A full house met at the Coeur de Lion in Bath, 7th
September 2017.
The group came to this book having surprisingly not read any
Julian Barnes as one of our choices, though some did indulge in an off-piste assignment
when he came to the Bath Lit Festival a few years ago. We were all to a greater
or lesser degree familiar with his work – some more with his earlier
books such as Metroland, others with more recent novels.
The response was broadly pretty positive. It’s a book about
the Russian composer Shostakovich – a kind of ‘novelistic biography’ as one of us had it. Well-structured,
well written and therefore pretty easy to engage with. One or two did find the
early sections harder to connect with, and only felt some kind of momentum was
achieved later in the book as the narrative gained some kind of life of its
own.
With one exception none of us was on more than nodding terms
with Shostakovich’s work. Some took the opportunity to investigate and the
comment was made that it was interesting that he ranges from pomp and bombast
(his 5th Symphony) to much more avant gard stylings in his maligned ‘Lady
Macbeth’ opera, and that the latter, while initially wildly popular, became
reviled under the influence of the Party (‘Power’), before being restored to
grace in his later years.
We found interesting insights into the life of a
self-confessedly flawed character: Eager to enjoy the pleasures of the flesh
with his early liaisons we see a man increasingly beset by self doubt, torn
between achieving the best expression for his artistic output and, basically,
toeing the line. His questioning of the nature of courage, of whether man is a
coward if he does what he needs to do to save his life, of the concept of
engineering of the soul – these uncertainties were pitched against an apparent
sureness that he was best off in Russia, that his former friend and ally
Stravinsky has more or less’ sold out’ by setting in America and was to be
afforded no sympathy, nor extended the hand of friendship later in life.
Bridges were burned.
A comparison was drawn with Dostoyevsky. Lest we should give
the impression that we all spend our days with our noses in one gigantic
Russian novel or other, it should be pointed out that no-one else in the group
was in a position to support or indeed contradict this, but it’s recorded for what
it is worth – was Barnes deliberately drawing a comparison with Crime and
Punishment, which similarly features a protagonist who, over the course of the
book, becomes increasingly introspective?
Several of us were most engaged by the overview of life in
Soviet Russia that the book afforded. It’s a compelling ‘biography’ – much more
worthwhile than the usual rather tedious shopping lists of all kinds of
information that no-one really need to know. Here, Barnes weaves the facts into
a narrative that, without ever lapsing into ‘Then he did this, then he did
that’, succeeds in painting a vivid and fascinating picture of someone that we
really didn’t know too much about.
The book wasn’t without its flaws for some but no-one really
took against it.
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