News
Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search
News
First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni
News
Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend
News
Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library
News
Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty
Communication, in its abstract form,
presents literature with problems as numerous
as they are complex. The movement
of information from one locus to
another often results in distortion, some
small yet fundamental change that alters
it irrevocably. The art of fiction deals intimately
with the problems of communication,
and the construction of continually
evolving narrative devices serves
the direct purpose of bridging the aesthetic
distance between the author of a
work and its reader. Still, there are those
authors who would rather confront this
problem, explore it, and overcome it in
an original way, than simply set it aside,
bypass it, and ignore it.
In this respect, English author Jonathan
Coe deserves credit. The approach
Coe takes to his latest novel, “The Rain
Before It Falls,” is relatively unique.
Though none of the ideas that he applies
to his narrative are, in themselves,
original, combining them all is a task fit
for a master. Coe practically entombs the
main thread of the novel—the story of a
young blind girl’s origins—in layers of
nostalgic meditation, the spun-out oral
recollections of the girl’s now-dead great
aunt. Using 20 different photographs as
narrative catalysts, the dead woman recounts
her life story. The dearly departed
passes all this information on to her
niece and the niece’s daughters by way
of audio recordings.
The potential complications are
endless and—for those salivating for
a centrifugal kaleidoscope of vivid,
half-dreamed characters and vistas a la
Pynchon, or unreliable narrative mindgames
and obscured truths in the style
of Nabokov—endlessly appealing. Unfortunately,
Coe is anything but a master,
and “The Rain Before It Falls” is the
type of literary nonentity that its title
unknowingly implies: equal helpings of
moisture and hot air.
The problems begin with the premise.
The focus of the novel is on these 20
photographs, organized chronologically,
explained one by one in order to widen
the readers’ conception of the blind girl,
the niece, and the history of this family.
This is precisely what it sounds like;
for 20 of the 25
chapters of the
story, great aunt
Rosamund speaks
to a tape recorder
about photographs.
20 chapters
of unadulterated,
s e l f - i n d u l g e n t ,
contrived, melodramatic
monologue
may seem
daunting. It is. The
only semblance of
shelter from this
squall of tearful regret
and feminine
angst is a flimsilyconnected,
poorlydeveloped
insight
into the life of Rosamund’s
grandniece,
Gill, and the bizarrely voyeuristic
bonding sessions she and her daughters
partake in, listening to the parallel collapses
of Rosamund’s emotional constitution
and their family’s legacy.
The sheer boredom of the monologue
compounds with each new photograph;
the tale of this young blind
girl’s life is only vaguely connected to
Rosamund’s, but, as Coe seems to have
decided, it’s impossible for the elderly
to make intelligent comments or pass
information forward without digressing
into pointless and totally narcissistic
stories about relatives who ignored
them or lovers who spurned them. Rosamund
carries on in stilted, overly formal
speech that in no way sounds like a
voice that can be recorded. Descriptions
are safe and dull; Coe squanders an opportunity
to use Rosamund’s perspective
to change ordinary perceptions of
places and times in the novel, either to
make them more beautiful and ideal or
more gruesome and haunting. His character
simply doesn’t have the imagination.
Because the narrative
is so heavily
bogged down
in photographs,
Coe seems to resist
the pictures’
resonant historical
context, maintaining
a weird sort of
temporal stasis. It
soon becomes clear
that this crutch of
photographs is really
as ineffective
for Coe as it is for
us. Rosamund admits
that one of the
photographs she’s
describing doesn’t
even accurately depict
the mood she
recalls—and this is the sort of problem
that Coe seeks out but can’t resolve.
What about photography is dependable
when the memories they conjure
are so different? More importantly, why
bother with the photographs that are
basically useless (and agonizingly uninteresting)
when Rosamund’s memories
are so vivid?
In the end, Coe seems to unwittingly
turn on his own characters. At first, Coe
intends for these women’s stories to be
sympathetic. In Rosamund’s words, each
one of them seems worthy of redemption;
they contrast profoundly with the
idle, vilified, or barely existent male
characters. And yet Coe gives a bizarre
natural license to his female characters
as they commit atrocious acts of more
horror than all the male negligence in
the story could possibly amount to. In
the hands of a superior author, this discrepancy
would seem more intentional
and unfold in a clever, unassuming way.
Instead, the surfeit of tragedy becomes
almost ridiculous. His novel seems to
point to an ultimately unsympathetic
universe when it should point to characters
that lack the foresight or free will
to extract themselves from perpetual
misery. This is the problem of communication:
meanings change, alter, and, in
the hands of an unskilled author, can be
lost altogether.
—Staff writer Ryan J. Meehan can be
reached at rmeehan@fas.harvard.edu.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.