Isolating these moments in his memory and attempting to analyze them much like a lens, he envisions "a haiku stripped of rhetoric that captures only what is in front of the camera." Yet, deprived of his sight, the photographer now must reconstruct his experiences as a series of affective snapshots, a diary of his emotions as they were frozen on this or that day. The result, then, is not the description of a remembered image, but of the emotional memory the image evokes. João Almino here gives us a trenchant portrait of an artist trying to close the gap between objective vision and sentimental memory, leafing through a catalog of his accomplishments and failures in a violent, artificial, universal city, and trying to reassemble the puzzle that was his life.
João Almino’s _The Book of Emotions_ is the prototypical Dalkey Archive book. Not that all of Dalkey’s books are the same, but there is a certain set of criteria that a lot of their titles have—and which Almino’s novel has in spades:
1) It’s a book about someone trying to write a book.
From _Mulligan Stew_ to _At Swim-Two-Birds_ to _The Journalist_, this is a set-up that runs through a lot of Dalkey’s titles. In this case, Cadu, a former photographer is constructing a memoir about his life in Brasília out of some of his old photos. The text alternates from his personal “current moment” experiences (which mostly revolve around trying to set up his goddaughter while sexually crushing on the girl helping him organize his photo files) and the text of his book, entitled “The Book of Emotions.”
2) The main character’s life didn’t turn out the way he had hoped.
If you’ve never read the “Letters to the Editor” from the back of the _Review of Contemporary Fiction_, you really should. A good number of them are quite hysterical, generally featuring a decrepit old man whose life has unraveled. In the case of _The Book of Emotions_, the aforementioned photographer is still pining away for Joana, the woman he loved who left him for a corrupt politician. Not that our protagonist doesn’t have his share of women—it seems like he’s slept with everyone—but that never seems to work out either: the boy he fathered doesn’t know him and is in prison, the woman he marries dies tragically young, etc.
3) The protagonist has mental or health issues.
This is true of most every book in the world, but in keeping with the sad sack people who write into _RCF_ with their problems, Cadu is blind and pretty much bed ridden. His best days are behind him, and he’s trapped with just the memories of his life, loves, and pictures. Which brings up the fourth key aspect to a “typical” Dalkey book . . .
4) The narrative works by illustrating the strangenesses of the character’s way of thinking.
A perfect example of this is _Iceland_ by Jim Krusoe. Or any of the Toussaint books that Dalkey has published. Actually, to be honest, you could throw a dart at a wall of Dalkey titles and whatever you hit will likely feature a quirky narrator whose prose illuminates all the bizarreness of his mind. And _The Book of Emotions_ falls into that general grouping, with the one difference that, although the entire text consists of Cadu’s thoughts and reactions to what goes on around him, the book doesn’t quite come together with the panache and humor that is evident in the examples above. There is something intriguing about _The Book of Emotions_, but unfortunately, it’s not the narrator’s voice.
What I like about this book is its overall structure—the parallel times, the numbered sections each centered around a particular (unseen) photograph—and the fact that it’s set in 2022 in Brasília and is part of Almino’s “Brasília Quintet.” (_Five Seasons of Love_, which is available from Host Publications features one of the characters from this novel, and the forthcoming _Free City_ is part of this series as well.) There are some moving moments in this book, but on the whole it’s a relatively sterile, exacting depiction of a man’s life and missed opportunities.
Unfortunately, I feel like Almino’s prose in Elizabeth Jackson’s translation falls a bit flat. There’s something too precise or rote . . . too straightforward in a way that is lacking and fails to really replicate the inner workings of the narrator’s mind:
"When Joana and I discovered that we couldn’t have children, we didn’t undergo the tests to determine whose problem it was. That impossibility was a blessing: we didn’t want to have children. However, it was unlikely the infertility was mine because many years before in Brasília another woman had conceived my child."
That “another woman had conceived my child” is just so stiff . . . One other example of where I think the voice in this book falls short from one of the sex scenes:
"We traded the most crude and vulgar exchanges, I used the foulest profanities I knew and yelled whatever else I could to shock her. Marcela wasn’t to be outdone. She dominated that rich vocabulary better than I did and she wasn’t intimidated, as if she’d had experience with phone sex."
This isn’t to write off Almino—I think he’s one of the most interesting Brazilian writers working today, and I’m looking forward to reading more of his titles. (Especially _Where to Spent the End of the World_.) I just went into this with high hopes—see list above and my belief that this would be a very Dalkeyish Dalkey book—and came to see the prose as something I had to trudge through, more out of a sense of duty and abstract interest in the plot than because I really _enjoyed_ it.
nice novel of brasilia, a city that has come a long way from its inception in the highland plateau boonies to another brazilian megalopolis with many many poor folks looking for THEIR middle class. but the story really isn't about brasilia, though the city is a sort of character too, with its technocrats and politicians, its superquadras, pilot plan, north wing and south lake. its garden of salvation, its flowers. cadu is a photographer who has gone blind and in his oldish age decides to write a book using his photographs (which he can recall to a t) as the chapters. he also comes to the realization that memories are hard to recall but the emotions they encompassed one can recall "picture perfectly". so we hear him going over his life in brasilia, his loves, hates, screwups, his sex, his bachelorhood, his marriage that lasted just a few days, his unclaimed son in prison, his major and only exhibit of flowers and triangles (women's triangles), big walls of photos arranged tastefully. it was not a hit. is it true that the emotions we had/have are more powerful than our recall of acts, faces, smells, happenings? maybe perhaps our shame felt most intrudes, even when not wanted, more than the glowing golden 'perfect' times? good addition to dalkey archive.
Starts off promisingly: blind writer recalls photos he has taken and the memories behind them. Swiftly lurches into dirty old man territory with numerous one-dimensional women 'opening' for him and painfully little plot to speak of. Avoid.
Metafiction with an air of Brasilia. Reminds me a bit of Coetzee's Slow Man - photography mingles with meditations on mortality, but this one's a lot more sensual. I didn't care much for the plot here.
Unique tale of an old photographer looking back on his love affairs and his work through his photos. I found it a bit challenging to keep track of all the characters (so many women!), but the story is well-conceived and downright poetic at times.