Don't die, Father Plomer said. Not a good idea.Subtle and not at the same time, Banville's version of the Faust cycle might or might not be.
The common flea, or pulex irritans, which is the name we scientists call him, can survive alive a long time without food. He likes a spicy drop of good red blood, of man or maiden, it's all one to him. He doesn't bite, you know, for fun. In fact, he doesn't bite, but, rather, pricks, sucks up a ruby drop, and off he kicks. His cousin, xenopsylla cheopis, or rat flea, is a different type, for this lad does not ata ll like human gore, indeed, it makes him puke, which is a bore for such a lively fellow. But when his host, the black rat, rattus rattus, gives up the ghost, he has no choice but to go after us. The poor chap's little proventriculus gets all bunged up with swarming bacilli, whose name is pasteurella pestis, need I say any more? Now, dying for a feed, he subjugates his loathing to his need, and finds a human target double quick. Blood is aspirated into the proventriculus. Now sated, our Jumping Jack relaxes, but, oh dear, some of that blood comes up again, I fear now rife with bacilli, and goes straight down the puncture hole. The victim, with a frown, scratches the spot, while pasteurella pestis heads pell-mell for the region of the testes. A week elapses, then the buboes swell, there's fever, stupor, and, of course, a smell as if the poor wretch were already dead. Next wifey gets it, baby too, then Fred the postman, yes, and Fred, the postman's son, then in a twinkling half the town is gone. It flies like black smoke, felling frail and fit, soon continents are in teh grip of it. And all teh doing of his majesty, our lord of misrule, Harry Hotspur Flea! So now, remember, when you feel a bite, it really is an honour, not a slight. The king is dead, long live the prince, and --and there's the knave! My trick, I think. And hand.
A riven thing, incomplete. Something had sheared away, when I pulled through. I was neither this nor that, half here, half somewhere else. Miscarried. Each day when I woke I had to remake myself, build myself out of bits and scraps, of memories, sensations, guesses. I knew how Lazarus must have felt standing in the blinding light of noontide in his foul cerecloths, with a headache, confused suspicious, still vividly remembering the other place, unsure that it was not better there than here.
Help me.
I do not know what to take away from this book. I do not know what is there in the book. Banville treads the line between outrageous, allegorical fantasy and common, if sodden and dirty, reality.
When I think about this book and try and imagine its appearance, it is much the same as before I read it. There are few pictures. A mottled face with cream scars folded like plastic wrap. A pale woman dying of a drug addiction. A lively fellow. Heaps of metal refuse and the junkyard of an industrial giant. I cannot see any clear pictures of the flow of the story. Generally when you read a book, you look back and can see the thing there in your mind, almost as if you went to the dramatized version of it. Yet here, there is so very little.
It's not as though it is a boring read. Banville writes well and the story pulls you through itself, only it doesn't lend itself to one seeing anything. But I know there is much to see in this book. It might be one of those books that needs to be read several times to picture it--unfortunately I did not enjoy it enough to want to read it again.
If you want a strange read that will give you plenty of rich soil to sprout your thoughts in, this wouldn't be a bad choice. Be prepared for creepiness made all the more powerful because Banville does catch certain aspects of life perfectly. They will resonate with you and sometimes their terrifying twins will come along for the ride.