I will focus on the first story of this trilogy, The Plant, which I read at school from this prolific author, and to this day, has stayed with me. I had searched everywhere for it and I couldn’t believe that I finally found it.
I read this in Greek rather than English, which was slightly challenging, however, I immediately became part of a world that mainly exists in the neurotic mind of the protagonist, Lazaros, a university student living with his parents in a new apartment complex in Greece in the 60s. We see life through the protagonist; his desires, his fears, and his utter repulsion to modern culture. His resentment of rules and conventions, and living a mundane routine existence in this new apartment complex, suffocate him and disturb him to the point that he finds solace in a plant that he nurtures obsessively.
The plant perhaps represents the female he admires from afar. She is the only one that he respects; almost worshiping her as he treats her like she is some goddess who is unaffected by the harshness of a cold, cruel world. I think the girl represents all that is pure and untainted — nature. His fear to approach her leads him to steal the pot plant from her garden after he secretly follows her on the street. There is an obvious juxtaposition with her garden and the concrete apartment complexes that had been erected in the 60s, perhaps in Thessaloniki.
As a reader, I was deeply baffled by this warped, nonsensical relationship that the protagonist develops with the plant. However, at the same time, I felt for this sensitive student and his need to connect with nature; to escape a life that he feels was not of his own choosing. I felt his isolation, his search for identity, and his need to regain some control in his young life. The cacophony and coldness that comes from modern life proves too much for this sensitive soul, and the plant is the only means of escaping a life he fears. His deep-seeded loneliness, and inner turmoil parallels the turmoil and conflict that come with modern living. The despair he feels towards his environment helps the reader understand Lazaros' intense need to connect with what is real.
Vassilikos uses metaphors masterfully to convey the protagonist’s disillusionment, and his resistance to the culture of the time. The apartment complex is likened to a “concrete jungle” and the plant symbolises the need to remain true; to think twice about challenging nature. Nurturing the plant is the protagonist’s response; it is his way of challenging the changes that are occurring in his environment at that time in Greece. He feels that he is, perhaps, taking the control back from the outside world which enforces rules on individuals and expects them to adapt to change without questioning it. The “concrete jungle” threatens what makes one human and real — what Lazaros considers to be meaningful in life.
The theme of finding one’s identity is also explored and we see this as he interacts with the plant, as though it was his girlfriend.
The clash between nature and an influx of concrete apartment complexes in the 50s and 60s in Greece, is cleverly represented through the apartment building — a society that is decaying from within. The apartment complex is a microcosm of the culture of the time, and the tall concrete edifices that challenged nature and individualism.
The story caught me completely by surprise. The clash between the “concrete jungle” and nature, and the inner struggles and conflict that takes place in the protagonist’s mind, manifesting in anti-social and unorthodox behaviour, were presented in a very clever, creative, and emphatic way.
The Plant is a story that continues to thrive in my mind as it encourages one to think about modern life; our wants and needs. Even if it was set in an earlier time, it still resonates with readers of the modern era as we all still face the same challenges and fears in this cyber world.
The other stories in this trilogy all deal with similar themes and are also worth reading.