|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
10 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The journey to the eternity,
By "irmam" (Slovenia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
The story starts few minutes before death of Herman Mussert, a teacher of classical languages, and ends few minutes after his death. In this short period of time we learn all the important events of his life. The story is just like a journey to the eternity. It begins in Amsterdam, where Herman is dying of heart attack. It continues in Portugal, where he wakes up and remembers the things happened here years ago that were very important for all his life. The last part of the journey is a journey with the ship over the ocean to the origin of the river Amazon. This is the last part of the journey and it is where the eternity begins.This is also a story of two men and two women, or three teachers and one student. This is a story of love and jealousy or love and revenge. The very important thing in this book is a relationship between materialistic world of science with all his natural principals, and spirituality. The last moments of life are just the right ones to think about the connection between them. The novel is very short. In some way, it is cyclic and written in such a way that at the end the reader has a feeling that the story is beginning not ending. But there is already the time for a following story - the story of the next traveller on the journey to the eternity.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Following Story,
By
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
Herman Musset, a quiet, introverted teacher of Latin and Greek, and who spends all of his time reading. He writes travel guides under the name of Dr Strabo, and calls it 'a moronic activity whereby I earn my living'. In his spare time - when he is not reading - he translates Ovid's Metamorphosis, a translation he wants nobody to see because, 'Our modern languages are altogether too wordy...the traffic jam, the jumble of words, blathering chaos.'
He falls asleep one night in his home in Amsterdam, and awakens in Lisbon, twenty years previous. He is unsure if he is dead, or has been transported back through time, or whether he is hallucinating. Or, maybe, some other possibility that he cannot imagine. All he knows is that the room he woke up in, the room in Lisbon, is the very same place where he slept with another man's wife. In waking up in this room, he remembers the actions of all those years ago and the people that were affected. Lisa d'India, a talented, beautiful student, he remembers the best. She was loved by all for her intelligence, loved by Herman for the ideal she represented. He admired her, appreciated her skill with Greek, but he did not love her in the carnal sense, the way every else seemed to. For Herman, sexual love '[has] more to do with the animal kingdom than with human beings, who concern themselves with the less tangible aspects of existence.' Lisa d'India is loved, most especially, by Arend Herfst, a poet and basketball teacher. He begins a relationship with the girl, and it seems that everyone but Herman is aware of this. Arend's wife, Maria Zeinstra, begins an affair with Herman, an affair of revenge, not love or lust, and Herman is completely unaware of this fact. Happily, the plot never moves into confusing betrayals or empty, 'romantic' gestures. Instead, we follow the events through the absent-minded, bewildered eyes of Herman. His affair with Maria Zeinstra, an affair that he did not plan and did not really want, is somewhat beyond his talents in people interaction. He does not know how to handle her, and luckily, does not have to. Herman is used merely as a piece in the strategy game that husband and wife are playing. Yet, Maria's relationship with Herman is not malicious, as far as we can tell, and is oftentimes quite gentle. The clandestine cum love story plot is one that can easily be ignored, and indeed is for most of the novel. The true focus is Herman. He is an amazing character, a learned, intelligent, gentle man, who is 'as ugly as Socrates'. He quotes Ovid, Tacitus and Shakespeare in his meandering confessions, he considers this philosophy or that author, wonders about the state of art and culture, comments on everything with a wry wink to the reader. Herman is a man who enjoys words more than anything else in this world, he enjoys reading them and - while he considers his own talents to be of a poor quality, and useless when compared to the Latin and Greek greats - he loves writing down his thoughts. Through the sarcasm and the negativity towards popular culture, there is a timid yet kind man who just wants to love his books in peace. An explanation for Herman's sleeping in Amsterdam and awakening in Lisbon twenty years earlier is given, but I will not reveal it. Towards the end of the novel, when Herman has relived the most vivid, alive experience of his life, when he has finished recounting an episode when the real world intrudes on his careful, closed existence of words and rhyme, he boards a ship, travelling with six other people, swapping dream-like stories of time and reality. In this section, the sardonic, witty narrator - Herman - all but disappears, replaced with a lazily beautiful chronicler of events of the mind. The transition is seamless and works very well, building up a sort of confused, dreamy tension until the last two amazing pages, and then the final, perfect sentence when the cloud of unanswered questions are blown away and we are left with a brilliant clarity and understanding.
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Masterpiece of modern literature,
This review is from: The Following Story (Hardcover)
I've come across this book quite inadvertently (or serendipitously taking into account the results)attracted by its European Literary Prize. But from the first page I was fascinated by this literary masterpiece of previously unknown (for me) author. It is a love story dressed in apparel of modern psychology and philosophy, overwhelming beautiful and devastatingly sad, absolutely devoided of schmaltz. This incredibly succinct book includes stupendous magnitude of contemplations and reflections, metaphors and symbols, images and emotions. Its composition is perfect - from humorous observations of ostentatious misanthrope nonplussed by extraordinary awaking in a memorable place to the pinnacle of genuine understanding of human tragedy of classical scope where jealousy and vengeance generate distorted passion and destroy real love. Its language is exquisite, the language of the sincere poet. It is the book which you'll want to reread when the last phrase still reverberates in your mind. It is one of the best books I've ever read, chef d'oeuvre of intelligent, perspicacious and generous author.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Witty and wise,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Following Story (Hardcover)
Mr. Nootebooms book tells a fascinating story about an outlived teacher in classical languages (or a classical teacher in languages). He getting more and more trouble with the problem of knowledge and reality. What is real? What is imagination or hallucinations? It's a rather sad book - but funny and wise. I really (?) enjoyd it and I thank Mr. Nooteboom for having written it. Anders Hjertén
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a gem!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
Rarely can such a slim book encompass such huge ideas and articulate them so eloquently. Additionally it is a brilliant love story with not a trace of sentimentality. (What, don't know what I'm talking about? Re-read the ending and determine to whom he is addressing the following story). A lapse or two into the farcical is really the only thing one can find to criticize here. It can bear up under, and deserves, several re-readings.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a Story!,
By
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
A friend told me, because I love Jim Harrison, Milorad Pavic', and Walker Percy, that I must read Cees Nooteboom. I bought "The Following Story". I can't explain this book. Van Morrison meets Rilke. Tom Waits meets Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Bruce Cockburn meets Larry Brown. This mysterious and deeply touching tale reaches heights most only dream of. It is a story of love, questions, regret, hope, death, and desire.Vivillo
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful novella.,
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
This is the first book by a dutch author I have read, and its excellence has led me to think that this nation is unfairly neglected. This book had many beautiful moments, and was, as far as I could tell, superbly translated.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Paradise Lost,
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
A novel which brings to mind Cristina Peri Rossi's dazzling The Ship of Fools cannot be too far from brilliant.
A wonderful read with depth which will inspire many a return. For readers of Nooteboom (and Peri Rossi for that matter) it appears more than one lost paradise is to be found within.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Earth-shaking one-liners,
By Girl Interrupted (United Arab Emirates) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
This book introduced me to Nooteboom and what an introduction it was! Nooteboom is a master, no words could do this work justice. Buy it, read it and i promise you, you will be re-reading it more times than you want to.
2 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Nice writing, weak story,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Following Story (Paperback)
"The Following Story" is full of lovely, epigramatical observations about life, language, love, and learning. I particularly liked the narrator's musings on his beloved Latin language, especially when he considers the names of the constellations and notes that "the blackboard of the sky was inscribed in Latin..." But the framing story that provides the pretext for these epigrams is much less impressive. The subject matter -- the adulterous affairs of academics -- is such a cliche of contemporary literature that it would need a treatment much more original than Nooteboom's to make it fresh again. Read this book for its language and its philosophical musings, but don't expect it to keep you up past bedtime.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
The Following Story by Cees Nooteboom (Paperback - January 22, 1996)
$13.95 $11.67
In Stock | ||