Let’s say farewell to some books this week.
Isn’t that cover of The Commitments (1987) great? It is even more or less accurate. “Jimmy Rabbitte knew his music” (1) – he’s
the blond kid holding the picture of James Brown. He organizes a Dublin bar band that performs twenty-year-old
American soul music. A lot of the
pleasure of the book comes from the representation of the performance of the
music:
I do not expect anyone to read this page (105, source
of the post’s title), but am using it as a visual object. You can see what Doyle is doing, the simplified Joycean tools he is using. I associate Joyce with interiority and complex referential patterns, but in Ulysses there is also plenty of people just goofing around in bars, the Dublin cacophony, and Doyle is in that tradition. Lots of speech, lots of energy, lots of noise.
The particular song represented here is James Brown’s “Night Train” (1961), a key work of 20th century music, which, on this page, in this performance, by means of adding Dublin train stops to the song lyrics somehow converts an amateur bar band cover into an art work full of meaning to the handful of people lucky enough to hear it. The Commitments is about – this is what it is actually about – how popular art creates meaning. “Dublin Soul had been
delivered.”
The 1993 movie, whatever its charms, completely omits “Night Train.” Too complex, or something.
The Third Policeman is Flann O’Brien’s follow-up to At
Swim Two-Birds (1939), ready to go in 1940 but not published until 1967 due
to circumstances and incomprehension.
It was so faultless and delightful that it reminded me forcibly, strange and foolish as it may seem, of something I did not understand and had never even heard of. (Ch. 5)
It is Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland for grown-ups,
where Alice is replaced by a philosophically-inclined Irish murderer and
Wonderland is not a dream but something perhaps related. There is a shared metaphysics, at least, and
a similar Carroll-like love of mathematical paradox. The quotation above is, in context, about a
series of boxes-within-boxes that does not go on to infinity but gets close. This line is about the transfer of atoms from
bicycle to rider and rider to bicycle, making people half-bicycle and bicycles
half-human:
‘Your talk,’ I said, ‘is surely the handiwork of wisdom because not one word of it do I understand.’ (Ch. 6)
It is just atomic theory.
It is so simple.
Perhaps it is because of the Alice template, just
because I understand it better, but I personally find The Third Policeman
quite a bit funnier and easier than the meta-fictional At Swim Two-Birds,
where fictional characters take vengeance on their creator. Parts of Policeman are just comedy
sketches, proto-Python. A separate novel,
about an insane philosopher and his cutthroat commentators, develops in the
increasingly long footnotes. Goofy exclamations
are everywhere: “‘Great holy suffering indiarubber bowls of brown stirabout!’”
(Ch. 6). My kind of humor. Perversely, then, I plan to sell the book I
like more and keep the other, since it is the latter I want to understand better. It is probably just as funny, once I get to
know it.
Farewell to these jolly books.