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Blinding (1996)

by Mircea Cărtărescu

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Orbitor (1), Abbacinante (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
376872,516 (4.13)16
Mircea Cartarescu's prize-winning, genre-crossing memoir-novel of hallucinatory Bucharest is a bestseller in Romania. Blinding follows the protagonist's childhood and teenaged hospitalisation, his family's migration from Bulgaria the century before, his parents' courtship and the installation of the Communist regime. Personal and political history forms a lush backdrop to an engrossing tale that connects a travelling circus, secret police, zombie armies, American fighter pilots and New Orleanian swamps.… (more)
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» See also 16 mentions

English (5)  Dutch (1)  Spanish (1)  French (1)  All languages (8)
Showing 5 of 5
Now this is the post-modern surrealistic epic full of nightmare logic I was looking for! Books like these are extra difficult because I am torn wanting to continue on to see what new wild imagery emerges, while wanting to reread passages to make sure I understand what is actually going on. Definitely going to look out for more Cartarescu in the future and I am sure I will revisit this more than once in the coming years. ( )
  tastor | Oct 15, 2024 |
  chrisvia | Apr 29, 2021 |
Monsu held the butterfly uterus in the open palm of his right hand. Its skin fibers gently pulsed. In the end, it took flight, not through the mechanical beating of lepidoptera, but by undulations within the gelatinous medium, the way transparent beings on the bottom of the ocean proceed dreamlike through the abyss. P. 458

This book is nuts. In ways reminiscent of snatches of William S. Burroughs. But Cărtărescu's approach to the novel appears to stem from a deep appreciation for poetry. His habitual use of arcane scientific terms can only be intentional, geared toward, one would hope, precise observation and the enhancement of photo-realistic depictions alongside the dreamlike, demented transformations and unholy images recorded by the detached narrator. It's enchanting, unnerving and brilliant. But it would be easy to pick apart his hastily conjured juxtapositions. Death and birth, death and sex, death and lust, death and dreams, and lots of skeletons, both sentient and inanimate, human and animal, all cut a jig through the tormented landscape of post-war Romania. Wallpapered with more butterflies than the books of Nabokov, the texture and tone puts me in mind of a wild Dia de los Muertos procession, an exaggerated show of fanciful horror. Every ingredient under the sun makes it into his witch's brew, concocted for sheer entertainment. Even the above quotation, while elegant in its imagery, requires a leap of faith. You must suspend your disbelief and turn off your critical faculty. The only way to enjoy this luscious prose is to 'see it' rather than 'read it.' Flaws of logic make way for jungles of interpretation and labyrinths of the imagination.

Blinding thrives on impressionism. It follows its omniscient eye through uncanny valleys of hospital nightmares and filthy streets, where coupling ghosts wreak havoc alongside childish phantasms. He stirs in helpings of philosophy and sprinkles in holy relics. The author challenges your mind while delighting the senses. Many will be offended, as he does not shirk away from fluids and acts often better left in the dark, but his brand of magical realism casts wide nets, roping in astral projections, macrocosmic wombs, and ending in an unwelcome exegesis. Luckily, Mircea eases the reader into his madness, describing lengthy family and community rituals, focussing his intense author's lens on the finest of details, tackling every topic you can think of, while descending into moments of traditional coming-of-age narration. Truly this is how I would have liked My Struggle by Karl Ove Knausgård to read. This is more imposing, acerbic writing. You can learn from his fantastic gravitas, whereas Realism so often strikes me as pointless reiterations of thoughts and emotions that are all too familiar. If done right, this is not always the case, of course.

Once again, prepare for long descriptions, flights of fancy, and an uncontrolled narrative. This will obviously rub many readers the wrong way. It cannot be called autobiography unless you consider Dante's Inferno autobiographical as well. Nor is it strictly a dream diary. Much effort went into the craft of the sentences, even if the scattering of the themes and watering down of the plot inevitably followed. It is also a remarkable feat of translation that we can read this in English and still be astounded at the density of invention on display.

This novel is a bold experiment and a delight to read. It sustains a high pitch of aesthetic value and political relevance. It relishes, celebrates and shames human anatomy, religion symbols, and urban squalor. Like Pessoa, Cărtărescu lives vicariously through dreaming. Welcome to his madhouse, watch your step, when you come out the other side, the world may not look quite the same... ( )
  LSPopovich | Apr 8, 2020 |
Blinding is a fever dream; a baroque hallucinatory journey through a labyrinth of gorgeous language and discovered meaning. It is a memoir and a collection of fantasy scenes woven tight into the Bucharest landscape — a twilight that extends through centuries...a circus of the macabre and misbegotten. I could not put it down and I was continually getting lost, in the best possible way.

Cartarescu’s language, and this magisterial translation by Sean Cotter, can be compared to nothing completely, but is Joycean in it’s scope, with Ishmael Reed’s bop prosody and Thomas Pynchon’s improbable continuity mixed in with Grimm, Kafka and Calvino.

I find it impossible to describe the book further or the events that are chronicled. There is a sense that the story morphs from page to page like fungal growth and develops in the way the pupae of a butterfly that is a recurring theme. The story is liquid and cunning and by the end you are exhausted and exhilarated. ( )
4 vote abealy | Aug 28, 2013 |
Review in progress for The Quarterly Conversation.
  KrisR | Aug 21, 2013 |
Showing 5 of 5
A good sense of time and place is the highlight of this overstuffed novel set in 20th century Romania—volume one of a trilogy that continues with Blinding: The Body and Blinding: The Right Wing.
added by DorsVenabili | editPublishers Weekly (Jul 29, 2013)
 
Op dit troosteloze Boekarest laat de in 1956 geboren Cartarescu in De Wetenden zijn verbeelding los. Het resultaat is een hallucinerende reis door de onder- en de bovenwereld van de stad, door de 20ste-eeuwse geschiedenis van Roemenië en de betoverende verhalen die Cartarescu daardoorheen weeft, langs alledaagse straattaferelen en apocalyptische visioenen, door het lichaam van de stadsbewoners en vooral de dromende geest van de verteller die het hele boek bijeenhoudt.
De Wetenden is een boek dat gemengde gevoelens oproept. De woorden zijn prachtig, de beelden indringend, de barokke stijl soms nét iets over de rand. Wanneer Cartarescu zijn fantasie gebruikt om de werkelijkheid te beschrijven, weet hij moeiteloos te overtuigen. Wanneer hij die de vrije teugel geeft, wordt van de lezer érg veel willigheid verwacht en blijft het alleen voor de liefhebbers genietbaar.
En toch is hier een imponerend schrijver aan het werk geweest. Door alle reserves heen blijft de bewondering voor het vakmanschap, de trefzekerheid en óók de verbeeldingskracht van Cartarescu overeind. De Wetenden is een boek dat maar half bevredigt, maar daarom des te meer naar werkelijke bevrediging door deze schrijver doet uitzien.
added by sneuper | editNRC Handelsblad, Ger Groot (May 7, 2010)
 

» Add other authors (5 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Mircea Cărtărescuprimary authorall editionscalculated
Alain ParuitTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Bos, Jan WillemTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Cotter, SeanTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Escandell Tur, AntòniaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Johansson, IngerTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Lone, SteinarTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Mircea Cartarescu's prize-winning, genre-crossing memoir-novel of hallucinatory Bucharest is a bestseller in Romania. Blinding follows the protagonist's childhood and teenaged hospitalisation, his family's migration from Bulgaria the century before, his parents' courtship and the installation of the Communist regime. Personal and political history forms a lush backdrop to an engrossing tale that connects a travelling circus, secret police, zombie armies, American fighter pilots and New Orleanian swamps.

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Riddled with hidden passageways, mesmerizing tapestries, and whispering butterflies, Blinding takes us on a mystical trip into the protagonist’s childhood, his memories of hospitalization as a teenager, the prehistory of his family, a traveling circus, Secret police, zombie armies, American fighter pilots, the underground jazz scene of New Orleans, and the installation of the communist regime. This kaleidoscopic world is both eerily familiar and profoundly new.
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