-tFriday, October 2,' 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, October 2, 1970 THE MICH$GAN E~AILY #~age Five 0 k s ilest drea I 'p" t' C' " C" "C ems: From Kathmandu to Jeremy Bernstein, THE WILDEST DREAM OF KEW, Simon arid Schuster, $7.95. By SEWALL OERTLING Nepal has received more at- tention from the' press in the last decade than in the pre- ceeding hundred years. More than a dozen titles published since 1960 are cited in the bibli- ography of Kew. Mere in Ann Arbor, Prof. Donald Gooch has published "Picture Talk in Kathmandu" in the Papers of the Michigan Academy of Sci- ence, Arts, and Letters, 1963. Although much of this interest is a result of the Everest expe- ditions mounted. by the Swiss and British in the 50's, especial- ly Hillary's successful ascent is 1953, the ultimate- cause is Nepalese neighbors. The Chinese occupation of Tibet in 1950 and the subsequent border skirmish- es with India in 1962 precisely defined Nepal's , position as a buffer state between these two giants. The credits of Jeremy Bern- stein, out of Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey, have an Asimovian range -- Ascent, Elementary particles and Their Currents, and A Compre- hensible World. The present title begins with a readable synopsis of Nepalese history and concludes with an account of the author's trek from Kath- mandu to Namche Bazar at the foot of Everest. Once upon a time .... This f a m i i a r but anti-historical phrase begins the book. It was a wise choice. Nepal today has made polite bows to the 20th century, but remains a land where the magic cloud of faith veils what we call reality. In small courtyards and village squares images of Tantric Bud- dhism and Hinduism are smear- ed with thq phosphorescence of devotional powders. These livid colors are complemented by the soft greens of the lichen that climb the brick walls and mat the pagoda roofs. I have never felt quite so isolated from time as I did in Nepal. With this in mind one can forgive the author a few incon- sistencies His propos Nepalese evolution of goda out of sacrificial contradicted by histor Kanishka's great pago 2nd century AD near] (modern West Pakist the prototype for Chin Japanese examples an turn, was derived fr "Stupa" relic-moundsc The. implications ofa 7th century Nepaleset Chinese Buddhism is odds with Chinese lite dence of 4th century B At any rate, Nepales hardly begins until t century, when a tribeo origin assumed contro valley of Kathmandu. F point the narrativeP speed, and the mecha of political maneuverin and 19th centuries w credit to Machiavelli. a British commentatoe "The power of the Prig ister is absolute till he when it becomes un: to question the exped his measures." I do lik Such insights into 1 affairs of Nepal are rar scious policy of isola dictated by a clan 'of crats that controlled t try and the monarchy. ation was intolerable f especially after the e Tibet in 1950. A quotet is worth repeating, " dom) does not'come (b forces that will ultima rupt the freedom itsel Everest al of a created and encouraged." The the pa- warning went unheeded. Mr. altars is Bernstein describes the daring y. King political coup that restored the da of the monarchy to power and opened Peshawar the country. Indian involvement an)' was was evident. nese and The book parades an assort- Ld it, in ment of facts and figures on rom the modern Nepal. Like the creator of India. of a Tibetan mandala the au- a 6th or thor seeks to explain by the ar- origin of rangement of numbers. Instead also at of demons and bodhistattvas, rary evi- he uses airplanes and TB cases. uddhism. How far does it take4Lus? In Sub- e history inspector Rana's garden are the 13th eight (8) varieties of vegetables. of Indian Alas! Shortly thereafter they 1 of the were consumed by a yak. From this By far the most enjoyable sec- picks upJ tion of the book is the account nizations of the trek itself. Photographs oul do 8t give some indication of the ter-', rain that the author and his In 1850 companions, a French couple, )r writes, covered. They passed through ime Min- sub-tropical forest and, rice pad- e is shot, dies before mounting to a an necessary 18,000 foot "hillock." (Everest liency of is 29,000, the highest mountain .e that. in Europe around 16,000). Those the early readers who have climbed will e. A con- identify with this section: those tion was moments when the effort to bureau- move one's feet is incredible; he coun- when the balmy summer day The situ- one left behind turns to snow for India, as the altitude increases. Con- vents in sider here the change in defini- by Nehru tion in a cup of tea. After The If (free- Wildest Dreams of Kew I am to Nepal) happy to report that a place re- ately dis- mains where such an elemental f will be pleasure can still be had. War orphans: A shoddy portrait M o n i k a Kotowska, THE BRIDGE TO THE O T H E R SIDE, Doubleday, $4.50. By GLENN LITTON It is not' particularly diffi- cult to depict the fact t h a t children suffer most cruelly from the effects of war. For three-quarters of a century, in- fant victims of battle atrocities have stared helplessly at us from unsubtle anti-war photo- graphs.1 Their unfocused stares and bloodied limbs might cause us to believe that war and its *wounds havet deadened perman- ently their nascent intellects and sensibilities. In the last few decades, two widely-read, chron- icles of childhood impressions of the Seeonel World War h a v e tempered this visual portrayal, giving us a slight awareness of the physic adjustments made by children who built their play- worlds f r o m the rubble of a Bliztkrleg or from 'the rumours of a concentration camp. These two chronicles are high- ly divergent: Anne Frank's diary reports the terrors of Nazi racism with delicate intelligence. H e r urban childhood, careful tutelage, a n d forced isolation led her to concentrate on the domestic trivia of. those with whom she shared two years in an Amsterdam attic. W h a t makes the trivia dramatic is the backtground of round-ups f o r the Nazi concentration camps, and the potential, almost immi- nent, end of Anne Frank's make-dc normalcy. Jerry KosinskW s Painted Bird is a fictional account of t h e wanderings of a displaced city 4 child who, because of his phys- ical resemblance to either a Jew or a Gypsy, is shunted from one peasant village in Eastern Eur ope to another during the final stages of World War II. The boy receives equal treat- ment from invaders anq the in- * vaded; he is bludgeoned and re- peatedly abandoned. While he is learning to live. as an out- cast he witnesses gory tortures, rapes so violent they lead to the deaths of their victims, and, as a repeated motif of the passion- less'Nazi murders, the charred remains next to railroad tracks of those who couldn't survive their transport to concentration, camps. The most recent of these chronicles has affinities w i t h both the, Kosinski and Frank 'books; it is almost a literary compromise between them. The narrators of Monika Kotowska's The Bridge to the Other Side are anonymous, fictional sur- vivors of the Nazi occupation of Poland. Most of them are young girls, all of them are city-dwel- ling children. Some of them, like Anne Frank, are sensitive enough to learn an artistic per- spective and with it consciously transform a bleak city during a downpour into an inpressionistic vista just by trying to "see" iL differently. Others narrate their own pre- mature hardening from the re- ceptivity of childhood to t h e self - conscious calculation of adolescense. Among these is a bored orphan, who, like Kosin- ski's narrator, learns that to be protected inevitably leads to be- ing possessed and so decides to periodically leave h e r current governess. She becomes so adept at her game of adoption and abandonment that she can an- ticipate the moment when her protector will metamorphose in- to a possessor and can predict the possessor's reaction to her announced departure: "Heart- less . . . heartless, ungrateful .'I knew it all by rote." She even composes a prose gallery of her "good ladies" as testi- mony to their common human weakness and her own detached superiority. Kotowska's n a r r a t o r s are closely related to their literary predecessors in T h e Diary of Anne Frank and The Painted Bird. Some experience the war indirectly, not understanding the causes for the behavior con- fronting them or the causes for their own behavior. In this re- spect their infantile psychology is skillfully constructed. In "Test Games," for example, the nar- rator and her "slave," a weak, and begrudgingly co-operative playmate, bait The Gray-Hair- ed One. To the children he is an eccentric ancient; vulnerable to their pranks because of his clandestine, lonely existence in an apartment attic and his rig- id stubborness: he has refused to sign "something or other" and has made himself the pas- sive victim of "unidentified as- sailants" whose a c t s are the serious pranks of adult war games. The narrator invents a game in which her "slave" plays the role of the Gray-Haired One as she becomes the "Unidentified Assailant." The roles are sel- dom reversed, until the narrator experiences first-hand an en- counter between t h e Gray- Haired One and the faceless Au- thorities. T h e child's admira- tion is excited by the stoicism of the old man as he shakes off the taunts of plainclohesmen. Later, her excitement is heigh- tened when she gets her first view of his living quarters: I was trembling as I cross- ed his treshold. I was finally inside his apartment! I ex- pected that everything inside would be unusual and it was. Near the door hung a paint- ing, large and very colorful. The old man saw me admire it. "It's Breughel,"he explain- ed. "Those people, w h o do they remind us of?" He talked like a lecturer I once heard in school. And he answered his own question: "They remind us of our neighbors. People around us." I looked at the painting. The people he was pointing at had red, ugly, fat faces. "Y e s. Everything that's happening in our world we can f i n d in 'this painting. What are you looking at? Are you trying to find me in there too? Perhaps there, in the background.." He pointed to a very small figure that was no more than a faint silhouette. At t h a t moment someone threw a stone against his window. After the inevitable arrest of the uncooperative Gray-Hair- ed One, the narrator insists on shifting the game roles w i t h her "slave." From then on. she plays the Qray-Haired One. This incident illustrates the high credibility and artistic skill of some of Monika Kotow- ska's chapters. Her children have the strong a n d healthy egotism of children. They are not sentimentally drawn. 'Their games a r e often attempts to gain momentary ascendency in a world dominated by adults, and this means that peers are sadistically subjected to the whims of the strongest child, so that the conqueror can briefly experience the electricity of power. At times there is no self- fulfilling motivation for their games; they are merely imitat- ing adults. The games of the narrator in "Test Games" have both these sources. The incidents themselves are occasionally striking raw ma- terial for narrative. "The Pay- ment Will Be Made on Sunday" takes its title from the opera- tions of a later-day Fagan who teaches his boys to intimidate passers-by with the loud taunt "You're a Jew," and to extort a few pennies for their master before the authorities overhear. In "Winning" the narrator's father and mother beat off a competing looter for the prize of a briefcase. When the oppon- ents meet some week later, we expect another brawl: Suddenly I saw him in front of us. He was walking toward us, holding a brief . case, and he was well dressed, like my father. But I recog- nized him. He was the tall man from the store. My fa- ther looked as if he couldn't Nremember where he had met him before. And the tall man had exactly the same expres- sion on his face. And then, both, at the same time, seem- ed to remember and they smiled at each other and tip- ped their hats. The incident is expertly con- structed to conceal its punch- line and to delay the pay-off for a perfectly-timed moment of narrative equilibrium. But a final judgment of Mon- ika Kotowska's The Bridge to the Other Side cannot be based on the narrative raw material she chose to develop n o r on the several moments of writing skill foregrounded by the con- stant, pale aridity of her style. The responsibility for the styl- istic failures of the book should probably be divided between Kotowska and h e r translator Maia Wokciechowska. No doubt the author strove to compose in a style simple enough to support the illusion of child-narrators. But the attempt is thwarted by a shifting perspective, from im- mediate reportage by the child as he or s h e is experiencing what is being reported, to the removed, reflective, and didactic voice of the same child as adult. As illustration, here are several successive paragraphs f r o m "The voyage inside the shell:" All my ideas " were limited by my childishness. I thought of starving them. Or of beat- ing them up. After a while, and with great effort, I be- gan to p 1 a n tortures. But w h e n I started to imagine what the torture would do to the victim something terrible happened inside of me. Man is a flawed creation. So many things hurt him. Ev- en revenge, retaliation against pain, is impossible to accom- plish painlessly. But as nat- ural as pain is to Man, so is hope. It gives him a chance at survival. Something as sim- ple as a pink light can change a room into the inside of a sea shell. If it were not for the fact of their voices I would have found joy in that ... I was lying down on the floor covering my ears. The fast cut is often an effec- tive technique, but when the cut combines startling shifts in narrative perspective with nar- rative voice, the technique calls attention to itself. The result is that the author has lost the illusion of a child-narrator. The children in The Bridge to' the Other Side also report their stories with an abstract- ness t h a t belies the distance and time separating the narrat- or from the event. The epithet attributed to one of bier char- acters can, ironically, be fairly assigned to Miss Kotowska's stylistic inexpertise: "He knew nothing of special effects, the noise of battle, explosions." Only a few of the "incidents" of, this book successfully use in- direction to depict their nar- rators. Otherwise, the flatness of the language, its repetitious- ness, and the monotonous lack of perceptive description fail to create an environment for the narrator. or a character for the narrator. Perhaps children have very faint recollection of their sur- roundings, but the case is likely just the opposite. Kosinski's child surroundings are so vivid- ly described. Granting that Miss Kotowska's subject matter is often less grotesque, arid there- fore inherently not vivid, this stipulation only puts more re- 'sponsibility on th e writer to make the unassuming material take shape for her reader. Reading The Bridge to the Other Side is a soporific object lesson for anyone interested in the relationship between exper- imential reality and literary "realism." In their simplicity and undramatic structure, Miss Kotowska's "incidents" would seem to be first-rate material f o r a "realistic" collection, whereas Jerry Kosmski's c o n - jestion of atrocities, stripped to their narrative framework, have all the realism of Madame Tus- saud's horrors viewed in day- light. B u t Kosinski boldly groups his horrors directly be- fore his narrator's and his read- er's eyes, directs their atten- tion to details of actions, so that the artificiality of the whole is backgrounded, and then amasses that detail, through repetition and variation, to pro- duce a reaction of revulsion which, because of its forceful- ness, creates the illusion of realism. M o n i k a Kotowska spends most of her time at an indefinite distance f r o m her subject, so that her viewer has the leisure and perspective to notice how shoddily s h e has painted her . landscape, how carelessly she has dressed her characters, and how seldom she has chosen to express their con- dition memorably. ---Students and Faculty-- Mak'NO Mistake! U THE GAY-STRAIGHT DANCE (This Saturday) rQ IS FOR EVERYBODY! \ ~t was up-tight when I arrived, and when I Ie4, I was just up!" -DAVID EISENHOWER SAT., OCT. 3 UNION BALLROOM 9-12:30 $1.50 (Donation) Today's Writers * Sewall Oertling has travelled in Nepal and India and is currently working on a doctorate in Chinese painting. The il- lustrations are reflections of his trips. Glenn Litton, a doctoral student in English, is a former law student. His talks with Kosinski, a former writer-in-residence at Michigan, broadened his interest in war fiction. 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