The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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A Dictator Calls
International Booker Prize
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2024 Int Booker longlist: A Dictator Calls
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Mar 11, 2024 08:26AM


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I think the book may also mention the fact that he's a Nobel Prize contender, at least in his and the bookies eyes. Although Alex Shepherd's 2022 piece rather dismissed him as a "less important Albanian cultural export than Dua Lipa" (hard to argue).

Oh yes, he mentions it several times.
It was interesting enough, but the rehashing of the different versions gets old pretty quickly. This one, more so than all of the others on this list, felt almost completely like nonfiction.

I would say that’s just the tongue in cheek persona of the narrator. Except Euronews was with him when the 2022 Prize was announced - he said he no longer had an opinion on why he hadn’t won after 40 years and his wife announced neither of them had ever heard of the person who did win (Annie Ernaux; they live in France).

P21-23 in Harvill Secker hardback refers to a loose trilogy of novels he was trying to publish
(I will use English rather than original titles)
First is The Three Arched Bridge
second is The Traitor’s Niche (which featured on the prize)
Third this novel implies is his Pasternak / student life in Moscow novel
But that is Twilight of the Eastern Gods which came out in instalments well before the the other two parts (although published in 1981 in whole).
But the third part of that trilogy is usually taken as The Palace of Dreams, which is different entirely - all three novels are then ostensibly set in Albania under Ottoman rule but subversively commenting on the Hoxha regime.
So why is he linking the Pasternak novel instead?

It's of the type of novel Javier Cercas calls the blind-spot novel, and also novel-without-fiction, where the novelistic element comes in not answering the central question - here what Pasternak and Stalin said to each other:
This is Cercas on what he calls 'the blind spot novel' (and also the novel-without-fiction) which is very much what this is:
The novel is not the genre of answers, but that of questions: writing a novel consists of posing a complex question in order to formulate it in the most complex way possible, not to answer it, or not to answer it in a clear and unequivocal way; it consists of immersing oneself in an enigma to render it insoluble, not to decipher it







I thought the Nobel mentions were about drawing connections with Pasternak.
So far, my second favourite after Lost on Me out of those I've read. It probably helps to have an interest in Russian poetry of the period and know a bit about those literary circles.

Rather like Philip Roth who allegedly went to his agent’s office each year in preparation for his win - which I suspect is completely untrue given it would be in the early hours of the day US time.

I have no idea if Murakami wants the Nobel Prize or if he expects it—and he shouldn’t, because he is not going to win—but I have decided to now picture Murakami doing exactly this. He laces up his running shoes. He puts on a Stan Getz record on the most expensive, minimalist stereo system you have ever seen. Pasta boils on the stove in a gleaming, spotless pot. Murakami sits by the phone in an Eames chair, and he loads YouTube and watches the announcement muted, with subtitles: some Swedish words—Jon Fosse—some more Swedish words. He steps outside and runs 22 miles without stopping.
(The year before the words Jon Fosse were indeed uttered)

The connection of being another writer having to contend with writing under a regime of censorship; a writer who gets phoned up by Enver Hoxha out of the blue, though the reason is apparently different from Stalin's call.
As this is filed as a novel, I'd say the narrator is a construct, not necessarily Kadare (or wholly Kadare) and it's an open secret that he's been nominated for a Nobel a number of times.