Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'The Daydreaming Boy' is a triumph for the truth of imagination

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 'The Daydreaming Boy' is a triumph for the truth of imagination

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Dec 27 2004

    'The Daydreaming Boy' is a triumph for the truth of imagination
    Novel deals with one man's personal journey after the Armenian
    Genocide

    By Arpi Sarafian
    Special to The Daily Star


    LOS ANGELES: It is hard to think of another novel that represents the
    horrors of war and of violence - or, more specifically, the horror of
    the atrocities committed against the Armenian population of Turkey in
    the 1915 Genocide - with such freshness and creativity, than
    Micheline Aharonian Marcom's debut novel, "Three Apples Fell from
    Heaven" (2001).

    Marcom's new book, "The Daydreaming Boy" (2004), is as good but
    deviates from more traditional narrative structures and ordinary
    discourse to, once again, "history the unhistoried" and say the
    "unsaid unsayable things."

    Whereas "Three Apples Fell from Heaven" dealt with the disruption
    caused by the brutalities of the Ottoman government to the lives of
    innocent Armenians in Kharpert, Turkey, "The Daydreaming Boy" shifts
    the setting to Beirut and deals with one man's personal journey.

    It is the story of the Vahe Tcheubjian, a middle-aged survivor of
    Turkey's Armenian massacres who spends the novel contemplating his
    brutal past while losing himself in a series of adulterous trysts
    that bring him slowly to a realization of the moral compromises he
    has made.

    Vahe is an orphan - in Marcom's words, the least historied of the
    victims of war - who, along with other children, was "loaded onto the
    boxcars at Eregli [Turkey] and unloaded in Lebanon by the sea's edge"
    at The Bird's Nest orphanage. A survivor who "would have liked to
    remain unexisted," Vahe is now a grown man living with his wife,
    Juliana, also of Kharpert, in 1960's Beirut in an apartment
    overlooking the Mediterranean.

    Rather than record the details of Vahe's external life, "The
    Daydreaming Boy" takes us to his interior scenery cycling through the
    fantasies, the dreams and the memories of a man attempting to come to
    terms with an impossible past.

    The book moves back and forth between Vahe's fantasy of making love
    to Beatrice, the Palestinian servant girl; his imagining of his dead
    mother's body; weekly visits to the zoological gardens (perhaps to
    free the caged beast inside of him); and memories of Vostanig,
    another orphan (who later commits suicide) "left outside the walls of
    the orphanage ... deposited there in the middle of the night, by whom
    we were never to know."

    Besides giving expression to the truth buried deep in Vahe's
    consciousness - Marcom's primary concern - these repeated images
    allow us to share the confusion of a man from whom a whole world has
    disappeared.

    Marcom writes with mellifluous, poetic tone - for instance, using
    such clever linking devices as the sea, "the vast blue belt" of the
    Mediterranean whose waves Vahe can still hear hitting the gray rocks
    outside the orphanage dormitory windows. Vahe, Marcom writes, "only
    loved the sea and to bathe in it. The sea was always his "solace, his
    haven," and also possibly a final resting place: "I want the sea
    only, in perpetuity, impossibly."


    Vahe half attempts to commit suicide to return to the sea and its
    "quiet eternal warmth." To "unexist" seems to be the only way out of
    the "eternal blackness" of living "in this world devoid of color."

    Vahe is a man haunted by his memories - by the torments he both
    endured and visited upon weaker fellow orphans in an Armenian
    orphanage; of his long-gone family and his pain at his separation
    from them, especially his mother; of his infatuation with his maid,
    which turns his wife against him and angers her even as he opens out
    this narrative as if a confession.

    Vahe survives solely through his fantasies. The fantasy of love makes
    the daily bearing of the memory of "this stink-hole orphanage"
    possible for him, "and of course there is only the bearing of it."

    Nonetheless, Vahe's fantasies come right out of the collective
    experience of a people "distanced from land and language." The
    journey inward thus taps into a clearly recognizable historical
    context, the tragedy that befell a nation still "adrift because the
    past is always unspoken heavy and ever-present."

    If Marcom uses fiction of the imagination to tell her story, it is
    because only fiction can give expression to what is beyond the daily
    conveyance of facts. The book picks up where the testimonies of
    Armenian genocide victims left off.

    What finally makes "The Daydreaming Boy" such a stunning text is
    Marcom's unfaltering commitment to her medium. She bends language to
    coin new words and lulls the reader into a trance. At no point,
    however, do her stylistic choices seem intrusive. "This notlistens
    Vahe," and "I unexisted them," or "they must be intolerated" and "he
    notspeaks" are perfectly adjusted to the disjointedness of the mind
    of "this sad and desperate boy who's become a sad desperate man."

    In Marcom's hands, language becomes a powerful tool to shake us into
    the significance of the crime, "the death of a race and our tongue,"
    still awaiting acknowledgement. The precision of observation of "the
    notroads," "the spectered notflesh," or "this notfeeling" is
    startling.


    "The Daydreaming Boy" is available at all good bookshops
Working...
X