This big deep wonderful plunge of a novel--THIS is exactly why I love fiction, wanted to be a writer in the first place. The Great Glass Sea is set in an alternative Russia, a speculative present that posits the cultivation of light by use of mirrors to create the Oranzheria, a mass greenhouse which begins to take over the entire region, banning night in favor of perpetual sunshine--run by contemporary oligarch named Bazarov (for those of you who enjoy that kind of thing, the reference to Turgenev's Fathers and Sons adds a certain spice).
It's the story of two brother, twins, Dima and Yarik, who grow up in Soviet times in the area now subsumed by the Oranzheria and its total monoculture. Those who do not subscribe to the 12 hour days and the company-town mentality are stuck in 'The Dachas' ('dacha' is the word for a Russian summer cottage, carrying overtones of private occupations, handwork and gardening) but is more of a shanty town where the slacker inhabitants are advertised to day and night with eye level video billboards of luxury products, things to want, reasons to sign up to the dream of the Oranzheria (consciously emulating a cynical version of the American Dream, the creation of material wants which then form the carrot of complete wage-slavery to the Oranzheria.)
The twins, naturally, come to land on opposite sides of this divide. One twin becomes Bazarov's (ambivalent) protege, while the other simply wants to be with his twin and go back to the land his uncle lived on in the Kolkhoz days and farm. (The Oranzheria is actually kind of Kolkhozlike, only the jargon is capitalist instead of Soviet). When the twins are split up early in the book for spending too much time together while working at the Oranzheria, the plot of the book unfolds in a chain reaction, as if an atom has been split. The two halves of the Russian soul--the yearning for individualism, the yearning for darkness and stars and dreaming, and the yearning for progress and material success and the bright shining lights of the New Russia--are beautifully depicted.
Josh Weil not only knows his Russia--wonderfully steeping the alternative history with a deep and wide feel for Russian culture, folkways and way of life--but he writes like an angel. This is the most careful, lush prose I've seen in a long time, he has really taken the time to write the hell out of every gorgeous sentence, searching for the best word, the best image. Here's a description of the zerkala, the mirrors:
"Dusk to dawn the city was eerie with a luminescence like a storm-smothered day with shadows sharp as noon. The planners had hoped a people used to the north's white nights might adapt with ease, that it would feel little different from summer's solstice: the long wait for dusk, the anxiousness that built by the hour until at last the sliver of night would drop and puncture it, pressure whooshing out like the long day's sigh. Except beneath the zerkala there was no puncture, no release. Not even summer's few hours of dark. And in the fall, the cold days drew behind them no blanket of night. Winter never grew its black coat. And what was there for spring to shed? From what would it wake?"
Especially beautiful in the Dima chapters--the book is told from alternate points of view--the lyricism takes you down inside the lake of this world in a way you never want to come up. I've set aside time to read this book in big chunks every day, an hour, hour and a half at a time, so I don't have to get into the water only have to get right out again.
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Found myself slowing down as I approached the last few chapters, just wanting to stay in this world, wishing there was more, wondering how in the world Josh Weil was going to end a book so full of ideas and peril and relationships and folklore and history in a satisfying way. So far, it had served up a beautiful meshing of all these elements--could he keep it up all the way to the end? Or would it turn out and out tragic, everybody going down in a heap of gore like a tragic opera? Or prove be falsely optimistic, happily-ever-aftering the American reader and catering to wishful thinking? Would it turn horribly into an action-movie, like Smilla's Sense of Snow?
No spoilers but it was an absolutely fit and satisfying end. What a great read. Looking forward to his next book, hope it's Russia again.