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Little Caesar (2012)

by Tommy Wieringa(Favorite Author)
3.45 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
0802120490 (ISBN13: 9780802120496)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Grove Press, Black Cat
review 1: Ik vond dit een prachtig boek! Tommy Wieringa is een ongelooflijke taalvirtuoos. Misschien lees ik Wieringa een beetje in de omgekeerde volgorde. 'Dit zijn de namen' vond ik al heel erg mooi geschreven maar ik vond het verhaal op zich té gekunsteld, de thema's té hoogdravend... Het is de taal van Wieringa die me echter heel nieuwsgierig maakte naar zijn ander werk.In 'Caesarion' krijg je evengoed zware universele thema's zoals existentiële eenzaamheid, eindigheid, verval van alle waarden en het zoeken naar zin en betekenis. De kracht van dit boek ligt voor mij in de dosering van de thema's, in het ritme ook waarin Wieringa het verhaal vertelt. De beschrijvingen van een eerste verliefdheid en een ontluikende liefde zijn zo heel erg mooi verwoord dat je de zinnen opnieuw ... moreen opnieuw zou willen lezen... het is als proeven van een overheerlijk gerecht. Ik verlies mezelf hier een beetje in superlatieven maar ik kan zeer gelukkig worden als ik eindelijk nog eens een fantastisch boek gelezen heb. De sterfscène van de moeder en de grafrede achteraf hebben mij ook zeer ontroerd - misschien was voor mij de uiteindelijke zoektocht en de ontmoeting met de vader overbodig maar dat is slechts een te verwaarlozen puntje van kritiek. 'Subliem schrijverschap' staat op de omslag - ik kan dit enkel beamen. Heb heel erg genoten van het boek!
review 2: this a compelling novel that promises (and mostly delivers) a lot though it loses some coherence in the last thirda very strong start when narrator Ludwig Unger, now in his early 30's and a hotel piano player who drifts through life, returns to his childhood home in Britain for the funeral of Warren, the man who sold a house from his large estate to his mother and later helped and befriended them - because said house was on the cliffs and threatened always by storms, while Warren's big projects to keep the land from submerging in the sea were thwarted by this and that bureaucracyGetting a gig at the local bar/restaurant run by one his school friends, Ludwig has an affair with a lady realtor visiting the place and tells her the story of his life from the dramatic move from Alexandria when he was little and his sculptor father had left his mother, to the school years in Britain, the revelation that his mother used to be a famous porn star when very young and then later after the house is taken by the sea, his mother's return to the porn trade and Ludwig's following her from Hollywood to many other places and trying to come to terms with her choice of profession, his acceptance of the glamorous lifestyle resulting from it and his need to accompany her...As mentioned the first 2/3 of the novel are very strong, but the last part which goes through quite a few years, locations and Ludwig's affairs (all inevitably with quite older rich women for obvious reasons) and includes Ludwig's quest to understand his father too feels rushed though it has its powerful moments tooOverall literary high grade stuff FBC review more detailed and with a small extract: "At the end of the Alburgh pier, where the Belle Steamers full of London holidaymakers once tied up, two fishermen were leaning over the balustrade. They each had two lines in the water. Below them the leaden gray waves washed around the pilings; the sea was cold as a corpse.From here you could clearly see Warren Feldman’s titanic accomplishment, and how those efforts had already been almost obliterated by the sea. Over a length of about one kilometer he’d thrown up a wall of turf, earth and clay – the wall was four meters high and stood out darkly against the yellow sand of the much higher cliff against which it leaned at Kings Ness. A primitive bulwark against erosion. Since time began the land here had been eaten away by the sea, during storms, when the North Sea threw its clenched fury at the cliffs of eastern England. Far away, at the extreme northern end of Kings Ness, stood the home of John and Emma Ambrose. All the house needed was a wee push to be drawn into the abyss.My mother and I had known the falling feeling that went with living on the edge. The inhabitants of the medieval town of Castrum had known it too, the water had driven them further west all the time. Now the sea flows where the city once lay, Castrum no longer exists, her name sounds like Atlantis. She was lost to the North Sea, which gobbled her up storm after storm, bite by bite. The western edge of the vanished town had snuggled all the way to Kings Ness. You could say that we, the people of Kings Ness, are the final inhabitants of Castrum, the last of the Atlanteans. Our house too, on that night long ago, became a part of the ruinous street plan of Castrum which stretches some three miles eastward out onto the seabed, and is visited only by divers and sea creatures.""Caesarion" is a compelling novel that promises -and mostly delivers - a lot though it loses some coherence in the last third. The book has a very strong start when narrator Ludwig Unger, now in his early 30's and a hotel piano player who drifts through life, returns to his childhood home in Britain for the funeral of Warren, the man who had sold a house from his large estate to his mother and later helped and befriended them because said house was on the cliffs and was continually threatened by storms, while Warren's big projects to keep the land from submerging in the sea were thwarted by this and that bureaucracy.Getting a gig at the local bar/restaurant run by one his school friends, Ludwig has an affair with a realtor visiting the place and tells her the story of his life from the dramatic move from Alexandria when he was little and his sculptor father had recently left his mother, to the school years in Britain, the revelation that his mother used to be a famous porn star in her late teens and then later after the house is taken by the sea, his mother's return to the porn trade and Ludwig's following her from Hollywood to many other places and trying to come to terms with her choice of profession, his acceptance of the glamorous lifestyle resulting from it and his need to accompany her...As mentioned, the first 2/3 or so of the novel is very strong in both character development and storyline as it has quite a few surprises and strong narrative momentum balanced by coherence, but the last part which goes through quite a few years, locations and a bunch of Ludwig's affairs - all inevitably with older rich women for obvious reasons - and includes our hero's quest to understand his father too, feels rushed though it has its powerful moments too. It may also be that the shifting in tone from hopeful and exuberant to tragedy and the resigned acceptance contributes to that feeling, but overall I felt a clear lack of balance between the parts.Overall "Caesarion" is literary high grade stuff that stops a little short from being a masterpiece to remember for a long time like say this recent translation, but still left me interested in reading more from the author. less
Reviews (see all)
susanna_marie28
Beetje teleurstellend na Joe Speedboot: de literaire constructie is iets te opzichtig aangebracht.
devalyn25
Na Joe Speedboat vond ik dit tegenvallen. Het kon me niet erg boeien.
krystalaleya1
Heel goed boek, vooral het deel wat zich in Engeland afspeelt.
Peanut
Just as good as Joe Speedboat. Loved it.
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