Land of Marvels by Barry Unsworth
Apr. 16th, 2010 03:28 pm
The author has chosen as his theatre the fertile ground of
Into this unstable landscape Unsworth drops a carefully chosen group of characters. John Somerville is an archaeologist excavating a site that he hopes may be Assyrian, but a German company is building a railway that looks as though it will head straight through the centre of the site.
Some of the narratives are more successful than others but it is clear that all the characters are blinkered in some ways, either by their lack of understanding of the historical context in which they are situated or their lack of scientific understanding.
In many ways the book is a beautifully crafted artefact, but because the author keeps taking us out of the story to point out that it's a text, in the end it left me feeling quite dissatisfied. I just kept feeling that John le Carre would have done all the literary stuff unobtrusively and given us a cracking good spy story as well. Which is really my problem with modern literary fiction. Why can't a good novel tell a good story as well? Why do we have to be forcibly distanced from the characters? Unsworth does take the time at the end to tell us how the minor characters end up, but, to be honest, by the end I didn’t really care.