After an unexpected incident triggers his first anguish attack in months, Antón is dead set on putting an end once and for all to his woeful days. His journal—a miscellanea of narrative, reflection, and witty comments on famous self-help books and the works of great philosophers and renowned authors—will bear witness to his escapades in his quest for happiness.
I saw this author at the Melbourne Writers Festival and so glad that I did. He's a spanish author and this is his first book translated into English. As he inscribed in my copy, this book is about family and happiness. Anton is a grumpy guy who decides that he's had enough, he's going to be an optimist. To help him on his way his brother lends him some self help books, which he pretty quickly dismisses as rubbish, and his sister lends him some classic texts, which seem pretty miserable themselves.
The format of the book is essentially a diary peppered with the fictionalised character's book reviews, meanderings, quotes, and Skype conversations with his mother. The plot line involves his dysfunctional family, the news that he's going to be a dad, and finding the mother in question.
I loved it. His grumpiness at the world in general is certainly relatable, as is his desire to be optimistic. The only reason I'm not giving this 5 stars is overall it wasn't a complete page turner for me, although there were certainly parts where I was reading on the bus and sorry that I had reached my stop.
Antón Mallick Wants To Be Happy, Nicolás Casariego Hispabooks Publishing (Madrid) 978-84-941744-8-3 $16.99, 353 pgs
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. - Ernest Hemingway
Antón Mallick is not happy. In fact, Mr. Mallick is clinically depressed and suffering from anxiety attacks, and for good reason. But he's had "Enough is enough. I don't want to be a pessimist, or a victim, any more. I reject the status of black hole. This notebook, which I address and dedicate to Vidor Mallick [his great-great-great grandfather], inveterate gambler and amateur loan shark, is proof of my will to optimism, that is, my great desire to become a man with a sunny disposition, happy, normal, one of the guys who springs out of bed every morning and has answers for pretty much every single one of life's many questions." Antón Mallick Wants To Be Happy by Nicolás Casariego (translated from the Spanish by Thomas Bunstead) is a tragicomic chronicle of Mr. Mallick's attempts at breaking free from the depression and anxiety that has gripped him for the past year. He seeks the things we all seek - redemption, reconciliation, reckoning, to create some sense from the randomness.
There are clues dropped at irregular intervals as to the cause of Antón's misery but we aren't let in on the secret until about halfway through and it isn't explained to us until much later. By that point the revelation is expected but the details are shocking. This is your first clue: as Antón begins to clean up the mess in his apartment, "...and open all the envelopes, the piles and piles of letters, all the condolences, invitations, bank statements and bills..." Something momentous has absolutely trashed - almost destroyed - this man's life. He has tried to ameliorate and compensate with alcohol, various substances, and women, to no avail. In fact, it's an encounter with one of these women that finally compels him to try to get himself together. She's pregnant and has disappeared; he's the father and has no idea who she is.
His brother Zoltan, a psychologist in Madrid, and his sister Bela, a professor of Spanish literature in the US, are consulted. Zoltan recommends pop-psyche bubblegum-and-Big-Red titles, such as The Psychology of Optimism: Glass Half Empty or Glass Half Full and Your Erroneous Zones: Step-by-Step Advice for Escaping the Trap of Negative Thinking and Taking Control of Your Life. As Antón notes, "...it would overall be a good thing if these idiots were right and happiness were nothing but a question of personal discipline, of iron will plus agreeable disposition, and if luck had nothing to do with it, nor circumstances, nor genes, nor lack of intelligence, nor a combination of all of the above." Bela's recommendations tend toward philosophical treatises beginning BCE with Epicurus, and including Marcus Aurelius, Rousseau, Lao Tzu, Sun Tzu, Voltaire, and the Bhagavad Ghita. Antón decides that, "I don't want to be Epicurus, nor Seneca, nor Marcus Aurelius, much as I admire them. They're pessimists, the poor bastards, in spite of doing everything humanly possible to mitigate our suffering and achieve a state of quietude. I don't want to die in life..."
Antón Mallick Wants To Be Happy is a delightful, almost perfect balance of comedy and tragedy, pop culture and philosophy, the banal and the transcendent. The author, Nicolás Casariego, creates complete characters and complex family relationships with uncannily authentic dialogue. And, for which I am always most grateful, he has confidence in his readers. Casariego doesn't dumb-down any of the concepts Antón considers and discards, although Kierkegaard can make your head hurt. My only complaint is that the pace lags a little during the third quarter. But then again, so does Antón. I truly laughed aloud beginning on page two and by the end of this novel I was quite fond of Antón Mallick. The impetus for the story is pure tragedy but this novel fairly glows with hope.
Nicolás Casariego is the author of eight books, including Cazadores de luz, which was a finalist for the Nadal Award, and co-writer of three feature films. In 2008 he was awarded the Writers OMI residence fellowship for international writers at Ledig House, New York.
Righteo, my least favourite task when running a blog – reviewing a work I didn’t like!! I’ve agonised over this one for a week now, and have finally decided that I do need to post my thoughts as it is unfair on potential readers/buyers of books if I only highlight the good ones. Having said that, this is probably not a “bad” book, it is more a case of a book that I didn’t enjoy. Only a short review this time, purely because I didn’t read enough of the book to give it a full review.
Basically our novel is a series of vignettes, a diary by Anton Mallick, who is writing to his great-great-great grandfather about wanting to move out of the world of pessimism and become happy. Simple premise, nice idea too, intermingle a diary with a few emails, a few book reviews, even the occasional quote – great idea.
"I’m writing this to cheer myself up, because really all it was was an anecdote, and if life consisted of a series of anecdotes, it would be cause for uncorking the bubbly, for getting happily drunk, for laughing until you fall down."
This novel does contain a number of laughs, the concept of somebody hating self-help books for their smugness, or scathingly reviewing them for their content is a novel approach to a tale of a person suffering deep depression.