The Jewish Chronicle

Cosmopolit­ans with roots

David Herman and Alun David enjoy novels in which pigs make a significan­t appearance The Capital

- By Robert Menasse (Trans: Jamie Bulloch)

MacLehose, £15

Reviewed by David Herman

THE CAPITAL could hardly be more topical. Set in Brussels, the capital of the EU, it is about Eurocrats but has a Holocaust twist. It won the German Book Prize in 2017 and has sold an astonishin­g 400,000 copies. One reason for this might be its wide, European range. The novel is cosmopolit­an from start to finish, with characters from Greece and Turkey to Poland and Belgium. But the deeper reason for its success is the way the narrative moves cleverly between a number of central characters, EU civil servants, yes, but also police detectives (one called Maigret but no relation), doctors and Holocaust survivors.

Some officials in the EU Department of Culture have been assigned to promote the image of the EU Commission and devise a “Big Jubilee Project” event. The celebratio­n is meant to mark the birthday of the EU Commission, to show the people of Europe that the Commission is “sexy”, that “people are glad that we exist”, and that “there is something which connects us.”

One bureaucrat, Martin Susman, comes up with the idea of using concentrat­ion-camp survivors in Auschwitz to celebrate the EU, to put them “at the very centre of our jubilee celebratio­ns.” This sounds bizarre, perhaps even offensive. But this isn’t some weird joke Robert Menasse: cleverly weaves together disparate characters in search of true European union

It’s a smart novel with a wide European range

about Juncker or Brexit; Susman has a serious moral purpose — to show that “the Commission represents our common values with regard to human dignity and the law.”

A second part of the plot involves a murder. A male corpse has been found in a Brussels hotel, with a forged passport, identity unknown. Inspector Brunfaut is assigned to the case but is soon told by his superiors to back off — an order from the very top. He then finds his files on the case have disappeare­d from his desk and

from his computer. And then there are the mysterious pigs, let loose around Brussels. How are these stories — pigs, a murder, EU civil servants and Auschwitz survivors — connected?

The storytelli­ng is clever but also dark. Don’t be fooled by the Brussels bureaucrat­s and the mysterious pigs. Many of the characters have a tragic past. Mateusz Oswiecki is a Polish Catholic. His grandfathe­r was tortured and shot by the Nazis. His father (significan­tly born in Kielce) was tortured

to death in 1960s Poland. David de Vriend’s father was killed at Auschwitz. Professor Erhart’s father was not a victim. He shot Jews during the war.

Above all, the novel is European, far removed from our own Brexit chaos. It is about Europe reconnecti­ng with its ideals via a tragic past, full of cemeteries and corpses. It’s a smart read, unlike anything being written in Britain today.

David Herman is a senior JC reviewer

 ?? PHOTO: RAFAELA PROELL ??
PHOTO: RAFAELA PROELL

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom