I'm staring at two books I bought in late spring, one I finished quickly, the other I hope to (re)open soon —
Julian Barnes' The Only Story and
Wittgenstein: A Very Short Introduction by
A.C. Grayling.
I got them both at
Perfect Books — in Ottawa, where I accompanied my wife on a business trip. While she did the pro thing, I shuffled around town and bumped through establishment doorways like this one.
I knew I was going to polish off the Barnes novel — if
E.L. Doctorow is
the most partially-read author on my shelves, Julian Barnes qualifies as among the most fully-read. I've never had trouble finishing a book by him. The “lesser” stuff, the highbrow stuff — it all grabs and sustains my interest.
The Only Story concerns a young man who falls for a woman old enough to be his mother, in '60s suburban England — lovely review by
Michael Czobit over here. So yes: easily devoured. Now to Grayling and Wittgenstein.
I last wrestled with Ludwig Wittgenstein some 25 years ago. And what I call “wrestling” is nothing any self-respecting academic would deign to recognize — one or two long walks after reading, some notes tentatively scratched into my journal. But then it was time to chase down the next paying gig.
I did a double take when I first saw this fetchingly slender book. I don't know much about Wittgenstein, but I do know he defies summary — “short” or otherwise. Still, if anyone can take a commendable stab at it, it would be A.C. Grayling, another Brit whose writing I've enjoyed over the years. I picked it up and made my way to the cash register.
Another reason for the Grayling/Wittgenstein purchase: I felt compelled to buy
something Philip Kerr related — Perfect Books put a “RIP Philip Kerr” sign beneath their selection of Kerr's
Bernie Gunther mysteries. This was the first I'd heard of Kerr's passing. In '92 Kerr wrote
A Philosophical Investigation,
a futuristic thriller (set in 2013!) that had a serial killer protagonist named Wittgenstein who hunted down other potential serial killers, while conducting interviews with the detective trying to identify and bring him in. I am nowhere near as fond of that book
as I am of
Berlin Noir, but I already owned the published Gunther novels so this tenuous philosophy connection was just further motivation to pass Grayling's book over to the cashier.
“Yes, I'm sorry,” said my book-steward, when I asked about Kerr. “
He died a couple of months ago. There's apparently one more Bernie Gunther novel in the pipeline, due to be published soon.”
I returned home and retrieved the Gunther novels I'd started but hadn't finished — Kerr was closing in on Doctorow, frankly. His stand-alone novels usually left me cool — with
one exception — while the later Gunther novels had lost the fever-dream of the original trilogy and showed occasional signs of writer-weariness.
Still, Kerr had a definite lock on his protagonist's voice, and it remains music to my inner ear. Gunther surveys the scene around him — Weimar Germany, Nazi Germany, the retreat from Stalingrad, the Nazi flight to South and Central America, etc — and asks, “Surely we are above all this?” He also looks within, and concludes, “No. No, none of us is.” A POV that can't help but feel
just a little timely.
Now I am finishing those novels, and wishing Kerr was still around to write more. Alas.
Anyway, the stand-alone that really stuck to my ribs is
The Second Angel,
which readers seem to have limited use for. Hopefully I'll revisit it and do a little excavating here.