The Sunday Guardian

Strange and enchanting novel about Lincoln’s son and Tibetan afterlife

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By George Saunders Publisher: Bloombsury Pages: 368 Price: Rs 599 “One must be constantly looking for opportunit­ies to tell one’s story,” explains Hans Vollman, one of the restless spirits who’s responsibl­e for much of the narration of Lincoln in the Bardo, a book that’s marked by an author who’s not only found an inventive way to tell his story, but has managed to weave something truly strange and enchanting in the process. The action recounted therein takes place over the course of a single night, that of 22 February 1862. Two days earlier, elevenyear-old Willie Lincoln, beloved son of the President of the United States Abraham Lincoln, died from typhoid fever, and now he’s been interred in a marble crypt in Georgetown cemetery. As his wife Mary remains at the White House, insensible with sorrow, se- dated by doctors, Lincoln, weighed down by grief, visits his son’s body in its final resting place.

In many ways, never has a plot précis been so exact but at the same time so lacking. For from this kernel of tragic truth, George Saunders concocts a narrative like no other: a magical, mystery tour of the bardo — the “intermedia­te” or transition­al state between one’s death and one’s next birth, according to Tibetan Buddhism — combined with extracts from various fictionali­sed historical accounts: “‘Eyewitness to History: The Lincoln White House’, edited by Stone Hilyard, account of Sophie Lenox, maid”, for example; or “‘ Witness to the Young Republic: A Yankee’s Journal, 1828-1870’, by Benjamin Brown French, edited by D. B. Cole and J. J. McDonough”. Together these build up a collage-like picture of the social, political and personal backdrop to Willie’s death. Of particular note, naturally, is the Civil War, an albatross round the President’s neck, and one that many worry he now won’t have the stamina and wherewitha­l to deal with, mired in mourning for his lost son: “The nation held its breath, hopeful the President could competentl­y resume the wheel of the ship of state, in this, its hour of greatest need.”

Saunders’s command of the more fantastica­l elements — sometimes mournful, sometimes bawdy, always riotously animated — of his story alongside the masterly creation of faux historical record is completely beguiling, a rich cacophony of voices (mostly dead, some alive) narrating the drama of the night. Lin- coln in the Bardo is described by Saunders’s publishers as a novel — and here it’s perhaps worth noting that, despite his acclaim as a writer of highly lauded short-story collection­s like Tenth of December, this is his first foray into this particular form of storytelli­ng. But in both structure and essence it’s nearly unrecognis­able as such, not least because the story is told entirely in dialogue. It’s more akin to a play for voices, such as Dylan Thomas’s Under Milk Wood. I was charmed as I read it, but what I really wanted was to hear it dramatised in all its majestic and spellbindi­ng glory. It’s a rare occasion where I suspect that listening to the audiobook — the full cast of which is apparently an astonishin­g 166 people — will be a far superior experience to reading the text oneself. — Lucy Scholes, THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? Lincoln in the Bardo
Lincoln in the Bardo
 ??  ?? George Saunders, the author of Lincoln in the Bardo.
George Saunders, the author of Lincoln in the Bardo.

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