I've written two prior reviews of this strange, revolting, macabre, beautiful book: some initial musings about fifty pages into it; a singularly outraged review at the midway point when I was all but ready to pack Malaparte and his sleazy manipulations in; and now this—final—one, in which that previous fire of ire has been reduced to a bed of barely smoldering embers, quenched by Malaparte's less morally reprehensible second half of the book and, frankly, his wizardry with the written word, which goes a long way towards appeasing this reader.
Although Malaparte earned a living as a polemical political writer and a journalist, he was also a poet, and he merged these differing styles into the narrative tone of Kaputt; the result is writing that is simply gorgeous, rife with sugarplum similes and meteoric metaphors blossoming throughout a series of eerie, haunting vignettes about everyday life under the suzerainty of total war in such places as Warsaw, Cracow, Romania, the Ukraine, Stockholm, Leningrad, Helsinki, Lapland, and, finally, Italy itself. Even accepting that Malaparte was freely mixing his own subjective experiences as a roving Italian pseudo-Fascist plenipotentiary with a good measure of lurid invention drawn from the febrile-but-fertile bounty of his imagination, much that is contained within just seems wrong. Appalled by Malaparte's self-serving suggestion that the endless suffering of the Jews in the filthy, starved, disease- and death-ridden nightmare of the Warsaw Ghetto was ameliorated by the fact that he smiled at them and sotto voce muttered Excuse me, please whilst wandering aimlessly to drink his fill of their wretched misery—which, mind you, he describes with heartbreakingly stark imagery—I began to suspect that this was but another of the highly implausible events—which painted him in an at least tolerable, at best sympathetic light—of which he wrote about so stunningly and yet, to me, so falsely; and so I skipped forward to the book's excellent afterword by Dan Hofstadter, which confirmed pretty much all of the suspicions that had been building within me.
Now, it's not the fictionalization of such chaotic and tumultuous and murderous events as were enacted and carried out across the various theaters of the Second World War that bothers me—I tend to be willing to give the author a great deal of leeway in working out how he wishes to depict his story. Malaparte, however, as I quickly discovered, is a different case: a self-identified Fascist and lifelong opportunist seemingly in it only for the power and the glory, perfectly willing to insincerely spout abusive and violent rhetoric if it helped him achieve as much and, apparently, having had to go back and rewrite the entire first half of Kaputt once he realized that the Germans were going to lose—and thus that those whom he had buffed and polished through encomium now had to be battered and bruised through indictment. That this was the case can actually be discerned by reading Kaputt, as much that is most objectionable about Malaparte's story arises in the first half, when he presumably had to scramble to insert justifications or create rehabilitations for brutal and pitiless acts that he originally had planned to defend or justify—as well as finding a way to make his own disinterested non-involvement seem more heroic or upright than it actually was.
Yet I could even deal with that—it was the way in which, even whilst admitting to possessing neither the courage nor the conviction to intervene in the horrors he was (allegedly) experiencing first-hand, he still wrote himself into the script such that, with a few righteous moves here and an outburst of anger there, he wrapped himself with the moral armor of the disapproving, civilized man forced to negotiate his way amidst warring tribes of bloodthirsty barbarians whilst dispensing what little justice he could that really frosted my cookies. It may be entirely true that he hated the Fascists and their violent incompetences and excesses, their giving free reign to all the black demons from the soul's deepest recesses; that he loathed the Nazi apparatchiks and hierarchs and their crude manners and gross appetites; even that, at heart, he was appalled by the systematic decimation of European Jewry; yet, for me, to keep all of this vituperation bottled up inside, to be unleashed only when it was safe to do so—and knowing that there existed a Western audience hungry for such lurid affirmations of their deepest-held suspicions—strikes all of the wrong notes for the tune he is trying to play.
Still, the man can write, and this is a lyrical and truly beautiful work of literature, with images that will stay with the reader forever—the regiment of stricken horse's heads in various strained postures spread about the merciless, imprisoning ice of a Lake Ladoga; a purplish steppe thunderstorm serving as the backdrop to a purposefully-crazed pogrom and a hallucinatory parachute drop by Soviet special forces; a train stuffed to bursting with human cattle who, having suffocated to death en route, tumble outwards like timber; a march of the crippled and the malformed through the rubbled streets of Naples. Malaparte has his weaknesses—a tendency towards repetition and revisiting select themes; a belief that within catty gossip he was inscribing subtle truths; an overbearing tendency to (improbably) place himself at the center of events; but, in the end, his fucking luscious pen, his inflamed imagination, his ability to stare at the bounty of death and ruin produced by the Second World War—through Nazi and Fascist and Falangist eyes—and capture its essence in a variety of vignettes that are spread across the Eastern European continent, including such little-visited theaters as Lapland and Moldavia, more than amend for these imperfections. At times, Malaparte also (seemingly) honestly mines his own personality and choices to discover just how he wound up where he did. What's more, he gives the impression of nailing many of the incidental details, the feel of the brutality of a Karelian winter, the colors of the boundless plains of the Ukraine, the sea-mist cityscapes of autumnal Stockholm, and, especially, the malicious banter between the new party-member and older lineage-based aristocracies, feasting and exchanging quips and bon mots and insulating themselves from both what was occurring out in the real world and their guilt for overseeing and orchestrating such ruthless and inhuman severity; Malaparte really wields the stiletto with a flourish in such urbane settings.
In the afterword, a plaint of Hofstadter's is that too many of Malaparte's chapters relate naught but anecdotal minutiae—I can entirely see where he is coming from, but cannot share his dissatisfaction with these; this book held me captive, even when disgusted, and fascinated me from start to finish. After writing my irascible review at the midpoint, I was quite prepared to abandon Kaputt, though such actions always prove easier for me to proclaim than to actually carry through with; but this time I meant it. When I got home, I convinced myself I would flip through a mere two or three pages—give him the briefest of chances for redemption—and then move on to better things on those overloaded shelves. Yet after opening to the bookmark, I was plunged into Malaparte's mesmerizing tale of an elevator-riding ghost that haunted the shimmery nocturnal sunlight of Helsinki in the summer—and before I knew it, I was settled comfortably upon the couch and all thoughts of abandonment, well, abandoned. It is true that the second half carries itself less objectionably, can be stomached more readily, than the first, perhaps because the author wisely discarded any further embellishments of his humane relief efforts in the midst of extirpation; this part focuses upon Finland, Germany, and Italy, upon nations wearied and exhausted by the endless demands of total war, upon the dignitaries and military commanders of the Axis nations who effect to support each other with a forced bonhomie and witty banter, heavily fueled by a wide variety of strong alcohol, that cannot conceal the fact that they all, to a man, comprehend that their nations have bitten off far more than they can chew; that everything will, in fact, end very badly indeed. Still, it is hard for the reader to feel any sympathy for them, and least of all for Malaparte himself, even though the final chapters present an elegiac tone to his character, freshly sprung from a nasty prison in Rome, and his shattered native land. At one point, Malaparte upbraids his erstwhile boss—and reliable protector—Count Galeazzo Ciano, Mussolini's son-in-law and a man who has tasted his closing doom, with the admonition You should have done something, risked something! Though he would likely be oblivious of the fact, these are words that cannot help but rebound back into their speaker's face.