If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo CalvinoBy Dave McCoy
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler is a marvel of ingenuity, an
experimental text that looks longingly back to the great age of
narration--"when time no longer seemed stopped and did not yet seem
to have exploded." Italo Calvino's novel is in one sense a comedy in
which the two protagonists, the Reader and the Other Reader, ultimately
end up married, having almost finished If on a Winter's Night a
Traveler. In another, it is a tragedy, a reflection on the
difficulties of writing and the solitary nature of reading. The Reader
buys a fashionable new book, which opens with an exhortation: "Relax.
Concentrate. Dispel every other thought. Let the world around you
fade." Alas, after 30 or so pages, he discovers that his copy is
corrupted, and consists of nothing but the first section, over and over.
Returning to the bookshop, he discovers the volume, which he thought was
by Calvino, is actually by the Polish writer Bazakbal. Given the choice
between the two, he goes for the Pole, as does the Other Reader, Ludmilla.
But this copy turns out to be by yet another writer, as does the next, and
the next.
The real Calvino intersperses 10 different pastiches--stories of
menace, spies, mystery, premonition--with explorations of how and why we
read, make meanings, and get our bearings or fail to. Meanwhile the Reader
and Ludmilla try to reach, and read, each other. If on a Winter's Night
is dazzling, vertiginous, and deeply romantic. "What makes lovemaking
and reading resemble each other most is that within both of them times and
spaces open, different from measurable time and space." |