Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The Death of Virgil, Hermann Broch

What goes through the mind of a poet on the verge of death? This sprawling masterpiece of streaming transcendence is one of the more breathtaking interpretations of that divine explosion, one in which the wick ignited by a soul gifted with deep perception winds its way through life before being incinerated at the door of death’s bomb. Broch is a master of Zen paradox; throughout the novel he attempts to dissociate his readers from context by turning basic concepts into intangible contradictions. While reading this one gets the sense that there is no purpose in life, that we are just along for the ride, while natural laws and theoretical ideas are only toys we use for exercising the gifts of reason and story. Unfortunately, he doesn’t depart from this formula at all, so the book risks the distinction of being one of the most redundant, repetitious, and inherently boring one to readers who don’t appreciate philosophical conundrums.

The pulse of the novel is a metafictional one; the ancient Roman writer Virgil is faced with the decision of burning The Aeneid before his death. Most of this takes place in the second half. The first half is an overwhelming barrage of apprehension in modernist prose. The first two sections are incredibly consistent, religiously intense, and before beginning the third section I was predicting that this would be in my top 5 reads of all time. Metafiction is somewhat of a bore to me, so the third section had me skipping ahead a few times. If it is too difficult or boring for you, at least give the fourth and final “Homecoming” section a try. I’m having trouble describing it; it’s simply one of the most spiritually gratifying pieces of literature in existence. It's a worthy capstone beyond measure, the heart of an unforgettable novel, and a must read for the enlightened few.


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