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A genius who invented truths

- Carole Angier REVIEW BY HUGH MACDONALD

SPEAK, SILENCE: IN SEARCH OF WG SEBALD

Bloomsbury, £30

QUIET, brooding, depressive, WG Sebald was a writer who was both fuelled by passion and created it. He was, almost incidental­ly, a genius. His work is so extraordin­ary that bookshops did not know where to place his books. Should they be in non-fiction, travel or fiction?

The answer, of course, is fiction. Rings of Saturn, Austerlitz and The Emigrant adopt the pose of non-fiction, with photograph­s peppering the text, but Sebald was an innovator rather than a recorder. There is mischief and downright larceny in his work. Sebald was adept at, er, borrowing from other authors and adapting other people’s lives to fit his narrative.

Sebald’s prodigious gift was to take matters from history, biography and a life of studying literature and spin it into something new and powerfully substantia­l. He was entranced by memory, seduced by the mystery of time. He was obsessed by the horror of the Holocaust. He believed in fate. A German, whose father served in the Wehrmacht, Sebald condemned the post-war silence over the “Final Solution” and was tireless in exposing those who took part in it.

Early reviews have concentrat­ed on this element of the story and the theory that Sebald’s drive to create was a result of his antipathy to his father. Angier, though, is more thoughtful and insightful than merely to frank this case. This is an impressive and nuanced biography. Its subject contained multitudes. Angier investigat­es most and with remarkable results.

The major flaw is that Sebald’s wife did not co-operate with the biographer. This is frustratin­g when one of the lines of inquiry is Sebald’s seeming aversion to physical love. He formed close friendship­s with women but Angier never uses the term “lover”. Similarly, his books never describe sex between characters.

All this, of course, would matter little if the subject of repressed homosexual­ity had not been raised. Angier is judicious but it is certain that Sebald was inhabited by a force that chased him towards brilliance. The price was heavy. He suffered from great anxiety and heavy depression­s. His happiness was fleeting. Yet he was loved, even if he found love hard to reciprocat­e.

Most geniuses straddle the line between neurosis and genuine madness and Sebald crossed over to the darkest of sides on at least three occasions. His work, though, is invigorati­ng. I read the first page of the Rings of Saturn and decided immediatel­y to buy everything he ever wrote. He tackled the subject of life and death with an unremittin­g originalit­y. The précis of a Sebald novel sounds grim. The reading of one produces wonder.

Angier explores his journey

Passion fuelled him

from Germany to East Anglia where he became an academic and finally an author of sublime gifts. Her research is exhaustive, her discoverie­s regularly enlighteni­ng and her conclusion­s consistent­ly sound. Yet Sebald resists capture in all his foibles, flaws and greatness. This escape, though, is to the credit of Angier. When she doesn’t know, she says she doesn’t know. She also, as a lover of Sebald’s work, knows that he defied definitive judgment. He could lie in an interview with the same facility with which he invented seemingly authentic histories on the page.

His truth, sincerely held, was in the greatness of art, though he sometimes doubted its resilience in the tides of history. In this, he has been vindicated. He died in 2001 in a car crash. Angier resurrects him. His books remain vibrant, vivid. Sebald is thus a benign ghost. He may well have embraced that fate.

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