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The Enigma of Arrival: A Novel

The Enigma of Arrival: A Novel

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Arrival of Enigma
Review: Caught up by the hoopla manifested by a new Nobel Laureate, I darted myself into a bookstore and picked up the first Naipaul book I eyeballed. I was expecting the best of Hemingway's descriptiveness and Cela's ingenuity rolled into "The Enigma of Arrival." Instead, the author delineates the parallels experienced in his tropical childhood, some borish English acquaintances and an uncelebrated De Chirico painting.

Notwithstanding his extravagant and lethargic plot, Naipaul does display a divine ability to graphically adorn his pages using a crisp and succint narrative. He draws out a map of bountiful trees laid geometrically and described poetically, yet bemuses his readers with arcane episodes in vague environments.

A book in which a refined and educated young man experiences a world he knew too well... in the books he had read ("I was like a man entering the world of a novel, a book; entering the real world"), Naipaul's autobiography is too personal a testimony to which only a few can feel receptive or entertained.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Watch out! it's dangerously boring!!!
Review: Enigma of arrival is a very dull book and hard to read. It is ridiculous that a 300 page long book mainly consists of walks by a middle aged man. It appears that he doesn't contact other people very much, at least the descriptions are often how he seas other people from a distance. The book isn't funny, but it made me giggle once.
I think that you need a degree from Harvard to be able to enjoy this book so I can't recommend it to the average reader.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Exquisite and haunting
Review: I truly feel the part of the Philistine in writing this review.

I bought the book to increase my culture.
I bought the book in appreciation of a Nobel Laureate.
I bought the book because I felt I should

None of these reasons were good enough reasons for me to spend time reading it.

The book is painfully slow, and difficult to read. The plot is nearly non-existant, but that can be overcome. The author's point was elusive, making me wonder why I read this. I've known root canals to be less painful.

If you are into Naipul, this may be the book for you.
If you're looking to get into "The Great Books", start with another.

Maybe I'll try again in a few years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Outer Limits of Writing
Review: I would never have picked up this book -- not my usual genre. However, my book group in Tucson chose the selection so I dutifully read the whole thing as carefully as possible.

You cannot read this book for plot. There is no plot. You can't read for character. All characters are viewed through the eyes of the narrator, a thoroughly unlikeable man who has come to the country to write and to heal himself from other writing disasters.

The book can be intensely frustrating. The narrator lives in his own head. I've known others like him -- people who respond to every person and place intellectually. Unlike an anthropologist, he is not trying to understand the culture of those he meets. Rather each individual is put under the narrator's verbal microscope, dissected on the basis of external appearance. We learn that a gardener always dresses up formally and changes clothes with seasons -- but we do not know why. We observe the comings and goings of the village people and the narrator's landlord -- but we do not understand their hearts, minds or motives.

The narrator's distance ultimately comes across as hostile superiority. He does not belong here in this house in the country and he knows he will never fitĀ in. Yet he never allows himself to have a genuine reaction to what he experiences. His encounter with the English countryside is filtered through the writers and artists he knows: Wordsworth, Constable, and more.

Amazingly, we keep turning the pages. Naipul violates every rule of writing. He tells rather than shows. He does not build suspense. The characters do not evoke sympathy. Yet Naipul's command of language keep the reader turning the pages, even when he launches into long descriptions of country places.
It's about language, not plot.

The ending of the book yields the greatest insight. We realize the narrator has become a man without a country, at home nowhere. He sees his own rituals through the eyes of a stranger. It is sad and, perhaps, inevitable. But in the end I, as a reader, was as detached from the narrator as he was from his own environment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Definitely not for everybody, but...
Review: I'll admit that I was really puzzled by this book when I started reading it. Very little happens. There is not much of a plot, at least as we usually think of it. I found myself wondering things like "what is he writing about" and "where is he going with all this detailed description?" The title aside, the book itself seemed like an enigma.

But after a while I began to get almost hypnotized by the narrative. And two things in particular really captured my attention. First, the very precise and painstaking psychological (and even behavioral) analysis of the characters in the book. To a great extent it reminded me of the level of detail that Dostoyevsky would go to in his psychological examinations of his characters. Second, the almost zen-like mindfulness of his description of setting. I was really astonished by the scope of the writer's attention, and his skill at simply noticing and describing ordinary things in a really extraordinary way.

So - no "action", not much plot, excruciatingly dull if you're looking for a thrill-a-minute page turner. However, if you can let yourself sort of mimic the mindset of the author and just go with it a bit, I think you'll find this to be a pretty amazing book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very tedious, indeed.
Review: In my reading circle, I suggested that we should read this novel.
When he received the Nobel Prize a lot of critics mentioned this as his finest achievement.
I found it plain boring. His language is refined and poetical, but nothing I mean NOTHING happens. There is hardly any plot, the characters doesn't come to life, you get what he is getting at rather quickly, he goes on and on and on about the scenery, various walks he makes, the flowers, trees etc. It is a long and very tedious read.

I read the first half in English, but finding it very hard to get in to it, I switched to the Swedish translation, expertly done by Rose-Marie Nielsen, but it was still a pain. Finally I rushed through it just to finish it to our group-meeting

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Naipaul's finest writing, deeply moving
Review: In this book, Naipaul goes far beyond the bawdy comedy and drastic character-sketches that characterize his other, easier works. The book combines three stories. The arrival in Britain, the life of a writer; wryly written insights. The very subtle experience of (an immigrant's) belonging and loss in a remote cottage in the English countryside; some of the finest writing ever. Finally, interlaced with this, fictionalized-historical accounts of the colonization of the Carribean -- full of black humor and anger; which makes a drastic and colorful contrast to the personal, quietly written, day-by-day experience of rural England. Together, this book is a departure for Naipaul (I think), in the same way that (in another genre) Stardust Memories was for Woody Allen. It is less a book about a colorful colonial society or person; it is about what it means to be an immigrant to (the reader's) country, nature, land; the symbols which to an individual, mean loss; how to experience loss. An amazing book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: One to Read in Winter
Review: The title of "The Enigma of Arrival" is borrowed from a mysterious, haunting picture by Giorgio de Chirico, and the novel is as enigmatic as the painting from which it takes its name. It is not a conventional novel; in many ways its tone is closer to that of an autobiography than to that of a work of fiction. The narrator, like Naipaul himself, is a Trinidadian of Indian ancestry who arrived in Britain in the early fifties to study English at Oxford University and with an ambition to become a writer. The greater part of the work is taken up with a description of three years spent by the narrator living in a cottage in a small village in Wiltshire, probably during the seventies.

There is no plot in the normal sense of the word, and little in the way of characterisation, although Naipaul does give sketches of some of the individuals he came to know during his time in the village. The most impressive aspect of the book is Naipaul's descriptions of his country walks, giving detailed accounts of the downland, farmland and water-meadows of Wiltshire in beautifully descriptive prose. Being a keen country walker myself, I marvelled at the author's powers not only of description but also of observation, as he brings the English countryside in all its moods to life with a vividness to rival such masters of descriptive writing as Thomas Hardy and H.E. Bates. There is also a strong sense of England's historic past. Unlike some of those who have reviewed the book, I did not find these accounts boring. The book is slow moving, certainly, but that is not, in this case, a fault; it is a book to be read slowly, to linger over.

The overall tone of the book is one of melancholy and disenchantment. Naipaul's aim in his descriptions of the countryside is not simply to celebrate its beauty. He frequently describes it in its more sombre moods; many of his walks seem to take place on cold or overcast days. He has a good eye for prosaic details- barbed wire, derelict buildings, farm machinery. A theme that runs throughout is that of exile. The narrator (who is clearly intended to be identified with Naipaul himself) is, in a sense, a double exile. For all his love of the countryside, he is an outsider in England, a voluntary exile from the land where he was born. He feels like an exile in Trinidad, however, aware that his family are exiled from India, their ancestral homeland.

In an sense, many of the English people whom the narrator meets are also exiles, although not, of course, in a geographical sense. They are exiles in the sense that they find themselves alienated or left behind by social change, like the narrator's landlord, an aristocratic figure from a once wealthy family which has come down in the world. The less wealthy among the villagers also find themselves affected by the changing social order, and many of them are unhappy, dissatisfied or disaffected.

Perhaps my main criticism of "The Enigma of Arrival" would be one originally made by Salman Rushdie, namely that it is "devoid of either passion or love". The narrator is as disillusioned as any of those people about whom he writes, perhaps more so, without any room for enthusiasm or joy in his life. He appears to be a childless bachelor, without any romantic attachments or even close friendships. The result is a bleak book, but still a fascinating one. One to be read in winter.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Time scale of change...
Review: This book describes the feeling of being thrown into a society that one does not belong to, where it's impossible to belong because , first, the past (the writer's old culture) has been disconnected from him, and, second, in the modern society the external circumstances change too fast and unpleasantly for the mind and soul to adapt.

The book is about a fragment of modern English-speaking society, seen from the perspective of an acute observer from a wildly different culture. The observer's original culture was destroyed by immigration, and he tries to interpret fragments of it from his childhood, like the meaning of sweeping the dirt outside the house each morning. From a related perspective, one can also read Spengler's 'Decline of the West', and John Berger's Pig Earth.

I picked up this book and began reading it at a friend's weekend house and couldn't stop. So, I bought my own copy. That was thirteen years ago. This remains one of my favorite books, in memory. The haiunting cover piece, from a painting by de Chirico, fits the message very well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Strange and beautiful
Review: Without question this is a strange book. It has no real plot, the arrangement of its sections is odd and their relationship to each other somewhat mysterious, and the attention to detail can be maddening. When I first attempted to read this book some years ago, I had to stop part of the way through, as I couldn't understand what was going on or why Naipaul had written this.

Fortunately I tried again not long afterwards; Naipaul is one of my favorite writers and I figured anything he wrote was worth at least a second try. The second time round I read much more slowly than the first time, trying to savor the precision of the prose and enter into the narrative more fully. The book's effect on me was dramatically different as a result. I became absorbed in the reading ("hypnotic" is how one review I read aptly described the prose), and I began to see the book's underlying themes: the existentialist need to make one's own place in the world in the face of decay and death, the power of art to transform experience and fight oblivion, how the writer sees and knows the world. Naipaul develops these themes slowly and subtly; they are woven deeply into the narrative, and can be easy to miss for that reason. But once you begin to see them, reading this beautiful book can be a profound and moving experience.

And so, despite the strangeness and the hard, slow reading this book requires, I would tell people that it is so worth the effort of careful study. Naipaul has written no ordinary novel here, but something rare and beautiful. A truly great book.


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