Max the Maximal, although a highly paid and influential barrister for a major international law firm that has its fingers in many European Union and United Nations' pies, is a loser. He knows this, and it's a canker of self-realization that has gnawed persistently at his interior throughout his remarkably yielding life, hollowing him out and putting the blinders over his eyes at select—and crucial—periods along the way; a state of affairs that has led him into the existential crisis he is facing when the novel opens. You see, Max loves Jessie, and is fairly certain that, in her own damaged and incommunicable fashion, the elfin Jessie loves him too. Yet despite this—or, perhaps, because of it—one night she recently phoned him at work and, in the midst of pleading with him to return home, suddenly blew her brains out with Max in mid-protest. Besides messily terminating Jessie's existence, the cannonade sent surging electrically through the wires has shredded Max's left eardrum. Having already been demoted from the firm's first tier of operations at its Viennese head office to its distinctly secondary one in backwater Leipzig, Max decides to end it all in a typical nineties style: with a quarter-pound of blow to ice the pain and fuel his self-loathing and send him along a wantonly self-destructive journey.
However, by a series of odd coincidences, the young female host of a late-night radio talk show devoted to bleak nihilism—the somewhat Jessie-like Clara—comes into Max's life, enduring considerable verbal, mental, and physical abuse from the maniacally forlorn and suicidal lawyer-in-despair in order to coax the story of Max and Jessie from the the unwilling depths of Max's memory. What emerges is a disturbing and blurry commingling of legal maneuverings, drug smuggling, youthful flames and friendships and jealousies, and EU expansion eastward, all darkly limned with the sulphuric shades of Serbian atrocities in Bosnia. Jessie's father and brother are involved in some nasty business; and the waifish Jessie, a spiritually rich girl whose social skills are, shall we say, underdeveloped—whose mind seems to operate near the borderlands of autism, in a world of wolves and lions, yellows and faeries, angels-as-slugs and bottomless wells—was apparently being manipulated by her kin into serving the family firm; and inexorably dragged a younger Max and his Adonis-like roommate Shershah into the maelstrom along the way.
This is an impressive book, the more so considering it was Zeh's first—published when she was a mere twenty-six—and the winner of the Deutscher Bücherpreis, of which I am admittedly ignorant but which sounds on the face of it like a big deal for a young writer. Nicely translated, Zeh's prose is spare and sleek, capable of a markedly expressive beauty and stark, haunting anomie. Her late-nineties Europe is a paradigm of modernized sterility, with form-functional and space-opening Ikea furnishings abounding, leaving plenty of room for the coked-up nihilistic meanderings of a deranged and skeletal ex-lawyer in and around a populace that serves as little more than a background murmur. The threnodic odyssey of Max, a perfervid obsession to a Jessie that quite likely never existed as described outside the confines of his memories, acts as a magnet, drawing other morbid and enigmatic obsessions to it with an enduring force. From his sidekick Clara, an amateur playing at psychological spelunker, to his estranged best friend Shershah, Jessie's true love and a repudiated soul desperate to cast his own imprint on a hostile world; from Tom, the bestudded tech from Clara's show who harbors a seemingly infinite supply of fat, tri-color pens and secret intimations, to an obese artist crafting Goldfinger creations, this is a sickly and flaccid society that, whilst smoothly operating and clicking on all cylinders, is but hasty commotion in the service of bemused banality. Within this inanity exists, as a prime motivational force, the seeking of power and control over other fellow sufferers. This urge, to dominate or be dominated, exposes its existence in various instances, ranging from overt violence to subtle contrivance. This ceaseless pantomime is driven by a staggering amount of drug consumption; better living through chemicals really is the creed by which this endemic maze gets threaded. Identities and memories are elusively shifting entities, pinned to the page by Zeh's pen but squirming and struggling and blurring all defining edges—an unreality permeates the air, especially the scenes in a Vienna being baked into stillness by a merciless summer sun.
Considering the torpid pace and enervating, enfeebling sickness with which Max and Clara cocoon each other, that they draw the reader along with them is a considerable achievement, showing just enough glimpses of the demons that drive them to render their lethargic purposes compelling. And if Max's paralyzing grief seems overblown to the magnitude of his loss, it's yet perfectly understandable situated within the polished surfaces of the dysfunctional European society in which the young Zeh was drawing her source material. It's a curious thing that Max's American boss, Rufus, and the bad element are the only actors within Eagles and Angels with a modicum of sane purpose and competence—and the entire tale plays as a grimly satiric commentary upon the muddled and anemic response of the European community to the outbreak of ethnic violence and savagery in the former Yugoslavian territories. As in real life the Americans were forced to step in and provide a semblance of moral firmness to the Old World posturing, so the transplanted Yank Rufus, perched in his lofty high-rise office in the former imperial capital Vienna and with a long-ranging purview of the hive below, dictates with a smooth certainty the legal fictions that will cover actions necessary for self-selected greater good. There are few likable characters in E&A, with Max especially endeavoring at all times to repel—yet failing, as his failures mount in all his activities and intentions, along with our awareness of his being manipulated by many hands. His romantic connection with Jessie is touching in its absurd improbability and awkwardness, as is his bizarre, vampiric connection with Clara and her endangered dissertation. Zeh has the gift of pulling off situations and characters that probably shouldn't work as well as they do. Intelligent, compelling, philosophical, a sharp mystery on the edge of a breakdown with garish robes, etiolated dreams, and several fresh surprises en route to a chilling finish I'd only half anticipated—I'll gladly read whatever books of hers make the transition to the English language from here on in.