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Executive Times |
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2005 Book Reviews |
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Slow Man
by J.M. Coetzee |
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Rating: ••• (Recommended) |
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Click on
title or picture to buy from amazon.com |
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Caring In his new novel, Slow Man,
J.M. Coetzee explores many aspects and the many
forms of loving care. Protagonist Paul Rayment, a
sixty year old bachelor photographer, loses his leg in a bicycle accident in
hometown Weeks
pass; he settles
into Marijana’s regimen of care. Each morning she
takes him through his exercises, massages his wasted and wasting muscles;
discreetly she helps him in what he cannot do without a helping hand, what he
may never learn to do unaided. When he is in the mood to listen, she is ready
to talk — about her work,
her experience of Whatever love he might
once have had for his body is long gone. He has no interest in fixing it up,
returning it to some ideal efficiency. The man he used to be is just a
memory, and a memory fading fast. He still has a sense of being a soul with
an undiminished soul-life; as for the rest of him, it is just a sack of blood
and bones that he is forced to carry around. In such a state, it is
tempting to let go of all modesty. But he resists the temptation. He does
what he can to maintain the decencies, and Marijana
backs him. When nakedness cannot be helped, he averts his eyes so that she
will see he does not see her seeing him. What has to be done in private she
does her best to ensure is done in private. In all of this he is
trying to remain a man, albeit a diminished man; and it could not be clearer
that Marijana understands and sympathises.
Where did she acquire this delicacy, he wonders, a delicacy her predecessors
so signally lacked? In ‘Tell me if it hurts,’
she says as she bears down with her thumbs on the obscenely curtailed thigh
muscles. But it never hurts; or if it does, the hurt is so much like pleasure
that he cannot tell the difference. An
intuitive, he thinks. By intuition pure and simple she seems to know how
he feels, how his body will respond. A man and a woman on a
warm afternoon behind locked doors. They might as well be performing a sex
act. But it is nothing like that. It is just nursing, just care. A phrase from catechism
class a half-century ago floats into his mind: There shall be no more man and woman, but . . . But what — what shall we be when we are beyond man
and woman? Impossible for the mortal mind to conceive. One of the mysteries. The words are St Paul’s,
he is sure of that — St
Paul his namesake, his name-saint, explaining what the afterlife will be
like, when all shall love all with a pure love, as God loves, only not as
fiercely, as consumingly. He, alas, is no spirit
being as yet, but a man of some kind, the kind that fails to perform what man
is brought into the world to perform: seek out his other half, cleave to her,
and bless her with his seed — seed
which, in the allegory or perhaps the analogy unfolded by Brother Aloysius,
he forgets which is which, represents God’s word. A man not wholly a man,
then: a half-man, an after—man, like an after—image; the ghost of a man
looking back in regret on time not well used. His grandparents Rayment had six children. His parents had two. He has
none. Six, two, one or none: all around him he sees the miserable sequence
repeated. He used to think it made sense: in an overpopulated world,
childlessness was surely a virtue, like peaceableness,
like forbearance. Now, on the contrary, childlessness looks to him like
madness, a herd madness, even a sin. What greater
good can there be than more life, more souls? How will heaven be filled if
the earth ceases to send its cargoes? When he arrives at the
gate, Marijana would have set him right, had he only
met her in time, Marijana from Catholic Croatia.
From the loins of two, Marijana and her spouse,
there have issued three — three
souls for heaven. A woman built for motherhood. Marijana
would have helped him out of childlessness. Marijana
could mother six, ten, twelve and still have love
left over, mother-love. But too late now: how sad, how sorry! Coetzee’s writing exhibits great skill, and the
fact that he reprises Elizabeth Costello for a key appearance in Slow Man
shows how much he, too, cares. Steve Hopkins,
November 21, 2005 |
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ă 2005 Hopkins and Company, LLC The recommendation rating for
this book appeared in the December 2005
issue of Executive Times URL for this review: http://www.hopkinsandcompany.com/Books/Slow
Man.htm For Reprint Permission,
Contact: Hopkins & Company, LLC • E-mail: books@hopkinsandcompany.com |
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