Arab Times

Funny, first novel about freshman love at Harvard

Moving memoir of terminal cancer up for Wellcome book prize

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he Idiot’

By Ann Levin

(Penguin Press), by Elif Batuman

“The Idiot,” Elif Batuman’s beautifull­y written first novel, is a wry, funny comingof-age story set at the dawn of email among a group of Harvard brainiacs too nerdy and self-involved to even think about sex, drugs and drinking, the usual pastimes of college students.

The heroine, Selin Karadag, is the goodhearte­d, naive yet preternatu­rally wise daughter of Turkish immigrants. When the story begins, she is shopping for classes and getting to know her overachiev­ing roommates.

Over the course of the novel she will fall helplessly in love with an older boy named Ivan in her Russian language class. She will even travel to his native Hungary to teach English over the summer in the hope of spending time with him.

Their tortured but chaste relationsh­ip develops largely through the new medium of email. And when she isn’t musing about such things as the difference between Noam Chomsky’s view of language and the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, she agonizes over his cryptic emails.

Readers figure out long before Selin that the relationsh­ip is doomed. Yet, as must happen in novels of this genre, she endures and emerges a wiser and more spirituall­y perfect being.

Batuman, a staff writer for The New Yorker, has an extraordin­arily deft touch when it comes to sketching character. There’s Selin’s friend Ralph, for instance. The two met at a summer program for high school students about the Northern European Renaissanc­e.

Ralph is premed but taking art history and thinking about majoring in government. The thought of majoring in government is baffling to Selin, who knows she will be a writer. “It wasn’t clear to me what was going to happen to them after college. Were they going to be our rulers?” she wonders.

That deadpan voice, so suited to Harvard Square, gives way to slapstick humor in the latter part of the novel, when she meets her hosts in the Hungarian countrysid­e. Here Batuman captures the antic quality of Americans abroad interactin­g with nonEnglish speaking locals.

The novel fairly brims with provocativ­e ideas about language, literature and culture. The title itself pays homage to Dostoyevsk­y’s namesake novel, whose main character, like Selin, is so good and noble he might be mistaken for an idiot.

And while the plot proceeds at the stately, sometimes tedious, pace of the 19thcentur­y novels Selin is reading for a literature course, you won’t want to miss it — as long as you’re willing to feel empathy for a bunch of superior beings who in one way or another are destined to be our rulers.

Also: LONDON: A doctor’s posthumous­ly published account of his life with terminal cancer is among six finalists for the medically themed Wellcome Trust Book Prize.

“When Breath Becomes Air” is among six books shortliste­d for the prize, open to fiction or nonfiction works published in that deal with medicine, health or illness. The American neurosurge­on completed the book before his death in 2015 at 37. Finalists announced Tuesday include

genetics study “The Gene,” Ed Young’s look at microbes, “I Contain Multitudes” and account of the fight against AIDS, “How to Survive a Plague.”

Two novels are on the list: “The Tidal Zone” and

“Mend the Living.” The winner of the 30,000 pound ($36,000) prize will be announced April 24. (AP)

Paul Kalanithi’s

Suddhartha Mukherjee’s

Britain

David France’s

Sarah Moss’ Maylis de Kerangal’s

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