Wednesday, 28 March 2012

28th Mar 2012 Noir - A Black & White Novel

Mar 28A
I discovered a new book 'Noir' by Robert Coover, translated to Spanish, that fascinates me. No, I didn't mean the translation does as I haven't read the original to compare if it had been translated straightly keeping the author's ideas precisely and respectfully. I mean the story and the way it's told. It's really several stories put together.

The part that tells the story of an oriental prostitute who had her entire body tattooed, covering every centimetre of skin, used by 2 Mafias to send coded messages to each other, an epistolary relationship that documents 2 things: the competitiveness of the 2 men who continuously demonstrate, mutually, each one's power and, the other, absolutely everything could become literature.
 
It's one of the many collateral stories with the text that follows strictly the clichés of the kind with a new layer of paint - copy, imitate, duplicate if you like - in black & white. The protagonist is a detective called Philip M. Noir, his secretary Blanche - which is to say, a black & while novel. Coover had learned the lesson of transforming it in the labyrinth, a tangled web of languages. The digression , deviation from the main point, is more interesting than the principal story, practically non-existent.

To our hero, who acts as if he had escaped from the hard boiled experiment of Mickey Spillane or from the Sin City of Frank Miller, couldn't care less about the object of his mission, didn't even know the name of his client, a black widow. Each story opens a new hole in a heavily coded universe. Each character extends a hand in Noir to meddle in another space, another time.
 
In a certain way, this magnificent Noir is the culmination of formal investigations which Coover, pioneer of hypertext , announced in an article, so visionary like 'The end of books'. One of his worries in that brief article was: what would happen to the novel when it loses it's centre of gravity, what would happen when the lack of closure pushing the readers against the cords.

It's a literary project difficult to conclude but Coover, who has de-constructed myths, legends and fairy tales in exemplary books like 'Poker magic', or 'Zarzarrosa' knew to transcend the condition of the post-modern artefact to transform it, with Noir, in a novel that talks to the reader, one to one. a very different and perturbing high jump without a net.

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