RSS Feed Level 0: Undefined

 Posts: 931995Timestamp: Wed Dec 03, 08 5:50 PM
|
| Post URL: Vampires in our time-Book Review of The Historian by Elizab
| |
|
Vampires in our time-Book Review of The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
For those who have read Bram Stoker's Dracula, this will be a trip down the same road, but mea
kaustuvghosh1972
Wed, 03 Dec 2008 23:46:38 +0000
For those who have read Bram Stoker's Dracula, this will be a trip down the same road, but meandering through hitherto bylanes and alcoves, often with surprising results. Elizabeth Kostova narrates a masterful yarn in the first person, starting with the time when she discovers a packet full of letters in her father's library. The letter, written by her father's doctoral supervisor and mentor to an unknown friend, is the first of many she comes to know and which begins a narrative reluctantly disclosed by her diplomat father. Her father, Paul, tells her how his mentor, Bartolomeo Rossi, disappears from his university campus and how he teams up with Rossi's daughter, Helen, to find him. Paul is no wide-eyed Jonathan Harker nor is Helen a Victorian Nina. The complexities of their characters and that of the others in this novel, add layers to this take in a way that Stoker did not. Yet Kostova is never far away from the mother classic, even showing it to be a part of Dracula's own private library. There are, in place of Dr Van Helsing, the robust and earnest Dr Turgut Bora and Master James, one from Istanbul and the other from Oxford and the ancient Anton Stoichev who comes closer to the vampire than anyone else. It is a sign of our age that Dracula is no longer slain only by good white anglo saxons but also pursued by Turkish academics, Romanians, Bulgarians and even a half-Scotch Gypsy. In bringing forth the amiable but dogged Professor Gorgescu and his brave pursuit of Dracula, Kostova dismisses the image of gypsies as handymen of the monster, as shown in the original book.
Three key aspects of this story stand out- one, the assertion that vampirism did not begin with Dracula but in a heretical practice in France; two, that Dracula was far from the dark myth we know and was a far more complicated and interesting character and three, that both East and West have common traditions of the same evil. Obviously, we have come a long way from Stoker's sexually repressed Victorian age and the study of traditions, myths and folkores across the world has been enriched considerably over the years. Dracula proves to be on one hand a brave warrior, a man of great learning and on the other hand, a person of immense cruelty and a prodigious talent who turns to the dark side. Kostova shows us as well how the powers of his time did business with him, supped with him and in case of the Hungarians, even gave him a wife. She also shows how people of the church may not be completely above condoning evil as well- as it was monk who helped him carry out the heresy that gave him immortal life.
But above all, Kostova's work is a study of evil-and a parable for our times. It shows how evil can be attractive, even seductive and how supping with the devil can be a literal act. Her writings, against the background of the coming carnage in the Balkans in the 1990s, is a clear warning. It also shows how the West can create evil for it's own purposes which then comes back to haunt it and even threaten to destroy it. The underbelly of civilisation is not often very palatable and it is this murky netherworld for which this novel provides a powerful allegory.
Written with great visual imagination and a keen sense of atmosphere, Kostova manages to put a difficult story together brilliantly. Her writing style brings forth high drama and anticipation without being overtly dramatic. This is a must read.
books « WordPress.com Tag Feed
Feed of posts on WordPress.com tagged "books" |
|