One of the reasons that I love Czech literature is that it poses very human problems and dilemmas but doesn’t necessarily offer solutions. Julian Barnes wrote, “Books are where things are explained to you. Life is where things aren’t.” In my case, I like happy endings but life isn’t usually like this; we often just get over and get on with it. It might be appropriate to start this review off by saying, “Physician, heal thyself,” (or in this case, “preacher”) but I’ve always thought that applied to hypocrites and the pastor here isn’t that; rather, he’s troubled by preaching the Gospel when it’s something he isn’t living by. Daniel Vedra is the pastor here who ministers to his flock, trying to guide them through the confusions of post-Communist Czechoslovakia while being a good husband to Hana and good father to his three children, two with Hana and one, Eva, from his previous ill-fated marriage, which still haunts him. The marriage haunts him because it only lasted four years, three good and one in which his wife, Jitka, is dying from cancer, and as is not uncommon, he’s raised his dead wife to something like sainthood, an ideal that neither Hana nor Eva nor any other woman could possibly match up to. Hana is a good woman but she’s not Jitka.
There are four principal characters who narrate the story: Daniel, Hana, his lover, Bára, and his lover’s husband, Sam; Daniel carries Jitka over his heart like a medallion, Hana had only had bad experiences with men, Bára has a son, disdained by Sam, from her previous unhappy marriage and Sam has been married twice before, the last broken up for Bára. So, everyone is carrying more than enough baggage into this unholy mess and while Daniel and Bára have the common ground of the love they’d both been waiting for, Hana and Bára have the common ground of being less than their husbands desire; in short, all of more in common than they perhaps realize.
And so it plays out with Daniel carrying out an adulterous affair while preaching from the Bible and displaying Jesus’s example of forgiveness by mentoring a released juvenile offender and welcoming him into his home, where he meets Daniel’s daughter, Bára trying to convince Sam of her love while carrying on an affair, Sam simultaneously demanding and rejecting Bára’s love…
If it sounds like a Peyton Place, it’s not, it’s only humans trying to attain the impossibly complicated goals they set for themselves and all this with beautifully poetic prose – which was my problem here. Some chapters are Daniel’s diary while he wrestles with his inability to completely follow the teachings of Christ, and some are letters, particularly between Daniel and Bára trying to reconcile an impossible love without hurting anyone. (A common theme in adulterous relationships, trying to love a new love while not hurting the old love, having your cake and eating it, too.) I can recommend the book if you don’t necessarily need easy solutions to life’s complex problems and don’t find this all a lot of heart-wrenching trite ridiculousness. Life isn’t easy, love’s even harder, but it’s what we all try and work out.