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#10 - JRL 7064
Los Angeles Times
February 15, 2003
book review
A novel steeped in all things Russian
By Kai Maristed, Special to The Times
The Commissariat of Enlightenment, A Novel.
Ken Kalfus, The Ecco Press: 296 pp., $24.95
Heralded as that much-feared and awe-inspiring creature, the Novel of Ideas,
Ken Kalfus' first full-length work of fiction lives up to its billing -- and
then goes on to break the mold. Kalfus, whose two previous collections of
irreverent, inventive short stories have already roused significant attention,
would appear to be an autodidact in the finest way; that is to say, out of
necessity and passion. Like his previous stories, the novel "The
Commissariat of Enlightenment" reflects a fascination with and knowledge of
nearly all things Russian and particularly Soviet Russian: from language, art,
religion and literature to history, politics and that doughty conundrum, the
"Russian soul." Few novelists would be well-advised to set their work
in a "foreign" country, with "foreign" dramatis personae.
But this writer's empathetic vibration with Russia runs so deep and true that
the reader never questions his authority to speak.
"The train jolted forward so abruptly that the three passengers in the
first-class coach sensed that they had been propelled much farther than a few
meters from the Tula station. One of the men (Gribshin) felt as if he had been
thrust from the era in which he lived. The second man (Vorobev) perceived that
he had been jerked out of a manner of thought that had become complacent after
years of discovery; the third man (Khaitover), who had been resting with his
eyes closed, now sprung them wide, as if he had been suddenly brought to life.
The three men had not yet made each other's acquaintance."
Thus the opening paragraph of "The Commissariat of Enlightenment,"
worth quoting in its entirety because it holds from the very start some of the
book's more striking aspects. There is the informed use of language: the
passengers "sensed" or "perceived" real changes, whereas the
terms "felt" and "as if" apply to more subjective
impressions. There is the economy of telling: here, in these first lines, under
the title "1910," we meet the main character, Kolya Gribshin (a young
cinema-adept hired by the famous newsreel producers Pathé Frères) as well as
two others who will continue to cross his life's path in significant ways. We
find clues to location, social class, and not least, to the fact that science
and technology will play an important part in what is to come. Finally, there is
the specific rhythm: a measured cadence that keeps stride with the historical
setting, the era and its literature. Not often encountered in contemporary,
"literary" fiction, this is the cadence of a Dickens or a Tolstoy,
evoking what many would call the classical high period of the novel. As such, it
rouses certain almost Pavlovian expectations: of a novel filled with incident
and reversals, not to mention colorful individuals, their backgrounds
painstakingly delineated, with whom we will come to identify, suffer with and,
hopefully, share some delight.
Irony and the rustle of driest humor abound in this novel. Indeed, our three
travelers are en route, each for his separate purpose, to the tiny, drab village
of Astapovo, where none other than Count Leo Tolstoy himself, ever on the run
from his harridan spouse, lies dying. But is this the plot-machine of
traditional fiction? "The Commissariat" has something else for us in
mind.
The wellspring of Kalfus' intent is more than hinted at when the
image-intoxicated student Kolya first ruminates on the new phenomenon of cinema,
come to re-energize the old burlesque theaters of Moscow: "All over the
world, men, women and children stared at cinema screens for hours at a time,
alert and motionless, backs straight and arms at their sides -- a posture still
relatively unfamiliar. The cinema had seized the human imagination. Now we saw
ourselves as if filmed, flat and inaudible, inhabitants of flickering,
rectangular space, and novelists began composing their literary scenes as if the
protagonists were viewed through camera lenses, engaging in brief episodes
separated by blackouts."
This is not to imply that Kalfus' novel lacks dialogue -- on the contrary,
Gribshin's exchanges with historical and imaginary figures, from his hero Stalin
to the orphan girl he first falls for and then violates, crystallize into highly
dramatic episodes. All the now usual movie techniques are brought into play --
backlighting and panning, fades and distance shots -- though in this text with
deft self-awareness. (Intriguingly, Kalfus has rendered all his scenes in sharp
tones of gray.) But it is the "blackouts" that exert a sort of tyranny
on the novel. Whole decades of Gribshin's life are swallowed by oblivion, but a
greater loss to fiction than time is the loss of feeling: of desire, longing,
any motivation other than a rather bloodless urge to see his concept of
movie-making enter and alter the stream of history. Gribshin's manifesto-like
ideas do alter with age and the appalling experiences of the Revolution, and
glimpses of inner conflict appear here and there. But his heart, like that of
every other person in the book, remains essentially mute.
What stuff, then, can substitute for characters' emotions here, much as an
embalmer's fluid might substitute for blood, creating a body just as amazing to
look on, and infinitely more lasting? Here, it's the writer's spirit.
Inquisitive, undeflected and fearless, whether illuminating miracles in terms of
the dialectic or examining the similarities between holy icons and Ronald
McDonald, "The Commissariat of Enlightenment" fulfills its mandate,
richly.
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