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Showing posts with label Tom Rachman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Rachman. Show all posts

Saturday, March 16, 2019

The Italian Teacher by Tom Rachman review / Great art and monstrous selfishness



The Italian Teacher by Tom Rachman review – great art and monstrous selfishness This exhilarating Costa-shortlisted novel about a son in thrall to his painter father skewers the hyperbole and hypocrisies of the art world

Clare Clark
Tue 15 Dec 2018

I
n 2001, Marina Picasso published a memoir, Picasso: My Grandfather. “His brilliant oeuvre demanded human sacrifices,” she asserted bitterly, adding that “no one in my family ever managed to escape from the stranglehold of this genius. He needed blood to sign each of his paintings … the blood of those who loved him – people who thought they loved a human being, whereas they really loved Picasso.” The damage is well documented: Picasso’s second wife Jacqueline, his longtime muse and lover Marie-Thérèse Walter and his grandson Pablito all took their own lives. His son Paulo, Marina’s father, struggled with depression and died in 1975 from alcohol-related illness.

Does great art justify monstrous selfishness? Must the lovers and children crushed by the careless cruelties of genius accept their suffering as inevitable, even irrelevant? Can they ever claim their lives as their own? These are the questions at the heart of The Italian Teacher, Tom Rachman’s Costa-shortlisted third novel.
Bear Bavinsky (who disparages his “overpraised” rival Picasso as “that clown”) is a charismatic American artist of growing reputation in 1950s Rome. In his paint-splattered studio, where he lives in bohemian squalor with his young wife and son, he creates his “Life Stills”, huge, wildly coloured canvases portraying a single magnified detail of the female body, “a roll of tummy fat, or a pricked shoulder”, but never the subject’s face. Though he paints feverishly, Bear judges only a handful of the paintings he makes fit to keep. The rest he burns. He disdains private collectors in favour of galleries and museums who will put his work on public display. Of course his apparent indifference to commercial success only enhances his reputation. By the 80s Julian Schnabel is describing Bavinsky as “the greatest of the modern American greats”.

Picasso in his studio in Vallauris with Brigitte Bardot, 1956. Photograph: Jerome Brierre

Rachman has terrific fun skewering the hyperbole and hypocrisies of the art world. While it is hardly virgin territory, he brings a shrewd eye and a knack for aphorism that lend his observations a satisfyingly sharp edge. “Popularity is a tan,” one dealer observes tartly. “It fades when out of the light.” Satire, however, is not his main business. Though Bear is the blazing sun around whom everyone in The Italian Teacher orbits, the novel’s protagonist is his son Charles, or, as Bear calls him, Pinch, after pinxtos, the little snacks served in Spanish bars. Pinch hero-worships his father and, like a snack, Bear swallows his son whole, feeding off his devotion and granting in return short bursts of attention cut with much longer periods of careless disregard. Pinch tries desperately not to mind. The work, he knows, must always come first. After Bear leaves for New York and a new wife, teenage Pinch, aching for his father’s approval, devotes himself to painting. His potter mother praises his talent but it is Bear’s brutally offhand dismissal that strikes home. “I gotta tell you, kiddo,” he tells Pinch. “You’re not an artist. And you never will be.”
A shattered Pinch turns to art history in the hope of writing Bear’s biography; when that plan stalls he takes a job as a teacher at a language school. His life shrinks, crushed between his yearning to live up to his father and the terror that he will end up like his increasingly unstable mother. Bear appears in his life in brief, bright, heart-breaking flashes, like a god or an avenging angel, smashing Pinch’s small certainties before vanishing again.
Pinch’s middle years are a study in neediness, disappointment and self-disgust: “With hideous clarity, Pinch sees himself: a pompous bore, a man he’d dislike.” While psychologically acute, this poses novelistic challenges Rachman appears at first not quite to meet. In its central third the novel slows to a crawl as Pinch limps through his lonely, colourless existence, unwilling to recognise his father’s monstrousness or admit his own collusion, unable to forge a convincing self of his own. Passively, unhappily, he sags into middle age. The plot, such as it is, sags too.
It seems a surprising miscalculation from a novelist of Rachman’s calibre until the book reaches its final climactic third and he delivers his sucker punch of a payoff. Against the odds, almost against his will, Pinch does something extraordinary, something that will ensure a complete reworking of the record and extract a kind of revenge that is both exhilarating and terrible. The final chapters recast both father and son in a different light, compelling us to revisit our assumptions, to look at them – and the novel itself – afresh. The satisfaction of the ending, and its moral ambiguity, underscore the impossibility of easy answers. Is the work all that matters? The critical and popular adulation that greeted the recent Picasso show at Tate Modern would seem to say that it is. But The Italian Teacher pushes us further. If success is at least as much about the artist as the work, and its value as much about the market as the artist, then what possible hope is there for authenticity?

 Clare Clark’s In the Full Light of the Sun will be published by Virago in February. The Italian Teacher is published by Riverrun.



Friday, March 1, 2019

Books that made me / Tom Rachman / ‘Does every author read faster than I do?’



Booksthat made me
Tom Rachman: ‘Does every author read faster than I do?’

The author on his love for short stories, crying at Curious George and why he no longer feels he must finish ‘great’ books


Tom Rachman
Friday 1 March 2019


The book I am currently reading

When asked this question, writers often list 493 books, all on their (apparently capacious) bedside tables. Of the 493, I’ve typically heard of two. Which raises questions. 1) Am I an ignoramus? 2) Does every author read faster than I do? My list is two-and-a-half books long. First, Masha Gessen’s The Man Without a Face, about Putin. Second, Martin Amis’s essay collection The Rub of Time. Last, Daniel Deronda by George Eliot, for which I’m crediting myself only a half-book, since I’ve been in a troubled relationship with it for a year. We keep getting back together. I know it won’t work. But I can’t end it.
The book that changed my life

While I was studying cinema at university, Elie Wiesel published a memoir, All Rivers Run to the Sea, about surviving the Nazi death camps and his subsequent blossoming as a reporter and novelist. I was so moved, underlining passages throughout. My dreams of film-making receded; I wanted to try writing. Years later, I met Wiesel briefly, and discovered how hard it is to convey to a stranger what he has meant to you.
The book that had the greatest influence on me

Any collection of George Orwell’s essays that includes Politics and the English Language and Why I Write. The first essay taught me how to identify blather, and that clarity is a form of courage. The second – with its confession to the petty motives behind writing alongside the noble ones – encouraged me to be frank, even if facing scorn for it.
The book I’m most ashamed not to have read

Books are a poor cause for shame when there are so many better places to apply it. Still, I panicked before one of my first public readings, fearing that the audience might spontaneously quiz me on great works I’d never read. This nightmare never materialised because an audience hardly materialised, just one rickety couple in the last row, she stage-whispering: “Walter, wake up – the young man’s talking!” I’m less frantic about my literary gaps now. In a lifetime, one has only so many books, which is good reason to never feel shame at quitting them when deserving multitudes still await.
The book I think is most underrated

An entire form as underrated: the short story. So few prominent publications bother with them anymore, though they seem ideally suited to our diminished attention spans. I dream of starting a free culture newspaper, handed out at train stations, and including one topical short story per edition. Billionaires who don’t mind losing their entire investment should get in touch.



The book that changed my mind

My adulthood started in the 1990s, when the west was still pleased with itself. Free-market ideals appeared both triumphant and moral. Unthinkingly, I shared these assumptions. Tony Judt’s Ill Fares the Land showed how shallow I’d been. Our vanity was underpinned by vice – self-interest, above all. This has aged into real ugliness. Sadly, Judt didn’t age with us, dying in 2010, the year this book came out. I wish he were here to explain 2019.
The last book that made me cry

Curious George and the Firefighters by Margret and HA Rey. I love reading to my son, but some books challenge parental devotion. As if the 41,938th reading wasn’t enough to bring me to tears, he inadvertently poked it in my eye.
The book I couldn’t finish

I once read an interview with Gabriel García Márquez in which he declared himself too old to keep finishing books that he didn’t like. His admission became my permission, and I started stopping. If you want names, here are just a few of the reportedly great books I’ve broken up with: Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, Underworld by Don DeLillo, Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon.
My earliest reading memory

My first memory of reading is of not reading. Everyone in my family devoured books. I, the youngest, felt like a dunce. In foggy memory, I recall a copy of James and the Giant Peach. And Dickens on tape, although you might not count that reading. Only in my mid-teens did I discover the bliss of books, and haven’t stopped since.
The book I give as a gift

I should buy Orwell’s essays in bulk; I’m always giving them away. Not just for the two pieces mentioned earlier, but also “Killing an Elephant” and “Such, Such Were the Joys” and “A Hanging” and “Notes on Nationalism.” His observations endure, while his ability to face unpleasant facts is a tonic in self-deceived times.
The book I’d most like to be remembered for

Although my debut, The Imperfectionists, is better known, another of my novels means more to me, The Rise and Fall of Great Powers. Is its obscurity why I hold it dear? It’s as if you have had one child who is shunned, so you grow especially protective, hoping that someday others might see in them what you do.

 The Italian Teacher by Tom Rachman is published in paperback by Riverrun.




THE BOOKS THAT MADE ME
2017
13 October 2017
Eimear McBride / ‘I can never finish Dickens – it’s sacrilege’
20 October 2017
Shami Chakrabarti / ‘Harry Potter offers a great metaphor for the war on terror’