Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY S Sundoy, March 34, 1975 'I BOOKS BEAUTY AND SADNESS Kawabata 's blend of Eastern and Western literary motifs THE POLITICAL NOVEL: Broken dreams in frantic Washington BEAUTY AND SADNESS by Yusunari Kawabata: Alfred A. Knopf; New York, 206 pages, $7.95. By BILL LOOMIS VUSUNARI KAWABATA w a s not a prolific writer but it is no exaggeration to claim that what exists of his literature is precious. He wrote four excep- tional novels, received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968 and took his own life in August of 1972. He began his novel Beauty and Sadness in 1961 and work- ed on it continuously until his death. In his youth, Kawabata want- ed to be a painter - as aspira- tion reflected in all of his nov- el,, but most especially in this masterpiece. Colors give Beauty and Sadness the stillness of a quiet pool. These colors and landscapes have a soft, soothing quality. Kawabata describes the main character's house: "He lived in the hilly northern outskirts of Kamakina, and his house was across the valley. The glow spread high in the western sky. The richness of the I purple made him wondar if there might be a thin bank of1 clouds. A purple sunset w a s most unusual. There were subtle gradations of color from dark to light, as if blended by trailing a wide brush across wet rice paper. The softness of the pur- ple emptied the coming of spring. At one place the haze was pink. That seemed to be where the sun was setting." However, beneath the pastel calm, characters nurse desires and emotions that seem espe- ially caustic and painful. They burn horribly in this quietude. THE NOVEL'S main character is Oki Toshio, a middle- aged novelist. The plot begins with his train ride to Kyoto to hear the New Year's bells. But it is a nostalgic journey too, for he is traveling to visit a lover with whom he had an affair twenty-four years ago. Okoto, the mistress, now lives as sn artist with a young female pro- tegee, Keiko. Otoko was sixteen when she fell in love with Oki. The af- fair resulted in her giving birth to a son who died immediate- ly afterwards. She then suffer- ed a mental collapse, resulting in confinement to a psychiatric hospital for several years. Now thirty-nine years of age, sh3 is still in love with Oki. Afrai: to be alone with him, she sends Keiko to greet and bid fare- well to Oki when he visits. TT WAS HIS affair with Otoko that gave Oki the impetus to write the novel which his' critics praised as his greatest. His wife, Fermi, has been jeal-' ous and embittered throughout the years by the fact that Okls' great novel is modeled on an affair with someone else. The young girl Keiko lives with Otoko as both pupil and lover. Her passion is uncontral-' led to the point where *t see:ns to border on masocism. It is out of this complex love of Otoka that her protegee decides to take revenge on Oki's sc'iolar- ly son for the wrong done to her beloved teacher. These emotional extremes produce a unique and original asymmetry. Kawabata's acute psychological insights are like open wounds in the calm setting of a rock garden or a home buried in a hillside grove. Char- acters overcome with passion will turn toward the landscape, the gardens or their art to help maintain the calm necessary for their emotional survival. TN HIS POWERFUL will, Oki consumes Otoko and his love of the young mistress. He devours, this love in a ri~ualis- tic form of cannibalism. Kawa- bata, in his unique manner of seiing on seeminely unimport- ant details to ultimately car- ture an emotional essence, por- travs Oko lost in the memorv of Otoko, on the train back to Tokyo: "Oki onened his sunrer ear- lv, around four-thirty. It was an assortment of New Year's food3, including some small, perfectly formed rice balls. They seemed to express a woman's emotions. No doubt Otoko herself had made them for the man who had lone ago destroyed her giri- hood. Chewine the little bite- s'79d rice balls, he could fel her forgiveness in his v e r v toneie and teeth. No, it was not forgiveness, it was love. Sre- lv it was a love that still lived, deen within her. All he knew of her veers in Kyoto was that sh, made her way alone as a paint- er. Perhaps there had bee i oth- er loves, other affairs. Yet he! knew that what she felt for him was a young girl's desperate A CITY ON A HILL. By George Higgins. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 256 pages, $7.95.t By DAN BORUSj 9- EORGE HIGGINS' A City on a Hill is not a conventional Washington political novel. This' is not a melodramatic potboiler where the future of the Presi-! dency, the fate of the nation, or the inte criti of the American Higgins uses few adjectives and no adverbs in building his de- scriptions. Yet description are there in plenty for those who want to delve into this rich source. Higgins builds feelings, atmospheres, and latent emo- tion with the hypnotic repetition of dialogue. The most prominent word in the novel is said. Just plain said. No exclaimed, cried, yell- ed; not said lightly said calm- love. He himself had gone on to other women. But he had never loved again with such pain."I Kawabata shows a passion totally distorted in another character. For Keiko, the head- strong pupil of Otoko, her love tears within her and the pas- sion she feels becomes preda- tory and destructive. It is wield- ed on all, including Otoko and even herself. BUT THIS is also a novel about' art and the arst; Otoko the painter and Oki, the novelist. Kawabata spends a good deal of time on Otoko's at- tempts to portray the mamory of Oki, of her dead mother and of the infant son that lived only minutes. These powerfal me- mories never leave her and she struggles most desperate~y with them in her painting. For Oki, the novel, like the love affair, is something finished and rele- gated to the past. It is a novel which was written and the-i set aside, though he remiisces about it lovingly. The novel brought him security, wealth and fame. Oki says the novel boug:-it his wife new clothes and sent his son to the university. The so^ Taicho, is similar to his fath- er. When visiting the shrine, of ancient poet with the re- venge-seeking Keiko, Taicho says, "In time, even grave-, stones change . . "What are you saying?" "There comes a time when a tombstone loses its meaning". VVERYTHING about this ,ov- -_ no t- tract. an essav s1t5gI -y L n 1 -, , Just fo , ty political process hangs precar- ly, or said ferociously. Just.for the New Y iously in the balance. Nor is this plain said. This device allows! Books. Higgins book a journalistic foray where Higgins to stand back and cre- and his politici the in-the-know reader can: ate with the words, leaving the trait rings true guess which fictional politico is reader to fill in the blanks. It is His black judge which factual Washington super- a difficult task, but one worth Midwestern hac star, the trouble for what it says New Frontiersn Rather, unlike the body of the about American political life. ly drawn and h. genre, this is a novel of interior Among Higgins' favorite dia- and juice in the lives, of micro - motivations, logue devices is the quotation gossip-monger. Idesires, power, and decadence. within the quotation, the"he A T THE CON By constructing his novel not told men, ' . . .'," lending cre- novel, we f on panoramic scope and in- dence once again to the notion as we found hir triguing plot, but on tragic sit- that politicians love to talk and ning, drinking uation, Higgins can deal with not to act. But Higgins finds Richmond on the true relevance of the po- the malady of political life beach. Only h litical process in American life. much deeper than the people working for the At stake is the fate of an hon- who chose it. is currently a est, but realistic political opera- byist for the Ma tive in a slowly deteriorating -T IS CUSTOMARY when re- sociation of D environment. At issue is whe- ferring to the breakdown of ther or not courage, integrity, trust in politics to refer to the dedication, and judgment have mass of scandals focused on the a place in American life. Watergate break-ins. But that I)AT HE PLOT if plot is the pro- s not the focus of Higgins' book. Watergate is there since per term for the scenarios the setting is 1974. But Water- Sunday,P which are melded together, con- gate is simply a frame against Day Calendar erns Hank Cavanaugh, right- which Higgins' picture is con- Tv Ctr.: The hand man for Sam Barry (D- trasted. Higgins makes his! wY7J Tv, Channe Mass.), a principled liberal who topical references to the crime wUoM: W. B. decides 1976 is theyear he's and the hearings, but he is after Coil., Dublin, r'Th going to call the shots at the something far deeper - the Poetry," 1:05 pm. convention and Sen. Paul Travis e.oeryday conduct of those non- . &IM Sports:, everdaycondct f thse on-state & Hoover, 1; is his candidate. Barry, who criminal but highly pressured PTP: Simon's owes his selection to his timely civil servants who must deal in Boys, Power. 3, 8 opposition to the War in the the political process for every- patsurreCom Cn oppoSitinsphantpaAreeCoCava- mid-Sixties, dispatches Cava- thing they need and want, atre. 8 pm. naugh, a thirty-three year old~b Latin American son of a Boston cop pulling him- Their travail - their troubled folklorist-quitarist self through the heights by his inability to achieve potential - is 8 pm. own initiative, to drum up sup- more American than the Water- Music School: port for his choice. gate crimes. For if honest Richard Watson, Barry's choice of Travis - a Americans are stymied in their Hall, 4:30 pm. lackluster candidate - is a poor, desires and wants by other hon- one, and eventually Cavanaugh est Americans and by the sys- Monday,P realizes he has been wasting tem honest American have set wuoM: willy his time. As we follow Cava- up for themselves, then the Chancellor, West c naugh from political hack to old Jeffersonian, Jacksonian, and & political sitat in novel form ers. He no longer believes Bar- York Review of ry can make the man he wants knows his stuff President or that Barry will ians. The por- make it back to the House. Nor and rings hard, does he believe in the efficacy in Chicago, his of national government. k, his burnt-out The man he is now working nan are perfect- for wants to be governor. "He's ave enough life not really a bad guy," he tells m to satisfy the Richmond. IN A WAY, A City on a Hill is ?CLUSION of the reminiscent of the Sixties find Cavanaugh re-union party held in "Doones- nm in the begin- bury" a short while ago. Mark with his pal and Zonker repeat the idealistic the Nantucket Kennedy inauguration lines e is no longer a m i d s t much guffawing Sam Barry. He and laughing. Until Mark, the registered lob- radical and idealist, pulls up assachusetts As- short and asks, "What's hap- tail Auto Deal- pened to us, anyway?" ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN March 30 tennis, archery, tripping & pianist; age 20 up. Drums Go Bang, camp Maplehurst, MI Coed: In- 1 4, noon. terview Tues. April 1 1-5; fields Stanford. Trniity open only for specialists, check with he Impact of Oral ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL PRESENTS "The Idea of a University: Newman to Newman" a Jubilee Year lecture by Dr., Frank Rhodes Vice President for Academic Affairs FRIDAY, APRIL 4 8 p.m. Gabriel Richard Center 331 THOMPSON amily recreation, :30-5:30 pm. The Sunshine pm. Iloquiurn: "Ele- g," Res. Coll The- Issues: Suni Paz, , Aud. 3, MLB, Degree recitals- Hill Acid., 4 pm: tuba, Recital March 31 Brandt, former Germnan Republic, ational economic ions, at NPR, 10 Ue I Candidates Needed for SOC 15 Al-Large- Seats PRESI DENT IAL/ VICE-PRESIDENTIAL SLATE SIGN-UP Monday-Thursday 3909 Michigan Union I I el - the characters, theRovl -rfriendand confidant Jess Rich- emotional conflicts alternatey mond If hone portrayed with intense drama tond, drying out in Nantucket, achieve and superb subtlety, the beauti-wife, to dinner with his ged ment, t fail poetic and descriptive prose fe, to dinner with his girlion that is one of a kind. For Kawabata ,-amedeth isaboe al, riina. Hs fneboss, we soon lose sight of his modelo Westave aatnuralsm bles assignment and become em- Hill" W Westen nauralsm bendsbroiled in the personal turbu- -is a n smoothly into Japanese impres- lence ofin teprnaurbuR sionism. He combines the subtle lneo Hank Cavanaugh.OR with a piercing psychological The crux of the matter is no ing n mastery. longer whether Sen. Paul Tra- lems of ~vis, who we never meet ex- City on It is the use of the Japane;e cept through other's reports, toiread culture and landscape that will gain grassroots support to bling in works so well. Beauty and Sad- reach the Oval Office, but whe- an anc ness is a final statement of ther the personal interchange of and eas Kawabata's virtuosity andscon- those in politics will damage the: speculat trol as a craftsman, to his strik- spirit and integrity of those who win the ing originality and resonan e carewhtapescldn within the Japanese tradition. what happens. cluding ("ity IS NOT an easy book to does mu read. It is virtually all dia- down of Bill Loomis is a junior major- logue, and it is dialogue which dedicati ing in English. must be studied carefully for But thi eltian ideals are rootless.; st Americans can not satisfaction in govern- [en John Winthrop's no- t government will be the of life - "A City on a here all eyes are riveted uightmare. IMPORTANT in build- mood is the marital prob- every character in A: ia Hill. To read City is of marriagerasda crum- nstitution, of fidelity as ient concept,of divorce sy sex as prevalent as 'ion on whose going to next election. By in-j such details, Higgins uch to convey the break- courage, integrity, and on. is is not a philosophical Refreshments follow a e Gigantc Sa le Continues 4 Every remainder and sale book in the store reduced another 40% IN ADDITION TO PREVIOUS REDUCTIONS .0 . .. COME SOON . . . The sale will be over in just a few more days THESE ARE THE BEST BARGAINS; EVER OFFERED IN ANN ARBOR Up to 95% OFF CENTICORE BOOKSHOP 336 MAYNARD Humanities Lecture Series am. CCS: "Artistic Creation," 2050 Frieze Bldg., 10 am. Applied Mech.; Eng. Science: Chia-Shun Yih, "Progressive Inter- nal Wave osf Permanent Form," 2291 W. Eng., 4 pm. Statistics: Mervyn Stone, Univer- stly College. London, "A Geometri- cal Approach to Generalized In- verses," 3.227 Angell, 4 pm. Physics: T. Roberts, U. of Illinois, "Three Pion Production on Nuclear Targets at 23 GeV/c," 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Music School: Composers' Forum, Recital Hall, 8 pm. Audio - Visual Ctr.: Condensed Cream of Beatles; Bolero, Pendle- ton Ctr., Union, 8 pm. ! UAC Future Worlds: Jean Hous- ton, "New Ways of Being; Con-j scoiusness and Its Transformation," Hill Aud., 8 pm. Summer Placement 3240 SAB, 763-4117 Register in person or by phone. Camp Chi, Jewish Com. Ctr. wI: interview Mon. 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Stauffer Chemical Co., Weston, MI: opening electrical engr. stu- dent; must have completed 3 yr. college before applying; details available. This Ne"sper S T.ApAversng Cono RAI *Id**' Sudou hire Of course you would. You work hard.And you're good at it. Like most Americans. But, if all of us did just a little better, we'd wind up with better products, better services and even more pride in the work we do. America. It only works as well as we do. ftH~in~ ..16.0 n/ r q.,t AcM~a, EVERY BOOK IN OUR; + South University Store Reduced 20% Limited Time Only' NEW BOOKS, USED BOOKS, BEAUTIFUL BOOKS, UGLY BOOKS 1 EVERYTHING!! CENTICORE BOOKSHOP 1229 S. UNIVERSITY 19 -' $ $4 $ JJ.S* .Ai$$ .Mi$i$ $- I EIGHT BUFFALO WOMEN FIRST LECTURE: MONDAY, MARCH 31 -4 P.M. EAST LECTURE (3rd floor, RACKHAM) Guest Lecturer: Profesor Emeritus Claribel Baird lecturing on "THE DRAMATIC USES OF THE GREEK CHORUS" SECOND LECTURE: TUESDAY, APRIL 8 - 4 P.M. EAST LECTURE (3rd floor RACKHAM) Guest Lecturer: Professor Marvin Felheim lecturing on "THE POLITIC BIRDS" THIRD LECTURE: "REIC(fAV ADBiy 1C A BDhu 9GO HRMOuj ww y y l~~l i 4 .. ... PROFESSOR BAIRD A EVELL E 14AR I I