| A Review of: Heir to the Glimmering World by Jana PrikrylIn Cynthia Ozick's latest novel, Heir to the Glimmering World, the
narrator Rose Meadows endures Jane Eyre's childhood without getting
to have any of Jane Eyre's fun. Maybe that's because Rose's
predicament is meant to signify something about the 20th century
rather than the 19th: Into her personal story barges the turmoil
of Depression-era America, Nazi Germany, post-Revolutionary Russia,
and Franco's Spain. It's always suspicious when such a large number
of world events congeals in a single work of fiction (at the very
least, it ties a bunch of one-ounce weights to the suspension of
disbelief), but in this case it seems fair to swallow your skepticism:
The story takes place in the 1930s; if things weren't this grim it
wouldn't be realistic.
Perhaps to galvanize that realism and make us really feel the misery
of that era, Ozick has piled personal calamities on top of her
protagonist. This is what we learn in the first 25 pages: Rose's
mother is long dead; her father is cruel and largely absent; they
are penniless, which obliges Rose to be a shrewd cook and housekeeper
by the time she's 11; at 17, she is forced to attend teachers'
college (which she abhors) and to accept charity from Bertram, a
relation-by-marriage (to whom she grows attached, just before he
throws her out). So young, so early in the novel, and so many kicks
in the pants.
Despite all this trauma, you are snake-charmed into reading more
because of Ozick's pure skill at animating sequences of words. At
school, Rose feels perpetually alienated from her carefree classmates:
"I watched the laughter and the horseplay with a melancholy
so ingrained that it crept downward into my hands: often my palms
were damp." Years later, when Bertram sends Rose away, he does
it to please his communist girlfriend Ninel (reader, spell it
backwards). The night before Rose's departure, though, he plants a
much-longed-for kiss on her lips, and the chapter closes with this
wonderfully rueful line: "In this way I was expelled from
Albany's obscure and diminutive radical pocket."
At this point, the novel has only just begun, but we are already
in possession of a key theme: the dialectical conflicts between
money and poverty, capitalism and communism. It's poverty (and a
bit of gender-based desperation) that obliges Rose to accept her
first job offer, to work in some obscure capacity for a family of
German refugees. Two years earlier, the Mitwissers effected a
harrowing (and rather capitalistic) escape from the Nazis in Berlin:
They rented a black-tinted limousine to escape random Gestapo
searches during the crucial week before their ship left port. For
seven days, the family of seven had themselves chauffeured aimlessly
round and round Berlin, with bathroom breaks taken anxiously in the
lobbies of swanky hotels. This by-the-way tale is one of the finest
honed miniature horrors of the novel. Not only does it work
historically; it also helps explain why the Mitwisser clan is such
a dark, self-enclosed unit, and why Rose, once again, finds herself
ostracized in the very household she inhabits.
But this is where the reader's eyebrow finally arches in doubt. For
the first few months of Rose's employment, the Mitwissers never
deign to pay her or define her duties, whether as those of nanny
or amanuensis. The father, Professor Mitwisser, was a famous scholar
in Germany; the mother was a famous scientist who is now prone to
nervous breakdowns. Mrs. Mitwisser is the first person in that
family to actually speak of their dependence on an invisible
benefactor, and Rose reflects, "It struck me that it was only
the family madwoman who would mention money." Rose knows the
family is in financial straits, yet she also knows they pay for
everything except her wages. She hardly makes a peep about the
matter. I don't want to get too baldly capitalist here, but even
Jane Eyre would have insisted on remuneration.
The fact that Rose doesn't is just one symptom of her general
dwindling as a character. At this point in the novel she recedes
into the role of transparent witness, watching various melodramas
unfold around her, and biding her time until the novel's last page,
when she is finally released from her duties as a narrative device
and allowed to fatten into three-dimensionality, to go seek her
fortune in Manhattan. Still, Ozick is not prepared to let her go
without a Big Idea lighting her path: You can hear a new wave of
social history propelling Rose along even in her newfound independence:
"I saw myself as the counterpart of that hungry aspirant, the
Young Man from the Provinces-modernity had granted the chance of
untethered motion to my own sex."
The burden of historical determinism in this novel is made heavier
because Ozick adds another layer of quasi-history to the mix: The
Mitwissers are financially prone to the whims of an eccentric
millionaire named James, who turns out to be "the Bear Boy".
Who is the Bear Boy, you might wonder? Rose described him early
on, under the pretense of explaining a children's book that was in
her father's possession when he died. Just think of the Bear Boy
as Christopher Robin. Ozick deliberately modeled the one on the
other, but her attempt to vault the fictional B.B. into the historical
role of C.R. buckles from the strain of equating the two. Rose muses
on the topic of the Bear Boy, casual as can be, for several pages:
"Some people think the Bear Boy is the most famous boy in the
world-famous the way, in those early years of movie cartoons, Mickey
Mouse was famous, or, to choose a more elevated example, the
metaphysical Alice." None of this makes up for the lameness
of the moniker "the Bear Boy", and none of it invests him
with the specific, idiosyncratic life of those real childhood heroes.
For the rest of the novel, you read "the Bear Boy" and
are forced to perform a mental calculus that conjures vague pictures
of Winnie-the-Pooh. For fans of the latter, it's more than annoying.
Similarly, Professor Mitwisser's studies of an arcane Jewish sect
called Karaism (which actually exists) are made to resemble
intellectual passion, but you never get into the subject deeply
enough to feel its heat. Rose is forever typing Mitwisser's sublime
dictations: " Here is a man,' he said, a mind comprehending
vastness, a luminary, a majesty, and history obscures him, buries
him, suffocates him! Ejects him! Erases him from the future,
suppresses him, names him the dissident, subversive, heterodox,
transgressive-' Mitwisser's eyes flung out their electric blue."
Admirable stuff, and thematically ironic in that Mitwisser could
be describing himself, but there isn't really enough here to hook
an idea on. Ozick forces us to take so much on oath that even the
novel's historical events wind up feeling ersatz. Ninel dies in
the Spanish Civil War? Well, maybe Ozick invented the war the
better to plunge Bertram into despair.
Given how historical determinism propels the whole novel, I was
surprised to find, after reading it, that James Wood wrote a loving
New Yorker profile of Ozick in 1996. Wood has built his career on
isolating the moral value that makes fiction thrilling-free will,
paradoxically granted to characters by authors who exercise control
by relinquishing it. Yet, to judge from Ozick's latest novel, she
is more comfortable mapping history than imagining ways out of it.
If Heir to the Glimmering World takes its inspiration from 19th
century social novels, with their characters caught in the pincer-hold
of history, then the book denies its characters a crucial weapon
of 19th century heroes and heroines: The power to rise up, as
individuals, and use their idiosyncratic strengths and weaknesses
to shape history. I suspect that Ozick's fascination with capital-in
all its forms, from how it destroys childhood celebrities like
"the Bear Boy" to how it's often the social agitators,
like Ninel, who are cruelest to the people around them-distracted
Ozick from giving Rose, at least, a crumb of free will. When Rose
finally hopes for freedom, it's only because the rest of her
generation is becoming emancipated. Even Jane Eyre, a hundred years
earlier, did better than that.
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