
his own literary achievements. He was a philosopher, he declared; writing
novels was just a hobby, a harmless little frippery, a holiday from genuine
intellectual effort. He once happily suggested that his readers were
‘masochists’. He was being too modest. I love his books, and I’m not noted for
my masochism – quite the opposite, in fact.
While Eco
was consolidating his reputation as a prolific writer (in both the fictional
and academic realms), Harper Lee, on the other side of the Atlantic, seemed to
have resigned herself to having just one published book under her belt.
Admittedly, this is not so much of a problem if that one book is To Kill a Mockingbird. Following the
book’s publication and instant success, Lee quietly kept out of the public eye
and steadfastly refused to release any further books. There were apparently other
manuscripts that she worked on, but was never really happy with; sometimes she
insisted that, having said everything she set out to say, she felt no need to
say it all again. Perhaps this is what happens when a writer’s talent and
vision crystallise and form something as good as Mockingbird. You’ve done it once; why do it again?
Harper Lee. Public domain image | Wikimedia Commons |
Perhaps the
master stroke of To Kill a Mockingbird
was that it was written from a child’s eye view. Children are often mystified
by their elders’ bizarre behaviour, never more so than when they’re presiding
over the unthinking condemnation of a blameless man. ‘Children are children,’
the novel notes, ‘but they can spot an evasion faster than adults.’ They can
spot a great deal else too, much of it unflattering to adult society, which is
perhaps why this novel is a perennial favourite amongst younger readers – a
group of which I was once a member. The combination of adult perspective and
child’s voice must be tricky (I think; I’ve never attempted it myself), but Lee
gets it perfectly, effortlessly right.
Adoration
of Lee’s novel was not universal, of course, and criticisms of Mockingbird ranged from the reasoned and
reasonable (with its ‘white saviour’ theme, perhaps it actually reinforces
racial stereotypes), to the dismissive and plain nasty (such as the persistent
rumour that Truman Capote wrote the book and then, inexplicably, allowed Lee to
attach her name to it). Some people find Lee’s vision saccharine and naive, the
characters one-dimensional. But for many readers, the character of Atticus
Finch – having little faith in victory but quietly doing what he believes to be
right anyway – became a moral compass.
Then in
2015, quite unexpectedly, there came a startling announcement: after so many
years, Lee was planning to publish a sequel to Mockingbird, Go Set a
Watchman.
Go Set a Watchman was, from the off, surrounded by controversy.
Some wondered whether publishers were taking advantage of the by now frail Lee,
and whether she had actually ever wanted the book published. The controversy
heated up considerably when Watchman
hit the shelves. Was it really a sequel, as had been claimed, or just a
discarded early draft of Mockingbird?
And what had happened to Atticus? The wise, moral man we thought we knew had
been transformed into a curmudgeonly racist. Was this more in line with Lee’s
original intention? Had Mockingbird,
in its earlier incarnations, been a darker, more complex and ambiguous, work
than the novel we’re familiar with?
Probably
only Lee knew the definitive answers to these questions. Whatever her
intentions, though, I hope that we’ll continue to regard the original Atticus
Finch as one of our moral Watchmen; now, as much as ever before, we need
characters like him.
I hope,
above all, that Watchman was
published because Lee really wanted it to be published. And I hope that both
Lee and Eco will be remembered with fondness and admiration for generations to
come.
Comments
www.franbrady.com/blog/afallenidol