| A Review of: What Casanova Told Me by Linda Morra"The traveler must start his journey with the same fervour he
feels when choosing a lover, knowing that a world of possibilities
awaits him," writes Susan Swan's Casanova in his "Advice
to Travellers". "And if his choice goes awry," he
adds, "he must quickly select a fresh destination. Just as the
best remedy for heartbreak is a new lover, so it is with travel."
Casanova's observations will have far-reaching consequences for the
characters who populate Swan's new novel, What Casanova Told Me,
since what he says, as the title suggests, becomes almost far more
important than what he does. And he does a great deal: escapes from
a Venetian prison, adopts different guises to avoid capture, theorizes
about the nature of love, seduces women. But he himself is also
seduced by Asked For Adams, the fictionalized niece of the American
President, John Adams. Casanova apparently claims in a journal that
he lends to Asked For that "I never seduced anyone except
unconsciously, always being seduced myself first." She
subsequently becomes his travel companion as well as his lover and,
during this period, she documents their travels together from Venice,
Italy-where they first meet-to Greece and Istanbul. The journal in
which she records their meanderings, however, abruptly ends before
they reach Istanbul. Approximately two hundred years later, her
journal falls into the hands of her distant relative, Luce Adams,
as do other of Asked For's personal effects-letters by Casanova
himself and another journal, a leather-bound Arabic manuscript of
uncertain origin.
Author of such renowned books as The Wives of Bath (1993) and Stupid
Boys are Good to Relax With (1996), Swan weaves these two plotlines
together in complex ways, demonstrating how matters of the heart
may be considerably altered in the process of making journeys. In
1797, Asked For finds herself crossing the Atlantic to accompany
her father and her fianc, the unfortunately named Francis Gooch,
on business when she first encounters the aging Casanova. He is in
Venice in disguise to avoid being captured by the authorities. The
events that transpire-the invasion of Napoleon's army in Venice-undermine
her father's financial hopes, which are then utterly dashed by a
Venetian swindler. The stress he endures by the turn of these events
is compounded by his daughter's refusal to promise to marry Gooch,
a Yankee farmer whose name is suggestive of his character. Her
father is outraged by his daughter's apparent unwillingness to
comply and, in an apoplectic fit, he dies, leaving Asked For to
fend for herself.
This eighteenth-century plot has a number of correspondences with
that of the twentieth-century. Luce, like her ancestor, has crossed
the Atlantic initially as a matter of obligation: she has been asked
to take attend her mother's funeral service in Crete. She reluctantly
agrees in part because, even though she deeply loved her mother,
Kitty Adams, she dislikes her mother's lover, Lee Pronski, an
initially unpalatable, cynical woman who is planning the service.
Luce also dislikes the idea of traveling because she dislikes
"the unwanted surprise [which] no traveller is capable of
turning to [his] advantage":
"Better to burrow in at home and avoid a disaster like the one
that had claimed her mother in Greece. If it hadn't been for the
nagging worry that she owed it to her mother and herself to see the
island where Kitty had died, she would never have let Lee pay her
way to the memorial service in Crete."
Her inclination to avoid travel is a metaphor for her insularity
and her refusal to open her heart to emotional growth, to feeling
desire, to asking for (with, appropriately, a reference to her
ancestor's name) what she wants. Like her ancestor, Luce lacks
self-confidence and does not yet believe in her own emotional and
sexual prowess. She must learn that desire-for love, for spiritual
growth, for sexual fulfillment, for tenderness-is integral to the
human experience. The novel is thus partly concerned with showing
her emotional and spiritual development. It is also an examination
of how Luce must come to terms with her mother's death and with
facets of her life that Luce initially has difficulty accepting-namely,
her mother's research of ancient feminist rituals in Minoan society
and her mother's lover. Feeling supplanted by and resentful of
Pronski, she eventually comes to appreciate both her mother's
personal decisions and her lover, who, in spite of herself, also
finds her affection for Luce growing.
As part of the voyage to Europe, Luce has been asked to deposit her
ancestor's journal, Casanova's letters and the untranslated journal
in the Sansovinian Library in Venice. She becomes so engrossed with
their contents, however, that she reads the documents from beginning
to end. The reader thus becomes privy to Casanova's tale. He comes
to the reader from a few removes-through Luce, who is reading both
Asked For's version of their conversations together and her
interpretation of their unfolding relationship. Even at such removes,
the beauty and elegance of his language, written and spoken-or
rather of Swan's rendering of his correspondence and their
conversations-is striking. There are moments, in fact, when reverting
back to the twentieth-century plot is almost an intrusion.
Luce is most profoundly affected by Casanova's assertion in an
extant letter respecting the importance of mothers and mothering.
"Why do we cry out for our mothers at the moment of our
death?" he queries and then responds, "Because we need
her still, and [we] may travel to the end of our lives before we
know this truth." Fortunately, Luce does not travel that far
before realizing this herself-she reiterates these very words at
her mother's memorial service in acknowledgment of their veracity.
Not one to be easily convinced by theories or emotional outbursts
from the past, she becomes persuaded by the importance of what
Casanova has to tell her about the centrality of mothers.
What he has to tell her also corresponds to her mother's archaeological
research about the Minoans, whom she believed to have been a
matriarchal society that engaged in the worship of goddesses. In a
letter Luce retains, Kitty explains that "[t]he Minoans knew
something we've lost, and I want you to have it." In yet another
letter to Lee, she elucidates why she wishes to partake in a ritual
that involved naming one's female ancestors at a cave in Greece:
"There it was: the link to our lineage and the truth that
society hides from us - that women's bodies are the foundation on
which human culture rests. All those mothers, going back in time
farther than we can remember, nurturing the spark of life."
Understanding the importance of mothers-as foundational to human
society and associated with life itself-is what Kitty wanted Luce
to understand.
That mothers are also related to desire-for love, for understanding,
for human contact-is what Luce eventually learns from Casanova. As
Pronski observes, citing the authority of a scholar on the subject,
"Casanova saw desire as an expression of a mother's
omnipotence." Thus, during her journey to Greece, Luce learns
that traveling is not motivated by obligation or duty or even
curiosity-it is motivated by the same kind of "fervour"
that is involved in "choosing a lover." In Greece, she
encounters a scholar, Ender Mecid, who is as important to interpreting
the mysterious contents of the Arabic journal as he is to Luce's
final stage of emotional development. Luce learns from him almost
entirely all that transpires between Casanova and Asked For. She
also learns from him-as Swan's novel clearly communicates-that
making herself vulnerable to desire and to human contact is utterly
worthwhile. As Luce discovers, when she opens herself up to a world
of possibilities, the world comes to her.
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