Wednesday, July 9, 2008

From the Shelves of the Paco Library



Uncle Peter, a retired Communist spy living in Potsdam, sat in his wheel chair enjoying the garden, when the family’s pet pig fell out of a tree, striking him on the neck and killing him instantly.

The beginning of a good Communist joke? No, more like a fitting symbol of the end of the bad joke that was Communism. Rory MacClean begins his marvelous book, Stalin’s Nose: Travels Around the Bloc (published in 1992), with this true story of his uncle’s demise, and he is soon on the road in a Trabant with his newly-widowed Aunt Zita and the murderer – Winston the pig – on a journey of discovery through the ideological (and, in some instances, the physical) ruins of post-communist eastern Europe. By turns funny and sad, the book explores the soul-deadening impact of Communism, and the lead-booted bureaucracy that seems to arise, inevitably, as a result of man’s attempts to theorize away human nature, as if it were little more than a bogus hypothesis.

On this strangest of road trips, we encounter a host of characters and incidents, some comical, some tragic, but almost all reflecting in some important respect the intrinsically evil, and idiotic, nature of totalitarianism. One of the book’s strengths is the skillful weaving into the narrative of Communism’s collapse some of the kaleidoscopic history of Europe, its peoples and prejudices, and the great episodes that have shaped it and reshaped it, for good or ill, for over a thousand years. But the book is also the intensely personal story of Aunt Zita, and of her efforts to exorcise the ghosts of a past haunted by the twin monstrosities of Communism and Nazism (her family broke with her upon her marriage to a Communist, and her brother was an officer in the SS). Along the way, we discover the delectably ironic story of how she first met Uncle Peter. She had been herding pigs, and she and a large sow took a tumble off of a slippery path. The sow landed on top of her, and she was trapped beneath the life-crushing weight, suffocating. Fortunately, a Red soldier happened upon her, shot the pig, and pulled her out from under. It was love at first sight. Many years later, one of the sow’s distant relatives would avenge the species by snapping Peter’s neck.


A few more vignettes:

Jerzy, a slightly tipsy Pole:

“’Forty years of socialism and still no toilet paper,’ said Jerzy as he reemerged. He… hung his coat on a brawny arm and unscrewed the Wyborowa. He poured the vodka and raised his glass in a toast. ‘The Red Fleet.’ We looked surprised. ‘To the bottom.’ He drained his glass. ‘In Gdansk I meet Russian sailor. He hate Poles and told so. Nothing the matter; we hate Russians also. He say Russians more strong and hard and fast and then, insult, he say Russians better drinkers.’ Jerzy poured another round. ‘So my friends and I take him for drinking: pepper vodka, honey vodka, even Zmijowka, vodka marinated by serpent. Of course, he not take; he only Russian and pass under table. So my friends carry him to tattoo maker. And while he dream of virgin in Minsk we tattoo on his chest a damn big Polish eagle. It much money but worth every zloty.’”

On Romania:

“In Romania corruption was not a vice, it was a tradition. The Greeks of Constantinople, the Phanariots, were a particularly duplicitous people who governed the country when it was an Ottoman vassal. Their voracious greed had perverted the society. The kings and dictators who followed continued to debase public morals. The custom continued even after the December revolution. In Romania’s first free election a million more votes were cast than voters registered. The official news agency attributed the discrepancy to ‘the enthusiasm of the people for democracy.’”


Moscow:

Hell may resemble the Moscow Metro: flawless and sterile. The escalator bore us deep down into Satan’s Versailles, a subterranean palace of blast doors and trains that ran on time. Beautifully crafted lies embellished the walls. Beneath the mosaics of loyal workers, offering their labors – rifles, tractors, and loaves – to an altar of red flags, the masses had moved silently during Stalin’s Terror. In grand marble tunnels the only sound was their shuffling feet. Loiterers were brushed aside. Nothing would delay the heroic march. The world wept gray tears when communism was victorious.

We waited no more than half a minute. A silver train whisked us through the burial grounds of a civilization as dead as Rome.”

A unique combination of travel diary, history, political analysis and farce, Stalin’s Nose is both a fun and an instructive read.

14 comments:

kc said...

Paco, I'm sending this recommendation to My Chief. I also need to go check the others you discussed a couple weeks ago & let him know about them. He has a job where a book is a sometimes necessary companion (ferinstance, right now he's training a new driver & they're up to the axles in sand, waiting on a tow truck).

This one's available in hardcover & paperback at Amazon. Amazon is an invaluable resource for those of us with limited browsing time & cash...but your recommendations make even that time more productive.

Paco said...

KC: Thanks. I hope readers find these mini-reviews interesting. Not every book is going to be to everyone's taste, or deal with a topic in which everyone is particularly interested, but my reading is very broad, so I hope that most readers will find the occasional volume that turns out to be enjoyable for them.

Anonymous said...

Paco, I look forward to your Thursday book reviews, so please keep them coming.

I, too, went poking around Amazon for MacLean's book and find two editions, the second with a slightly different title, and lots more travel books by him, all look interesting.

Retread

Anonymous said...

One other thing, where is the big comfy chair in your library? Reading is best with your feet up.

Retread

Paco said...

Retread: It's over in a corner not pictured in the photo. It's a plush, winged chair of the sort I imagine Sherlock Holmes would have sat in, and there's a little floor lamp next to it (and a small. embroidered footrest in front of it). Actually, though, I do most of my reading on the Washington Metro. One of the few (one of the very few) benefits of the old two-hour commute on AmTrack (each way) when I lived in Richmond was that I had plenty of time to read. But I used to have to wear gunrange sound mufflers to drown out the excruciatingly boring chit chat that was always going on around me (the mufflers had the additional advantage of causing people to think twice before sitting next to me; if the thought had occurred to me, I would have added a rabbit's ears TV antenna, thus guaranteeing my relative solitude practically every day).

Anonymous said...

Another intriguing book recommendation from paco! Thank you, sir! I would point out that some of my favorite pieces by P.J. O'Rourke were about his travels behind the then Iron Curtain. His trenchant observations of the dead hand of Communism superimposed over Polish or Czech nationalism were typically biting, sardonic, and hilarious.

Your tale of reading on the two hour commute from Richmond to DC put me in mind of when I worked in Seattle and part of my commute was by ferry. If there is a more civilized way to commute than by train (and there is) it's ferry. Got a lot of reading done.

Two years ago, while I was going to school for five months in Seattle, I used the ferry to do homework. The upshot was that I was easily as prepared as any of my classmates, did it during otherwise nonproductive time, and kept my evenings and weekends free of studying.

Anonymous said...

Damn nice place, for a Detective, Paco...Must be nice. Big bucks, all those dames, danger and peril at every corner.

That's why you make the big bucks, Detective Paco. :)

RebeccaH said...

Paco, I have to say, some of your recommendations (the British Raj, the Empire-era books) don't excite me because I've read a ton of them already. But this one intrigues me mightily. Keep them coming. I might have to reassess my reading preferences

Anonymous said...

paco, when I worked in Chicago, I lived in the suburbs. I had a 2.5 hour commute every day, and that was excellent study time. I polished off parts of two Army correspondence courses that way.

Paco said...

RJ: That really is the only benefit to a long commute (except for, possibly, some additional nap time).

Anonymous said...

Fortunately, paco, I now live a short bike ride from work. Napping and reading are accomplished on my sofa.

:-D

Skeeter said...

Here in the backwoods of SE Queensland, we enjoy a very good library service accessible via the Internet. I have just checked the catalogue and found that the city library's one copy of Stalin's Nose is presently on the shelf waiting for a reader. So I have logged on and placed a "Hold" on the book in my name. It will be waiting for me in my local branch on Tuesday.
See what you have started, Paco? Global erudition.

Anonymous said...

Recommendation seconded. It's a terrific book

Paco said...

Thanks, Skeeter, for mentioning the public library. It was rather preying on my mind that some folks may go out and buy some of these books I talk about and then not like them. With the library, you dissatisified customers out there at least won't be out of pocket (unless you don't turn the book in on time!)