Sunday, August 24

The Time of Indifference + Fontamara

   A couple more book reviews.  Both books were written during the early
   years of Fascism in Italy, but they're quite different in style and
   substance.  "The Time of Indifference" is not political at all, while
   "Fontamara" is clearly political.  The former is closer in atmosphere
   to the decadence of "The Great Gatsby", while "Fontamara" is closer to
   the desperation in "Of Mice and Men", with some of the political fable-
   like qualities of "Animal Farm".

   1. "The Time of Indifference" ("Gli indifferenti") by Alberto Moravia
     <http://www.amazon.com/Time-Indifference/dp/1586420054>

   This is the first novel by Alberto Moravia, author of "The Conformist",
   "Boredom" and "Contempt".  It is set in Rome in the late 1920s.  It's
   the story of a middle-class family that has been used to the easy life,
   but has run into some financial troubles.

   Maria Grazia is a widow, living with her two children: daughter Carla
   and son Michele.  The mother has a long-standing boyfriend, Leo, but
   he seems to have shifted his attention to her daughter.  The other main
   character is Lisa, one of Maria Grazia's close friends who happens to
   be an ex-girlfriend of Leo.

   The pivotal event of the novel is Carla's 24th birthday.  She is aware
   of Leo's intentions, and decides that she will acquiesce, even though
   this will obviously hurt her mother.  She sees it as the start of her
   new life.  Meanwhile, 20 year old Michele has been flirting with Lisa,
   and is trying to decide whether to take it any further.

   Tensions between the characters surface at various times in the novel.
   When Maria Grazia and her family fall behind in their mortgage payments,
   Leo (self-made man and opportunist) tries to convince her to sell their
   house to him at a bargain price.  He considers he's doing them a favour
   by helping them settle their debts.  Interesting confrontations also
   occur when Michele finds out about Leo and Carla.  The mother, however,
   seems quite oblivious to what is actually going on.  She thinks Lisa is
   her rival, attempting to win back old flame Leo.

   This is another psychological novel by Moravia.  Through the extensive
   use of internal monologues, you're always aware of what each character
   is thinking as events unfold.  Admittedly at times I found this style a
   bit too intense, almost claustrophobic.  But this approach successfully
   brings out the theme of the book, which as suggested by the title is
   indifference: lethargy, lack of emotion, halfheartedness.  All of the
   characters think and resolve to act a certain way, but end up doing
   something else.  This mismatch is particularly stark in the case of
   Michele, the youngest and arguably the central character.

   Overall, an interesting read, but not quite as good as some of the
   author's later work (which I've reviewed in the past).


   2. "Fontamara" by Ignazio Silone
     <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignazio_Silone>

   This is the story of a peasant community living in Central Italy during
   the time of the Fascist regime.  The peasants from Fontamara struggle to
   make a living in the face of corruption and greed from government and
   capitalists.  Even the local priest, don Abbacchio, seems to have turned
   his back on his parishioners.

   Everyone tries to take advantage of the "backward" and gullible "cafoni".
   An outsider, l'Impresario, has bought up a lot of land upstream from
   Fontamara.  He begins using his political connections to great effect.
   The authorities want to divert the stream that irrigates the land of the
   Fontamarese, coincidentally to the benefit of the businesses of
   l'Impresario.  First they send a man to gather signatures for a petition,
   requesting the diversion(!).  The mostly illiterate cafoni are tricked
   into signing.  Then, after they find out what has happened, they request
   the assistance of don Circostanza (Mr Circumstance), the "Friend of the
   People".  He is a rich landowner and former mayor, who negotiates a
   "compromise" to share the water.  The deal means both l'Impresario and
   the Fontamerese will each get three-quarters of the water.  The peasants
   wonder how such an arrangement will work, but they have faith in don
   Circostanza and so they accept the deal.  Later it is revealed that the
   deal actually means l'Impresario will get three-quarters of the water,
   and the Fontamarese will get three-quarters of what's left!

   These are a couple of the many examples where the gullibility of the
   peasants is taken advantage of.  But the cafoni can only accept so much
   before they wake up and react.  It is the responses of the peasants that
   result in tragic consequences by the end of the novel.

   In some ways this book echoes some of the characters and themes in the
   epic Italian novel, "The Betrothed" by Alessandro Manzoni.

   It's also interesting to note that the author was a founding member of
   the Italian Communist party.  He wrote the book while in exile in
   Switzerland.  But the surprising "twist" is that, according to evidence
   that has recently emerged, Silone may have actually been an informant
   for the Fascist secret police during the period.  This revelation has
   prompted people to question the book's message.  Did the author use his
   writing as a cover, almost as if he was acting as a double-agent?  Could
   the author have intended the book as a cautionary tale against the
   excesses of corruption, rather than being a simple exposè of the corrupt
   actions of the Fascism regime?  We may never know.

   Whatever the motivations for the novel, it still stands up as a well-
   written (albeit exaggerated) story about the struggles of poor and
   illiterate peasants in an environment of greed and corruption.