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Fire Under the Water


Article # : 15958 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1989  5,092 Words
Author : Arnost Lustig
Arnost Lustig is a Czech novelist whose books include Darkness Casts No Shadow, Diamonds of the Night, and A Prayer for Katerina Horovitzova. He teaches literature and film at American University.

       Do books have souls? Some books do, some don't. How long does the soul of a book last? That depends. Some books are stillborn, others are immortal. Jiri Weil's Life with a Star belongs to this latter category. These are the truly first-class books.
       
        When I was asked to write a few pages on Life with a Star and its author, the eminent Czech Jewish writer Jiri Weil, his name brought back images. A warm, spirited face. A knowing, tender smile. Graying black hair. Simple black glasses. I knew this man in Prague at the end of the fifties, at a difficult time when the communist revolution was devouring its own children, or, as the Czech saying goes, the swine were eating the sows.
       
        In those times, Weil had the courage to befriend young writers, and his was rare courage indeed. Even to speak to other people took courage. He was a friend to all the possibilities of art and did not abandon his position under pressure from the communists. He was in love with literature. Whatever other forces influenced his life, he was shaped by literature and was happy with a single goal: to be able, for a brief period, to determine the body and soul of Czech literature. And this he did. As writers were his brothers, young writers were his hope. He was a key figure in the struggle to keep art alive in communist Czechoslovakia.
       
        Yet Weil was a sad man, despite having one of those beautiful smiles that so often serve sad people as a deceptive façade. His life was sad, and what he had witnessed was far sadder. He saw the collapse of the prewar order in Europe, and of a common morality. First the crash of the market, leaving millions unemployed in Europe and America. ... (1997 of 28305 Characters)
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