Beth Gibbons: Lives Outgrown
First Night of the New Symphony Season

Jonathan Geltner: Absolute Music

The moment I saw the cover of this book I wanted to read it. 

AbsoluteMusic

It isn't just that she's a pretty girl, or even that she seems miraculously suspended in space. Presumably she's jumping on a trampoline, and the image we see is only a bare instant in one of those jumps, frozen by the camera. The power of the image is in the look on her face, that her eyes seem to be on or searching for something in the far distance, and that she seems to be not just suspended but ascending. Or levitating. Maybe that's it--it's like those medieval saints who were said to levitate. 

Did the novel live up to the promise of that picture? Well, not really. But that only shows the power described in the old saying: a picture is worth a thousand words. That's generally true but almost necessarily true if the words are an attempt to describe, or provide an equivalent of, the picture.  How could words, no matter how brilliantly chosen and placed, do just what that image does? Words must be read in sequence, over some period of time, while the image has its effect in an instant, and this is a picture of an instant.

More to the point, is it a good novel? Yes, it is. 

I can't help associating the girl in the picture with a crucial character in the novel, who hardly appears at all but is very significant. Her name is Hannah, and she and the narrator, who is in his middle or late thirties, had been childhood friends. (It's mentioned in passing that she did in fact have a trampoline.) As they entered their teens he fell in love with her, but never had a chance to do anything about it because she died suddenly of an unsuspected brain aneurysm on New Year's Eve of 1995, just shy of her fourteenth birthday. On that night he might have made, in fact had more or less intended to make, some kind of approach or declaration to her. But he chose, instead of going to the New Year's Eve party at her house, to play Dungeons and Dragons with friends (and drink beer, his first experience of drunkenness). 

The novel opens in 2017, and the first-person narrator has not thought much about Hannah for many years. Then the sight of honey locust trees on an October evening sparks his sudden recollection of the night of her death:  

...my mind without warning or apparent cause [was] seized by the memory that despite every reason to be by her side I spent the night that my childhood love Hannah died far away from her, playing a game of fantasy and getting drunk.

This sudden surge of memory is the catalyst for a series of recollections amounting to a review of his whole life since adolescence, and to events which lead to major upsets in his marriage and his life in general. 

The narrator is, we are told, a writer of fantasy novels, but I admit I was never quite convinced of that--I mean, convinced that he had actually written popular fantasy. Certainly he is extremely interested in fantasy, but the interest seems more that of a reader and a thinker than of a practitioner. I would in fact describe him first as an intellectual, but a polymath, not a specialist: very widely read, very much preoccupied with ideas, having a useful knowledge of multiple languages, a cellist accomplished enough to play Bach's cello suites, and a composer of music, at least in his student days.

And this is a very cerebral novel. It's almost the exact opposite of the last book I wrote about here, Mark Helprin's A Soldier of the Great War. That novel, though not lacking in thought, and implying much more, is primarily a story of action, often very robust (to say the very least) physical action. This one, though not lacking in physical action, is primarily one of thought, often fairly abstract thought. And whereas the main body of Soldier is one continual sequential narrative, Absolute Music is a sort of mosaic of memories of different times and places, moving among the latter in a connected but not sequential fashion, though always within the framework of the events following that moment in 2017. 

This sometimes leads to memories within memories, a technique which I found somewhat confusing at times. I've just glanced back at a section which begins from the point of view of 2017, looks back into 2001, and from there into 1989. As these recollections are often, or usually, accompanied by some more or less abstract philosophical or theological reflection, it is easy--or at least it was easy for me--to lose track of where and when we are.

And I could have done with less explicit philosophizing, though the complaint is a little unfair, as that is clearly the nature of the narrator. But though it may be at times a little confusing to me, the novel itself is not confused. It's in fact pretty tightly structured. Its structure is based on that of Bach's cello suites, a conscious and explicit decision by the narrator, who refers to the narrative as "suites." There are six of these, one for each of the cello suites. And each suite is divided into seven parts, corresponding to the dances, or pseudo-dances, of Bach's work: Allemande, Courante, Sarabande, two Minuets or Bourrees or Gavottes, Gigue. I would be surprised if there is not some significant relationship of the "dances" of the novel's suites to Bach's, but I did not make the effort of figuring it out. (And I don't know the cello suites so well that the relationship is obvious.) And I'm pretty sure that themes and ideas are worked into the novel as musical themes are worked into a symphony or other substantial work, though, again, I did not attempt to dig them out and analyze them. 

So. We have an elaborately woven picture of a man's mind and life, including the intimate presences of friends, family, lovers, and wives--two of the latter. And places: I would be culpably negligent if I failed to mention the important role which place and love of place have in this novel. Much of it is set in Cincinnati, and I have to admit that I had not thought of Cincinnati as a place inspiring deep affection and study. But I believe it here. In saying that the novel is cerebral I don't mean to imply that it is indifferent to the physical, which is portrayed vividly. Those honey locusts in the opening pages, for instance, are described in detail, not only those specific trees at that moment, but the species at large.

What does this picture portray? What is most significant in it? This is a complex novel and that's not a question to which I would attempt to give a full answer in a blog-length review, or in fact without reading the book a second time, which I may do--I think it would be worth re-reading. It is a startlingly full book, though it isn't quite 300 pages long; it's crammed with incident and thought and people and places. It would take me another thousand words just to name the characters and their relationships. One of the blurbs on the back cover emphasizes its focus on the elemental human relationship, man and woman. And that's a fair reading. But I think these few sentences, which occur near the end of the book, are closer to the heart of it:

It seemed to me in that dim midday that only in the pure music I had long since renounced, the absolute music that reaches into the world behind the world, can the artist master time, set a time signature at will and free of words. But even that was an illusion, wasn't it? For only in performance...only then is the composer's time realized, only then--in time.

I wanted to believe that singing in my veins and sinews from one autumn to the next there had been many kinds of music that made up one great music. Who then was the composer, and for whom did he compose?

*

With A Soldier of the Great War still fresh in my mind, it occurs to me that the experience of reading it, a mostly straightforward linear narrative, provides something closer to the experience of music than does the musically organized Absolute Music. Like music, a story as such is experienced in time, and moreover it is, you might say, a simulation of time: it depicts events, which by definition exist in the stream of time and therefore in the only sequence of which we have knowledge and experience, the only one we can truly call sequence, the one we call chronological, They may not be presented in that order, but if the result is to be a story in any useful sense of the term, it must at least be susceptible of that ordering. In a non-linear narrative, at least one in which the non-linearity is the norm and not an occasional effect, we see temporally disconnected pieces of the story. There is no continual flow, and we can only grasp the story as a story after we've received all the pieces, i.e. out of time. Some assembly required. This is not necessarily a bad thing, and may be very effective artistically. But it is a different sort of experience from the elemental one of hearing a story. 

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I remember seeing a little bit of press on this book when it first came out but I had forgotten about it. It sounds pretty interesting to me and I've added it to my list, but not sure how soon I'll get to it.

Your comments on narrative are timely, as I've just read Byung-Chul Han's book The Crisis of Narration, and prior to that Helprin's latest novel The Oceans and the Stars. There is an odd thing going on with Gen Z in which many of them have a sort of fixation on nostagia -- they like art and music that gives them nostalgic feelings. This has struck me as odd, given that most of them are in their 20's and would seem to have little (so far) to feel nostalgic about. But while reading Han's book it occurred to me that perhaps their feelings of nostalgia aren't truly related to their own lives at all, but rather to a more general sense that the past is gone, and they don't have the tools to reconnect with it via narrative, being the first fully "digital" generation. Instead of real "stories" they get deluged with mere information. So the question becomes, how do we teach "narration" in this sense to a generation which has largely grown up without it? Our generation, and even Gen X and millennials, still functioned under the older mentality in which narration meant something. It's now been levelled out though, so that narrative is just something that everyone has -- Han calls this "the inflation of narrative" -- there's this narrative and that narrative but no one pays attention to actual narration, i.e., storytelling.

It has also occurred to me that perhaps Gen Z is using the word "nostalgic" wrong. One sees comments on YouTube all the time that say things like "this song makes me feel so nostalgic." Ok, but the person writing it is probably 23 -- what, really, do they have to feel nostalgic about? Perhaps they're using the word to mean "melancholic" or "wistful." Or has the digital world so telescoped their lives that they really do already feel nostalgic about their childhoods and teen years?

I have on order from the library a book that Han frequently refers to in his work, Peter Handke's The Jukebox and Other Essays on Storytelling, and am intrigued to see what it has to say.

The Helprin book is very good, by the way, although it's disappointing to see that it's the first of his novels to receive almost no attention in the literary press. It came out last October, I think, but I didn't hear about it until March, when a friend sent around an interview with him that mentioned it. Kirkus and Booklist both liked it a lot, as did NR and the New York Journal of Books, but as far as I can see none of the bigger literary sources even reviewed it which, as I say, is a first.

"It's now been levelled out though, so that narrative is just something that everyone has -- Han calls this "the inflation of narrative" -- there's this narrative and that narrative but no one pays attention to actual narration, i.e., storytelling."

I hadn't thought about it, but this is to a great degree a misuse of the word "narrative." As in "The Republican narrative is that Trump is being unfairly targeted" or "The Democrat narrative is that Harris is joyful." These are more accurately described as the interpretation of events, or just the crafting of an image, not actual narrative. It used to be called "spin." Or just "propaganda." I heard it just today from football announcers: "The narrative around this guy is that he's very hard to tackle in space." (I'm always tickled by that use of "in space." Sports announcers say the darndest things.)

I think I get the nostalgia you're describing among 20-somethings. I can remember having similar feelings when I was young, about things that had happened less than a decade before. Sometimes it really was a species of nostalgia, even though from the point of view of older people it seems ridiculous. "Nostalgia" for the 1950s existed in the late 1960s among people in their twenties or even teens. Sometimes it was a form of sehnsucht.

I'm continually being a little shocked when I read books like this one. For the narrator and I assume also the author, 1995 is a long time ago and he's a very different person from the 14-year-old he was then. For me, it's part of the long plateau of adult life, and doesn't seem that long ago.

re misuse of the word "narrative." Yes, Han gets this, and is why he prefers to use the word "narration" for what he's talking about. At one point he even says that "storytelling" has been replaced by "storyselling."

"Sometimes it was a form of sehnsucht." -- Yes, that I can see.

Btw, I'm sure you noticed that you responded to a comment by Jonathan Geltner on Dreher's substack yesterday....

Yes, I did notice that. Started to remark on the book and possibly link to this post, but then thought "Well, it's not a totally positive review" and didn't.

About young people and "nostalgia": I remember at the age of maybe 10 or 12 poking around in my grandmother's attic, which was a good old-school attic, a real room full of stuff, and finding some old Christmas decorations that made me feel something that could be described as nostalgia. But it made no sense as that. I definitely associated the feeling with the past, but the decorations probably weren't much older than me.

"storyselling"--ha--that's good.

Here are some other reviews of Absolute Music. They go further into the plot and the ideas dealt with. The second one is quite lengthy and I admit that I did not finish it.

https://www.dappledthings.org/reviews/absolute-music-by-jonathan-geltner

https://afkimel.wordpress.com/2022/07/27/ambiguities-of-nature-jonathan-geltners-absolute-music/

https://chireviewofbooks.com/2022/07/08/absolute-music/

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