Saturday, October 31, 2009

Roberto Bolano

After talking with my good friend about the corruption and danger in Mexico City, I decided to read 2666 again now that I have some insider perspectives/a better understanding of what Bolano's opus describes. So yesterday on the G train, his prose hit me in the face like breathlessly awesome poetry; I found myself astounded at Bolano's accuracy and beauty in describing Liz Norton, one of the 4 Archimboldi critics in part 1 of 2666.

He writes:
"Liz Norton, on the other hand, wasn't what one would ordinarily call a woman of great drive, which is to say that she didn't draw up long- or medium-term plans and throw herself wholeheartedly into their execution. She had none of the attributes of the ambitious. When she suffered, her pain was clearly visible, and when she was happy, the happiness she felt was contagious. She was incapable of setting herself a goal and striving toward it. At least, no goal was appealing or desirable enough for her to pursue it unreservedly. Used in a personal sense, the phrase "achieve an end" seemed to her a small-minded snare. She preferred the word life, and, on rare occasions, happiness. If volition is bound to social imperatives, as William James believed, and it's therefore easier to go to war than it is to quit smoking, one could say that Liz Norton was a woman who found it easier to quit smoking than to go to war."

Call me a philistine, but I totally get it.