Dead Man Leading Essay, Research Paper
Dead man leading To the Last City by Colin Thubron 168pp Chatto £14.99Unlike his coeval among travel writers, Paul Theroux, Colin Thubron has never had the acclaim for his fiction that he deserves. To point it out bluntly like this reinforces the impression of inexplicable failure, but I am constantly astonished when admirers of his melancholy, passionate travel books express surprise to learn that Thubron has written novels at all. They should check out at least, among his six previous fictional works, A Cruel Madness (1984). In a close tie with Patrick McGrath’s Asylum, it ranks as the best English novel about mental illness of the last few decades. That may not seem like much of an accolade until you consider how problematic a novel with such a subject might be – what difficulties one could run into presenting a very disturbed consciousness. Thubron’s great triumph in that novel was to engineer a particular impression in the reader’s mind (a particular conception of reality) and then disturb it actively. If this didn’t exactly put readers in the same position as the mentally ill, it at least showed us that sane/insane is not the clinical demarcation that some would have us believe. Instead, one came away from the novel alert to an idea of competing realities. Perhaps alerting us to that idea is one of the jobs of novels. And (though maybe in a slightly different way) of novellas, such as Thubron’s new production, To the Last City. It is set in the South American jungle, and the title immediately invites comparisons with The Lost World, Conan Doyle’s romp involving Professor Challenger’s search for a lost Inca city. The author of the Sherlock Holmes stories was capitalising on a tradition of jungle exotic that was already well established through colonial adventure stories. Others would follow in more recent times, adding their own spin as their personal predilections dictated: VS Pritchett’s Dead Man Leading (a perfectly pitched adventure novel), Redmond O’Hanlon’s In Trouble Again (a non-fictional comic take), and Alan Jenkins’s long poem “Greenheart” (James Bond meets Gawain and the Green Knight ). Thubron’s book plugs very neatly, and knowingly, into this tradition, yet it is – as the jacket ungraciously puts it – “a novel which can be read on several levels”. Apart from giving comfort to elevator operators everywhere, To the Last City works as both a deconstruction of its genre and an incisive psychological study along the lines of A Cruel Madness. The action describes the passage of five unlikely travellers, along a “barely traceable path” to Vilcabamba, final citadel of the Incas. It was to here that the beleaguered civilisation retreated under the onslaught of the conquistadors. It is to here that Thubron’s travellers wend their way, piling up a weight of expectation. Among them are Francisco, a Spanish seminarian racked with colonial guilt and feelings of failure, and Robert, an English writer who stands in, perhaps, as an authorial persona. We hear of the twin poles of jungle exotic. Out of Europe come Spanish cruelties, quoted by Francisco from historical accounts: “They take two or three thousand Indians to serve them and carry their food and fodder, heavily loaded in shackles and dying of hunger. When Indians grew exhausted, they cut off their heads without untying them from their chains, leaving the road full of dead bodies…” Out of America come Inca customs, noted by Robert, who discovers a mummy: “He was looking down on an embalmed husk. All the internal organs of such corpses had been extracted through the anus or vagina, leaving only these airy shadows . . . In embalment even the brain – the seat of memory – trickled down as liquid through the body, to be absorbed by the cotton pad on which the corpse sat. So everything a person was, his whole remembe
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