Have you ever seen such cruelty?

I happened to pick up Isabelle Allende’s Island Beneath the Sea, and now I’m sorry.  Okay, so the cover said it was “[t]he sweeping story of an unforgettable woman–a slave and a concubine determined to claim her own destiny against impossible odds.”  So I was warned.

In my defense, I didn’t expect it to be great literature, and I assumed I’d have to skip some steamy parts (right-o).  But Allende’s earlier novel, The House of the Spirits, was actually a good book — not perfect, but interesting, carefully made, funny, and original.

Island was none of these.  The author apparently felt that what the world needs now is yet another novel about a strong and valiant woman who is cruelly crushed by western culture and masculinity, yet rises from the ashes and manages to learn to support herself and have children and orgasms — but historical!

I’ve never written fiction, but I know an early draft when I see one.  Even if you ignore the loud creaking noise made by the elderly clichés  described above, you will get lost in the disorder of this sloppy work.

Major plot points are exposed so clumsily that you can just hear the author thinking, “Crap, I meant to put that in sixty pages ago!  Well, a deadline’s a deadline — I’ll just cram it in . . . let’s see, here.”

Some characters are elaborately and meticulously introduced, only to evaporate without explanation in the second half of the book; while others leap fully-formed halfway through the plot, leaving the reader to wonder, “Wait, who is this guy?  How did he get to be so important?”  Subplots are hinted at, never to appear again, and satisfyingly huge denouements are promised, but all you get is a fizzle.

There are long, confusing passages of dry historical detail (the book takes place during the Haitian revolution, which should have been interesting) which are followed abruptly by hastily sketched-in descriptions of the cruelty of a slave’s life, the cruelty of a young student’s life, the cruelty of men toward women, etc.  I kept thinking about this scene from Blazing Saddles:

In Island Beneath the Sea, whole chapters go that way.

The prose (it can’t all be the translator’s fault) is also clunky beyond belief.  Wade through this if you can:

He was amazed by his ardor, renewed every night, and even at times at midday, when he arrived unexpectedly, boots covered with mud, and surprised her embroidering among the pillows of her bed, expelled the dogs with one sweep of his hands, and fell upon her with the jubilation of again feeling eighteen.  (271)

I knew a guy who surprised my embroidering once.  It wasn’t pretty.

So, to sum up:  Women damaged by rape and oppression, healed overnight by a tender lover who’s not so grabby?  Check.

Women controlling their fate through choosing when and where to be slutty?  Check.

Swooning approval of loathsome behavior as long as it’s done consensually in the name of lurve?  Check.

Catholic priest who’s a good guy mainly because he says that voodoo is basically the same as Catholicism, so you go right ahead and bite the head off that chicken?  Check.

Writing whole chapters in italics to show that certain characters are deep souls who speak interiorly? Check.

Dreadfully predictable switcheroo with an inexcusable number of various mixed-race babies?  Check, check, and check.

Railing against the senselessness of racism and sexism while shamelessly exploiting both in lieu of character development?  Check.  (For a quick reference guide:  dark skin=good; female=good.  Light skin=bad, male=bad.   Black female is double plus good; white male double plus ungood.)

Throw in some tutti fruity quasi-lyrical nonsense about surrendering to the power of the drums and the dance, and, according to Allende, you’ve got yourself a novel.  For a more insightful and entertaining exploration of race, just go ahead and watch Blazing Saddles.  It’s twoo, it’s twoo!

(Cross-posted at I Have to Sit Down)

Comments

  1. Blazing Saddles is one of my all-time favorite movies! Can you even *imagine* it being made today? I mean, when AMC shows it, they take out all the racial slurs, which is kind of the point of the movie. It’d be like taking Luke and Darth Vader out of Star Wars, or Sam and Frodo out of The Lord of the Rings.

    I might have to watch it tonight, just because you reminded me how utterly awesome a movie it is!

  2. Oh, and I’ve noticed that the breathless and wordy writing is all over in Atlas Shrugged. I’m really hoping the story comes through BIG here, now that I’m half through the book. I find myself either glazing over or skipping sections to get through the sappy talk (about money and power, that is).

  3. Lynne says:

    ‘I knew a guy who surprised my embroidering once. It wasn’t pretty.’

    You had me in stitches!! No pun intended…

    May I suggest:
    The Life of Pi – Yann Martel
    Clara’s War – Clara Kramer
    The Enchanted April – Elizabeth Von Arnim

    Love your blog…

  4. Sal says:

    Love your book report!
    Something I’ve wondered about: after a longish time reading, say, half a century, are there any stories that are new? I know authors, playwrights and screenwriters agree that there are only about -how many?- twelve?, fifteen? stories and most works are just a variation on one, two or a few of those themes.
    It seems to me that more and more, you can see the whole story unspooling before you, once you’re about a third of the way into it. And with fewer and fewer surprises, presentation becomes more and more important. This is why I don’t read very much current fiction, but revisit the classics, which is often where the stories were told first and best.

  5. Jan says:

    Is it wrong to want to read a book just to see the awfulness for oneself? ;)

    Epic Awful. Maybe that should be its own genre.

    Atlas Shrugged is the most boring book I ever picked up and only one of a very small number that I put down unfinished, never to pick up again.

  6. Russ says:

    Well now that she’s declared full-blown war against Western culture and maculinity she’s sure to win the Nobel Prize.

  7. Jeanne says:

    Hilarious review and unfortunately true checklist of what equals good and bad in our politically correct society. Yet if you ever review my first novel like this, I shall hide under the covers until it’s safe to emerge.

  8. Anna Rueda-Barrie says:

    When I read this bit of your review “…so go right ahead and bite the head off that chicken” I laughed out loud – good thing my co-worker walked out of our office. Thanks for the mid-morning laugh break!

  9. Sheryl Bryant says:

    I gave up on Allende a while ago. I just can’t get myself interested anymore in anything that is “epic”, “brimming with narrative wit” or “transporting and remarkably topical”. I like her fellow Spanish author Arturo Perez-Reverte. His characters are bit more . . . earthy? But more realistic. I like too that they are necessarily PC. They smoke and drink and don’t care what others think.

  10. baleen says:

    That’s exactly how I felt skimming through “Going Rogue.”

  11. newton says:

    Gracias por advertirme. Thanks for warning me.

    I have read Allende’s work before. In Spanish, no less. I will, thankfully, spare the twenty-plus dollars I could have spent on it!

    Frankly, I’d rather read Rosario Ferré.

  12. Ellen says:

    I’ll stick to mysteries thank you. Michael Connelly has a new book out next month and S.J. Rozan and Robert Crais have new ones out later in the fall and they are all excellent writers. Most modern literary fiction gives me the willies, so I want to read some literary fiction, I go back to the Victorians – Trollope could really tell a story.

    I read somewhere that the last really NEW story was Edwin Abbott’s Flatland. I recommend it.

    I tried to read The Fountainhead but my eyes glazed over, I haven’t dared to read Atlas Shrugged.

  13. Caroline W says:

    I really enjoyed this review. Thanks for plodding through the pages so that we don’t have to!

  14. SMcG says:

    Ya lost me at “sweeping”, lol! I’m not sweeping saga type of person, I guess.

    I have been recommended Isabelle Allende by several people and now I can pass without feeling guilty at all, so thanks for that!

    I enjoy a romantic story line (although I dislike genre romance novels) and I find nothing ruins a good romantic story line like lots of graphic sex scenes. Sometimes the more subtle relationship lines in mystery novels (like Ellen, I’m a big Crais fan — think the new one is January, though, but it is Joe Pike-centric, yay!) are more romantic in the long run than the trash that passes for romance these days.

  15. J says:

    Check out Kenneth Roberts’ Lydia Bailey. Great read, deals with the Haitian revolt and his other books are great Revolutinary War books with personal stories woven in. Great reads and you learn some good history.

  16. Feeney says:

    Excellent! Funny! Womens’ fiction nowadays is all written by formula – women good, men bad, etc. There is a lot of what used to be called “Chick Lit”, but apparently that phrase was too demeaning to women. I like to call it “Fiction For Emotionally Shallow Women”. But don’t look for that section in your local bookstore.

  17. LarryD says:

    Something I’ve wondered about: after a longish time reading, say, half a century, are there any stories that are new?

    Sal – I have found Tim Powers to be a creative novelist. His stories “Declare” and “The Stress Of Her Regard” to be two of the most impressive and unique novels I’ve read in a long long time. Check them out.

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