This is the 2nd-best book I've read this year. The first was Independent People, by the same author, which is easily one of the 5 or 10 best books I've ever read. If you want to discover a truly phenomenal writer, one with as much pathos and humanity as tenderness and good humor, with some of the most stunningly beautiful passages imaginable... I would suggest Mr Laxness to you! No, I would almost demand that you let this saint into your life. These two books are something on another level altogether. He wrote with so much honesty and passion, warm and fuzzy yet cold and distant when needed. (He is Icelandic, after all). Reading Laxness feels like sitting in front of a blazing fire with wool socks, watching a terrifying blizzard from the single-plane windows of your house which may or may not stand up to the elements (but you hope that it does, so that you don't freeze to death, and can read all of his other novels when you're finished with one).
Laxness's protagonists are fairly impoverished and rather single-minded, simple on one level but intrinsically complex, and intelligent enough to scrape by. There are heaps of other characters buzzing around his epic tales, ranging from greedy tobacconists, hypocritical pastors and evil Christian men, strong-headed young women, tyrannical politicians, strange and lonely spiritual mediums, etc. Needless to say, most of the townsfolk we meet along the journey are quite grotesque in one way or many. The anti-hero of this novel is Ólafur, an orphan who "was sent away from his mother in a sack one winter's day." The first quarter of the book (originally published in four installments) details his awful childhood with equal parts sympathy and subtle anger. (The same can be said of the whole novel, really.) Weak and extremely unloved by all, he lives a bleak existence that somehow never quite becomes bitterness. His only solace is learning how to be a poet, which he does while in his sickbed for two years, meanwhile memorizing every knot and crack in the wood floor and ceiling in his corner of the cold hut. He soon comes across a book, a sole book, which he reads in private, knowing that the house would be outraged if he were caught reading a "filthy" book (meaning any book that is not the Bible). Alas, he is caught and the book is burned in a tragic episode. "Admittedly he had never understood the book, but that did not matter. What mattered was that this was his secret, his dream, his refuge; in short, it was his book. He wept only as children weep when they suffer injustice at the hands of those stronger than themselves. It is the most bitter weeping in the world. That was what happened to his book; it was taken from him and burned. And he was left standing naked and without a book on the first day of summer."
He eventually is ostracized from the house and taken on horseback to a faraway village. He is guided by Reimar the poet, the most popular in the region. He finally works up the courage to ask, “Don't you find it exceedingly difficult to be a poet, Reimar?”
“Difficult? Me? To be a poet? Just ask the womenfolk about that, my friend, whether our Reimar finds it difficult to be a poet! It was only yesterday that I rode into the yard of one of the better farms hereabouts, and the daughter of the house was standing outside, smiling, and without more ado I addressed her with a double-rhymed, quatro-syllabic verse that just came to me as I bent down from the saddle to greet her. No, it's not difficult to be a poet, my friend, it's a pleasure to be a poet.”
In this new land, he is free, though equally poor. His one desire is to write poetry all day long and look at the world around him. His only thought of the future is to write poetry, with no questions about food or employment. He seeks not friends, but only vaguely to be understood. In short, he's a bit naive...but he is, after all, only 17 at this point. "He went on composing poetry for most of the day, and reciting his poems to Nature and lying on his back on the grass and loving the sky. Late in the afternoon he drank some water from the brook. He was sure that the birds of the sky would bring him tidbits in their beaks whenever he got hungry."
His life continues on, with a handful of genuine (though mild) ups, and many downs. It is the saga of good Ólafur, who merely wants to be a true poet and not bother anybody. But in the process he somehow ends up bothering almost everybody... Surrounding him are all the narrow-minded and corrupt people in high positions, and the hard-working, hungry townsfolk who are more and more oppressed at every turn. Of course, much of the book deals with bleak things, but it's never bleak for long - there is good humor throughout, even in the speeches of the corrupt hypocrites, and even in the deep despair of young Ólafur. What's more, the genuine joy to be found in such simple things as the sun splashing onto the hair of a first lover in the morning, the glimpsing of a beautiful glacier, the divine power of feeling the heavens, the palpable spirit of an inspired poem...these moments fill your soul like they're actual breaths of fresh glacial air.
There's a lot about spirituality, and much talk about Christianity (especially the two religious leaders of the town, who are just about the opposite of godly men). Near the end of the book, however, we meet a pastor who often pays a visit to jails. Turns out this guy, at least, has a bit more of the kind, humane, gentle personality of the figure Christians are meant to look up to most.“If I have a face that rejoices in God's grace, my brother, it is because I have learned more from those who have lived within the walls [of this prison] than from those who lived outside them,” said the cathedral pastor. “I have learned more from those who have fallen down than those who have remained upright. That's why I am always so happy in this house.” I think it's fair to say that the reader will feel the same: reading this book, we learn more about goodness from those who have fallen than from those who have supposedly "remained upright."
I finished this book a month and a half ago, thinking I'd find the words to write a proper review about it. Those words are still avoiding me, so I'll just give up and tell you to read this book if you like books that have the power to change the way you think about life.
Laxness was a god among men, and these two books are incredibly inspired. Independent People was written before World Light, so I would suggest starting there, but that's like choosing between Rubber Soul and Revolver: completely pointless; you need them both in your life, and the sooner the better.
And here are a few more of my favorite passages!
-- "Was this perhaps life, then?—to have loved one summer in youth and not to have been aware of it until it was over, some sea-wet footprints on the floor and sand in the prints, the fragrance of a woman, soft loving lips in the dusk of a summer night, sea birds; and then nothing more; gone."
-- "Whoever thinks that beauty is something he can enjoy exclusively for himself just by abandoning other people and closing his eyes to the human life of which he is part—he is not the friend of beauty. He who doesn't fight every day of his life to the last breath against the representatives of evil, against the living images of evil who rule Sviðinsvík—he blasphemes by taking the word beauty into his mouth."
-- "Children should live a wholesome and natural life and go about with a mussel in one corner of their mouths and a shrimp in the other instead of sweets."
-- "I'm an extremely wealthy man. I own the sky. I have invested all my capital in the sun. I'm not bad-tempered, as you seem to imagine, nor do I bear grudges. But like all wealthy men, I'm a little frightened of losing my fortune."
-- “And here we sit on someone's threshold shivering in the night, you a hero and I a poet: two beggars.”
-- "The spirit of this penniless folk poet, whom the learned dismissed and the major poets despised, has lived with the Icelandic nation for a thousand years, in the smoky farm cottage, in the destitute fisherman's hut under the glacier, in the shark-catcher off the north coast when all fishing grounds are lost in the black midwinter night of the Arctic Sea, in the tatters of the vagabond who beds down beside a hill sheep in the willow scrub of the moors, in the fetters of the chain gang convicts of Bremerholm: This spirit was the quick in the life of the nation throughout its history. The five strings of the poet's harp were the strings of joy, sorrow, love, heroism and death."