Sunday, October 21, 2018

The Mimic Men by V.S. Naipaul


Here is Dmitri Shostakovich's Waltz No. 2 .  Shostakovich was a complicated character.  He wrote many pieces, epic and grandiose for the "Powerful Soviet Union", however later musicologists claim that he was simply doing what he was forced to do and decided that he was going to write what he wanted to write and give it whatever title that made the government happy.  Some surmise that some of these compositions were actually meant to be ironic.

111 years since the birth of Dmitri Shostakovich

Whichever, I do really like his compositions. I met his son, Maxim, who is a conductor and a compelling person in his own right.





The Mimic MenThe Mimic Men by V.S. Naipaul

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


The Mimic Men is a work of fiction about a man who grew up on a Caribbean island called Isabella (not a real island). As an adult he moved to England for a while, came back to Isabella, trying to help reconstruct it after it stopped being an English colony and ultimately failing.

Ralph Singh is a man who tries to Anglicize himself. In school he changes his name to Ralph from Ranjit Kripalsingh. The story fluctuates back and forth between the two cultures as Ralph Singh tries to come to terms with his identity inside a Caribbean culture while trying to apply English attributes to his person and life. There are wheels within wheels because Singh is a man of Caribbean culture but also from Indian culture; yet he is not Indian either. He is Indian suffused with the culture of the islands.

The story has its moments. When he describes his life on the island, his family and relatives, I see glances of a vividness in his culture among Indians, whites and those of African descent, not to mention all the ones who share each race, which is quite common in the Caribbean. But these moments only occasionally flash here and there.

Singh tries to blend into the Englishness of the U.K. He marries a white woman, has affairs with many others, but he cannot warm up to the people or their way of life. However, going back to Isabella, he no longer fits in there either.

Really, I had a hard time understanding or caring about the characters of this novel. A lot that was going on was not clear to me, at least I failed to see the point. The only thing I found interesting were the different characters Singh describes as they come into his life.

The least interesting part of the novel is when Singh joins a group of Socialists in the U.K. Reading about him and his co-horts trying to promote these ideals was just plain boring. Describing people enamored with "causes" holds no interest for me.

I wish he had spent more time giving the reader better views of his characters but Naipaul has a habit of writing about people without any sense of who anyone is. Everyone is a stranger to him. It is as if the narrator suffers from some sort of emotional detachment and is incapable of caring about anyone or anything.

He gets away with it in his non-fiction, at least in the one non-fiction book of his I read (An Area of Darkness, his travelogue of his time in India), but it simply does not brighten this existentially bland account of people from either island who I know from personal experience are filled with so much personality and color.



View all my reviews




8 comments:

mudpuddle said...

i've read reviews of Naipaul, both good and bad (yours was one) but have yet to read him... and at this point, unless i was powerfully motivated, i most likely won't... read him, that is... fascinating that you met Maxim Shostakovich; were you playing something with the orchestra? i like some of his dad's work, but a lot of it is a bit too bangy for my uncultivated taste...

Brian Joseph said...

Too bad that this was a bit of a disappointment. The conflict between cultures within a single individual seems like it could have a lot of potential. I also think I would prefer a book that was not about a fictional Caribbean Island as each individual Island has such a rich and unique culture. It seems that making an Island “anonymous” and fictional would take away from that.

Tim Davis said...

Belatedly, after many visits and pleasant diversions, I thank you for the musical links and tidbits. Wonderful supplements to your alwaysi terest book notes.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Thanks, Tim. Are you back on the blog train, I hope?

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Brian. You are so right. I have lived in both England and also on the island of Grenada. My landlady and her family were Indians from Trinidad. She was so interesting and frank about her life both there and growing up in Trinidad.

You know, even the accents vary from island to island. I knew some people from Jamaica and their accent was different from the locals.

I think I would like to read a biography of Naipaul and perhaps gain a better perspective as to why he wrote the way he did.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Mudpuddle. Your taste is most certainly not uncultivated. I have gone through different cycles in my life where I was completely enamored with Romantic (Schumann, Chopin, Liszt etc.); then Baroque; and lately I have really just loved 20th century. Interestingly, my taste in authors coincide with the same dates. I'm reading a lot of lit from between the world wars.

I met Maxim when he visited my University. He came to our recital class and answered questions and talked about his life as a conductor. We were instructed beforehand to not ask him about his father. Apparently he was tired of his talks being all about his controversial father.

mudpuddle said...

his address is on the comments on my last post...

Sharon Wilfong said...

Thanks, Mudpuddle. Appreciate ya!!