Understanding Camilo Jose Cela.
Gerling, David Ross
Lucile C. Charlebois. Columbia. University of South Carolina Press.
1998. xvi + 187 pages. $29.95. ISBN 1-57003-151-7.
Understanding Camilo Jose Cela by Lucile C. Charlebois is part of the
series Understanding Modern European and Latin American Literature
published by the University of South Carolina Press. The body of the
work consists of ten erudite essays, each one devoted to a different
novel by the Nobel laureate, beginning with La familia de Pascual Duarte
(1940; Eng. Pascual Duarte and His Family) and ending with the
untranslated La Cruz de San Andres (St. Andrew's Cross; 1994).
Besides the ten essays, the volume contains the following: a clear,
concise, and amenable introduction; some thirty pages of very readable
notes to the essays; an up-to-date selected bibliography; a two-page
conclusion; and a chronology that inexplicably silences Cela's
late-in-life divorce of Marfa del Rosario Conde Picavea for a much
younger woman.
Besides La familia de Pascual Duarte and La cruz de San Andres, the
eight remaining essays examine Pabellon de reposo (1944; Eng. Rest
Home), La colmena (1951; Eng. The Hive), Mrs. Caldwell habla con su hijo
(1953; Eng. Mrs. Caldwell Speaks to Her Son), San Camilo 1936 (1969),
Oficio de Tinieblas 5 (Service of Darkness 5; 1973), Mazurka para dos
muertos (1983; Eng. Mazurka for Two Dead Men), Cristo versus Arizona
(Christ versus Arizona; 1988), and El asesinato delperdedor (The Murder
of the Loser; 1994). Interestingly, the style of each essay reflects the
style of the particular novel under consideration. It is as if
Charlebois had so assimilated the esthetics of Cela's novels that
the essay on Oficio de Tinieblas 5, for example, is much more
challenging reading than the one on La familia de Pascual Duarte, By the
time I read the essay on El asesinato del perdedor, I was beginning to
wonder if the protagonists of this novel, or perhaps Cela himself, had
ever heard of Prozac.
Notwithstanding the editor's preface which proclaims that the
UMELL series is for undergraduate and graduate students as well as
nonacademic readers, the ten essays that constitute Understanding Cela
are definitely not for the general reading public. The South Carolina
series is not an easy reader a la Twayne's World Authors Series.
The ten essays in Charlebois's book sound like reworked chapters
from a dissertation or articles extracted from an academic literary
journal. While none of this detracts from the value of this book on
Spain's most celebrated and most decorated living writer, the
editors should realize that no one book can be all things to all
readers. Statements such as the following, referring to Mazurka para dos
muertos, probably would sound alien even to readers of the New York
Times Book Review: "Strung together by a protean, extradiegetic
narrator whose voice is intertwined with those of others, the dialogic
segments that surface as a result of the oral point of departure
manifest themselves in the rhythmic, strategically plotted, yet
spontaneously decontextualized, conversations/dialogues that serve as
guideposts for the entire discourse." And this is not an isolated
example.
Rather than a primer, Understanding Camilo Jose Cela is a
well-researched work bubbling with fresh insights for those who already
understand both Cela and, especially, the esthetics of the nueva novela.
David Ross Gerling Sam Houston State University