'The Books of Jacob,' a Nobel Prize winner's sophisticated and overwhelming novel

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 19, 2024


'The Books of Jacob,' a Nobel Prize winner's sophisticated and overwhelming novel
'The Books of Jacob' By Olga Tokarczuk. Translated from the Polish by Jennifer Croft. Illustrated. 964 pages. Riverhead Books. $35.

by Dwight Garner



NEW YORK, NY.- Polish writer Olga Tokarczuk was, in 2019, a youthful winner of the Nobel Prize in literature. She was 57, dreadlocked, mischievous of politics, a vegetarian.

Her novel “Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead” had recently been turned, by Agnieszka Holland, into the film “Spoor,” a slice of existential and ecology-minded dread.

Tokarczuk was not among those laureates the Swedish Academy sometimes seems to prop up in the crypt for a final viewing. Her career was, and is, in full gallop.

Her novels — they are often both pensive and mythic in tone — are slowly making their way into English. In addition to “Drive Your Plow,” these include the philosophical and often dazzling “Flights,” about travel and being between stations. It won the 2018 Man Booker International prize.

Tokarczuk’s most ambitious novel — the Swedish Academy called it her “magnum opus” — has long been said to be “The Books of Jacob,” first published in Poland in 2014. It’s here now. At nearly 1,000 pages, it is indeed magnum-size.

Even its subtitle (rare, on a novel) is a mouthful. The first third reads: “A fantastic journey across seven borders, five languages and three major religions, not counting the minor sects.”

If you sense you are about to step into a sword-and-sandal epic with a mud room, you would not be altogether wrong. If you detect a saving, dill-scented note of satire, you would not be wrong either.

Set in the mid-18th century, “The Books of Jacob” is about a charismatic self-proclaimed messiah, Jacob Frank, a young Jew who travels through the Hapsburg and Ottoman empires, attracting and repelling crowds and authorities in equal measure.

Frank is based on a real historical figure; the author has clearly done her research. Tokarczuk hews closely to the twists and turns of Frank’s fate as he converts to Islam and then to Catholicism and, along the way, becomes a proto-Zionist.

Convicted of heresy, he spends many years in prison. His ideas are important, as they say, if true.

To remark that “The Books of Jacob” is about the vexed wanderings of a cult leader, however, is akin to remarking that Thomas Pynchon’s “Mason & Dixon” is about two men who go for a walk.

“The Books of Jacob” is an unruly, overwhelming, vastly eccentric novel. It’s sophisticated and ribald and brimming with folk wit. It treats everything it bumps into at both face value and ad absurdum. It’s Chaucerian in its brio.

This Jacob, he’s a specimen: muscular, tall, dimpled. His abundant beard gleams in the sun. He is as graceful as a red deer. He is enigmatic and earthy, a singer of filthy songs.

He heals the sick and renders lost things found. A comet follows him in the sky. The chickens he touches lay eggs with three yolks.

A greasy nimbus of borderline-comic sexuality swims around him. Women are said to gaze in astonishment at his genitalia.

Later, it is said that he has two penises. Conveniently, it seems he can retract one when two seem like a handful. He can make women pregnant by looking at them, as Jim Morrison was (I think) said to be able to do.



Also on Artdaily
A day of divas





Multiple other characters spin in orbit around him. There are serried ranks of wives and lovers and misfits and buttinskies and assorted hangers-on.

Two supporting characters are particularly important. One is Nahman, a rabbi who becomes Jacob’s Boswell. Awkwardly, Nahman’s wife and Jacob despise each other.

Then there’s Yente, an elderly woman, on the edge of death, who swallows an amulet and becomes essentially immortal. She views the action as if from atop a minaret and serves, as Tokarczuk semi-jokingly put it in an interview, as a kind of “fourth-person narrator.”

This enormous novel makes space for a landslide of incident and commentary. There are plagiarism scandals and the cutting of difficult toenails. There are misanthropic doctors and bishops with gambling debts. Bloodstains are bummers.

The usefulness of Latin is debated, gout is suffered, colds are caught, large breasts are fetishized, fresh-squeezed pomegranate juice is quaffed. At a key moment, a character might wander off and weed the oregano. It’s that kind of book.

Tokarczuk can be very funny. Jacob asks, in front of one audience: “Why does the spirit like olive oil so much? Why all that anointing?” Jennifer Croft’s sensitive translation is in tune with the author’s many registers; she even makes the puns click.

The comedy in this novel blends, as it does in life, with genuine tragedy: torture, betrayal, imprisonment, death.

Darker themes surface. Jews are hounded, chased across the landscape. Early intimations of the Holocaust are felt.

The author pays close attention to the fates of female characters. Inequalities are always on pointed display. “How did it happen,” one character thinks, “that some have to pay while others collect?”

“The Books of Jacob” feels modern in its sense of an old order ending. End times feel closer than they once did. People hear “the clanking of the angelic arsenal.” Jacob offers his grateful followers a sense that someone has a handle on what is going on.

This novel’s density is saturnalian; its satire nimble; academics will tug at its themes, as if they were pinworms, for decades. The author’s enthusiasm never flags, even when a reader’s does. She bulldozes the sprawl forward.

Yet the characters remain at a distance. “The Books of Jacob” rarely touches the emotions. No page, for me, turned itself. A word from “Finnegans Wake” came to mind: thunderslog.

I don’t mean to dissuade. As with certain operas, I’m glad to have had the experience — and equally glad that it’s over.



Publication notes:

'The Books of Jacob' By Olga Tokarczuk Translated from the Polish by Jennifer Croft Illustrated. 964 pages. Riverhead Books. $35.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

January 26, 2022

Whitney Biennial picks 63 artists to take stock of now

Baltimore Museum of Art announces 54 acquisitions across encyclopedic holdings

Lark Mason Associates offers up a veritable treasure chest of gold and other U.S. coins and jewelry

Art Basel announces participating galleries, artists, and highlights for 'OVR:2021'

Exhibition shows how Paul Gauguin and the group of artists around him created an entirely new painterly expression

Sony Music buys Bob Dylan's recorded music

Exhibition honours the work of Denmark's most important female sculptor.

British Library and University of Westminster announce major research collaboration into Black British music

Sprüth Magers opens an exhibition of works by four leading women artists at Gallery 181

Reynolda announces acquisitions of works by John Singer Sargent and Minnie Evans

"Germaine Richier and colour" opens at Galerie de la Béraudière in Brussels

Sale celebrates 70 years of photographs at Swann

H&H Classics launch a rolling 4x7 timed online auction service to replace the live auctions online

P·P·O·W to represent Astrid Terrazas

WSU Fine Arts Dean Rodney Miller named Ulrich Museum Interim Director

"A Site of Struggle: American Art against Anti-Black Violence" opens at The Block Museum of Art

Winter exhibitions at Herron Galleries showcase John Buck, American abstract artists

Global Positioning: New artworks by 20 international artists on view in NYC, Chicago & Boston

Justin Peck and collaborators combine gravitational universes

Touring through omicron: Broadway shows hit bumps on the road

Art Fund announces Queer Britain as new tenants at 2 Granary Square

A day of divas

'The Books of Jacob,' a Nobel Prize winner's sophisticated and overwhelming novel

Centro de Artes Gallery reopens to the public with internationally inspired exhibit

9 Common Mistakes to Avoid in Heat Press Printing

Outlook Support Phone Number +1-888-298-0208




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful