| Nowhere Man by Nathan WhitlockAleksander Hemon's next work of fiction should be called "The
Nabokov Comparison". Just as questions of identity-sexual,
linguistic, historical, literary-haunt Hemon's fictional hero Josef
Pronek, so have comparisons with Nabokov haunted the critical
reception given his first novel, Nowhere Man. It's a tricky and
often irresistible operation, placing an artist this way. Comparisons
are often the last refuge of the ignorant critic, with reviewers
squinting their eyes and declaring an uncanny resemblance where
none exists. An author's given peers make up a major part of his
literary nationality. Through laziness, through confusion, through
intentional distortion, authors are often mis-aligned and thus find
themselves stateless.
In Hemon's case the comparison is apt, and the influence admitted
to. "My right foot rose out of the sludge of darkness like a
squat, extinguished lighthouse. The blinds gibbered for a moment,
commenting on my performance, then settled in silence." This,
from the novel's very first page, is very nearly a parody of Nabokov.
Even Hemon's biography seems to ghost the great Russian-American's:
Hemon left Bosnia in 1992, just before the outbreak of the civil
war that left him stranded in the United States. Within six or seven
years, Hemon had all but mastered the English language, and begun
writing and publishing the stories that made up 2000's A Question
of Bruno, Hemon's first book. The centrepiece of that book was
"Blind Josef Pronek & Dead Souls", a novella-length story
about Josef Pronek, whose unintended emigration roughly mirrors
Hemon's own.
Pronek returns in Nowhere Man, but this is not merely a continuation
of the story. Nowhere Man is not quite a group of linked stories,
and not quite a novel-the book is subtitled "The Pronek
Fantasies", which seems to fit. Nowhere Man re-imagines Pronek
in a number of guises, and through a number of narrators and
perspectives. Details and incidents are echoed throughout the
disparate narratives. The theme of misplaced or confused identity
runs through each section. The book's first narrator comes across
Pronek in an ESL class, laboriously reading an article on Siamese
twins whose personalities converge. As a teenager in Sarajevo,
Pronek starts a Beatles cover band, which falls apart when their
Ringo goes punk and George goes back to his violin lessons (Pronek,
of course, is John). On a student trip to Kiev, Pronek meets George
Bush (the elder), who blithely takes him for another freedom-loving
Ukranian. Years later, in Chicago, Pronek is hired by a private
detective to serve court papers to a dangerous Serb, who takes
Pronek to be a Serb himself. ("Are you a Serb or a Muslim?"
the detective asks Pronek, who replies, "I am complicated.")
Even informed North Americans had difficulty unsticking the
complexities of the Bosnian war. Hemon's Pronek is compelled by
history to embody all of this complexity. Working as a canvasser
for Greenpeace, Pronek's shifting, confused identity is made explicit
by his having to go door-to-door and be taken as a new person each
time. In the book's last and most audacious section, Pronek is
merely one alias used by a Ukrainian adventurer and scoundrel in
China in the first half of the 20th Century. There comes a final,
unexpected shift in narration that ends by looping back to the
book's beginning, as if each of the book's voices has dreamt the
one that follows.
Through all of this narrative shifting, there is some inevitable
loss of tension, and a certain slackness creeps in during the longer
episodes, as if Hemon can't resist proving his point again and
again. Hemon's use of language can easily slip from agile to
overwrought. And, yes, the stylistic and structural debt to Nabokov
can grow a little heavy. But Nowhere Man is an impressive work, and
makes most other contemporary novels feel flaccid and underimagined.
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