What do you think?
Rate this book
294 pages, Paperback
First published June 25, 2009
Once again, it was Dona Dordalma, our absent mother, who was the cause of such strange behaviour. Instead of fading away into the distant past, she invaded the fissures of silence within night's recesses. And there was no way of putting the ghost to rest. Her mysterious death, without cause or visibility, had not stolen her from the world of the living.But no mystery can be sustained by its words alone, though its fiction depends on them for life (as do we, the lie-tellers sometimes called narratologists, called humans). And something much like the truth will out, though what the value of that telling is remains ambiguous. In this story where graves resist their digging, the wind (itself deemed the movement of ghosts) filling them with dirt against the wish of the funeral goers, the exchange between presence and absence, the living and the dead, finds its true home in the presence of writing. Or, as one character writes in her journal:
--Father, has mother died?
--Four hundred times.
--What?
--I've told you, four hundred times: your mother died, every little bit of her, it's as if she was never alive.
--So where's she buried?
--She's buried everywhere, of course.
So maybe that was it: my father had emptied the world so as to be able to fill it with inventions. At first, we were bewitched by the flighty birds that emerged from his speech and curled upward like smoke.
During my wait, I had learned to enjoy my yearning. I remember the verses of the poet, which go like this: 'I came into the world to feel yearning.' As if I could only populate my mind through absence. Following the example of those houses that can only speak to the senses when they are empty. Like this house where I now live.Reading The Tuner of Silences is to tour this haunted house, a family's history, for a little while.