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Light in the Mirror


Article # : 16516 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1989  1,851 Words
Author : Michael D. Aeschliman
Michael D. Aeschliman teaches English literature at the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Restitution of Man.

       A SEASON IN THE WEST
       Piers Paul Read
       New York: Random House
       240 pp., $16.95
       
        Speaking of the velocity, volatility, and "pluralism" of late twentieth century experience, Czeslaw Milosz has said:
       
        We are constantly threatened by chaos and nothingness
        because life as such is an enormous multiplicity. My
        personal feeling about the twentieth century is that we are
        submerged. The things that happened in this century in the
        sense of horror and heroism escape our thinking and
        formulations. The century is largely untold.
       
        Literary art since Auschwitz and the Gulag somehow often seems--however well made or otherwise interesting--very small. With the possible exception of Solzhenitsyn, "the century is largely untold." Even Milosz's profound poems and prose books reach but a few and are consciously tragic, stoical, and aristocratic.
       
        In the major novels of the English writer Piers Paul Read there is to be found another exception to this analysis. I know of no finer, deeper, more serious, or satisfying novelist now writing in our language. His three large historical novels--The Junkers (1968; about Germany), Polonaise (1976; about Poland), and The Free Frenchman (1986; about ... (1997 of 10692 Characters)
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