Author: Philip Roth
Translator: Young-mok Jeong
Publisher: Munhakdongne
Hardcover | 192 pages | 188*128mm
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About This Book
Philip Roth's 27th novel is a marvel of brevity, admirable for its
elegant style and composition (no surprise), but remarkable above all
for its audacity and ambition. It seizes unflinchingly on one of the
least agreeable subjects in the domain of the novel -- the natural
deterioration of the body. But beyond that, Everyman can be seen as a
bid to engage conclusively with the core anxieties that the literary
novel exists to confront: How, absent the shadow of God, in new and
confusing brightness, shall we decide what we are, how we human animals
should judge ourselves and whether we can love our species despite
everything?
Everyman begins with its hero's end, his interment. Only three of the
graveside mourners speak -- the dead man's daughter, his second wife and
his older brother. Ordinary puzzlement, sadness and resignation are
expressed: "That was the end. No special point had been made." What
follows is a summary retrospective of the protagonist's life. We see him
as a dutiful good son who, yielding to his parents' wishes, sets aside
his artistic aspirations and, after a tour of duty in the Navy, goes to
work in advertising. He prospers, ultimately becoming creative director
of a major New York-based firm. His infidelities figure in the breakups
of at least two of his three marriages. Along the way, he fathers two
sons (they reject him with bitterness for having left their mother) and
a hapless daughter, who adores him.
His health abruptly worsens when he is in his early fifties and he has
to live through 20 years of episodic but severe medical interventions:
many surgeries, including a quintuple bypass. His medical miseries
dominate his life. He retreats to an upscale retirement community on the
Jersey shore and devotes himself to painting (until he concludes that he
has nothing to say in that medium) and to teaching painting to his
fellow residents. He hears of colleagues declining, beginning to die
off. A last operation for a carotid blockage is fatal.
Roth has taken great pains to craft an archetypical American life for
his readers to contemplate. The nameless protagonist "was reasonable and
kindly, an amicable, moderate, industrious man," Roth writes. "He never
thought of himself as anything more than an average human being." He is
l'homme moyen sensuel to perfection, neither good nor bad -- or, rather,
about as good as he is bad. He has served his country. He has no visible
politics. He is unreligious (he gave up attending synagogue after his
bar mitzvah). He has met his obligations -- his material obligations --
to his immediate families, but he has made no wider benefactions that we
hear of. In his thought-life, there's nothing distinctive. He is
reasonably stoical about his medical ordeals, which are brought to life
in harrowing detail by the author, but toward the end he is less
stoical.
There is, in truth, more on the negative side of his ledger than on the
credit side. He is self-centered to a fault. In conscious envy of his
beloved elder brother's robust health, he turns against this man who has
been his sole steadfast friend. He deceives his wives. And he asserts a
comfortably exculpatory determinism when he thinks over the many
missteps in his life: "There was only our bodies, born to live and die
on terms decided by the bodies that had lived and died before us. If he
could be said to have located a philosophical niche for himself, that
was it -- he'd come upon it early and intuitively, and however
elemental, that was the whole of it. Should he ever write an
autobiography, he'd call it The Life and Death of a Male Body." Finally,
he is insular. He seems never to apprehend that he is suffering at a
privileged level, that great medical coverage means everything when the
bad luck begins.
Still, it is for some purpose that we are conducted through the salient
parts of a life not interesting in itself. What do we say, as readers,
waving farewell to this man? What assessment do we make of his life?
It's a feat, but through this clinically secular morality tale, Roth
manages to extract love and pity for his created mortal. Bravura
descriptions of his skirmishes with death skillfully penetrate the
readers' normal, reflexive resistance to such images. Although our hero
continues to fine-tune his rationalizations, his remorse -- powerfully
depicted -- breaks through. And virtuoso lyrical passages capture the
protagonist's yearning for the strength and joy of his youth: "Nothing
could extinguish the vitality of that boy whose slender little torpedo
of an unscathed body once rode the big Atlantic waves from a hundred
yards out in the wild ocean all the way in to shore. Oh, the abandon of
it, and the smell of the salt water and the scorching sun! Daylight, he
thought, penetrating everywhere, day after summer day of that daylight
blazing off a living sea, an optical treasure so vast and valuable that
he could have been peering through the jeweler's loupe engraved with his
father's initials at the perfect, priceless planet itself -- at his
home, the billion-, the trillion-, the quadrillion-carat planet Earth!"
Through consummate art, Roth elevates the links that bind his
protagonist to us, the readers who judge his life. From a distance,
Everyman looks like a shaggy dog story -- a long, quotidian story whose
meaning resides in its final pointlessness. Up close, though, it is a
parable that captures, as few works of fiction have, the pathos of
Being, as it's manifested even in the favored precincts of affluent
America. --Reviewed by Norman Rush / From The Washington Post
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