The Sunday Guardian

Chabon’s playful new book is impossible to place in categories

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By Michael Chabon Publisher: Harper Collins Pages: 448 Price: Rs 1242

Anovel, a memoir, or simply a “pack of lies”? Described as each in turn, Michael Chabon’s new book Moonglow vacillates between multiple guises, playfully teasing the reader at every turn.

In it, a young writer who goes by the name Mike Chabon (a subtle but necessary distinctio­n), is privy to the deathbed confession­s of his grandfathe­r. In the final stages of painful bone cancer, the old man’s tongue is loosened by high doses of painkiller­s. “Explain everything,” he tells his grandson. “Make it mean something. Use a lot of those fancy metaphors of yours. Put the whole thing in proper chronologi­cal order, not this mishmash I’m making you.”

Chabon definitely makes it mean something — a tender love story between two damaged people — what he doesn’t do, however, is set it forth in chronologi­cal order. For, whatever this book is, it’s also a reflection on memory, and memory doesn’t work like that. By default it’s self-selecting; not objective reportage, but instead the creation of a narrative, one in which beginnings, middles and ends chase each other’s tails.

Chabon’s grandfathe­r is an engineer from Philadelph­ia. As a soldier during the Sec- ond World War he witnesses the liberation of MittelbauD­ora, the concentrat­ion camp at Nordhausen where inmates were forced to work on the V-2 rocket. He’s haunted by what he’s seen, and by the figure of Wernher von Braun, the aerospace engineer who invented the missile for Nazi Germany and thereafter the Saturn V rocket for Nasa in the US. Space both compels and repels him — knowing what he does about von Braun, he has to leave the room when his family is gathered round the TV eagerly watching the moonlandin­gs, but later in life he builds scale models of crafts and vehicles for Nasa.

Grappling with her own demons is Mike’s grand- mother whom Mike’s grandfathe­r meets in Baltimore in 1947, a French Jewish refugee with an infant daughter (Mike’s mother) in tow. The horrors of her war experience manifest in the fright- ening figure of a Skinless Horse, and soon a full-blown psychosis sends her over the edge and into a state hospital.

With the action moving episodical­ly between Germany during the war, Florida in the late Eighties (where Mike’s grandfathe­r is living in a retirement complex prior to falling sick), Baltimore in the Forties and Fifties, and a New York prison (Mike’s grandfathe­r does time after attempting to kill his boss), the book’s structure ably mimics the labyrinths of a drug-addled mind.

That said, Chabon never loses control of his material, or his plot; the liberties he takes when it comes to “the truth” — whatever that is — allowing him to create a narrative that unspools in a seemingly organic way. “In preparing this memoir,” he explains in the author’s note that precedes the work, “I have stuck to facts except when facts refused to conform with memory, narrative purpose, or the truth as I prefer to understand it.” Whether fact or fiction, it’s undeniably a masterclas­s in storytelli­ng. — Lucy Scholes. THE INDEPENDEN­T

Chabon never loses control of his material, or his plot; the liberties he takes when it comes to “the truth” — whatever that is — allowing him to create a narrative that unspools in a seemingly organic way.

 ??  ?? Moonglow
Moonglow
 ??  ?? Michael Chabon, the author of Moonglow.
Michael Chabon, the author of Moonglow.

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