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I am an unabashed fan
of David Mitchell. At least I was an unabashed fan of David
Mitchell. I loved his mixture of fantasy and sci-fi and literature
and bizarro plot devices and post-modern narratives. And then he went
and got all traditional on me come his fourth novel, Black
Swan Green. So this was the new Mitchell I had to settle for;
a great writer who writes relatively straightforward coming of age
stories set in his home country of England. And then he goes and does
another 180 and writes a giant novel about feudal society in Japan
in 1799! Man, this much talent and utter and complete well roundedness
shouldn't be allowed in one man. This isn't to say that I don't miss
the old Mitchell desperately, but this Mitchell is clearly a very
studied man and amazingly patient and detail oriented.
So, what did I know about Japanese feudal society in 1799 before reading
this book? What did I know about The Dutch East India Company and
Dutch politics and whatnot (despite just
going to Amsterdam)? Pretty much nothing. But luckily I have our
esteemed author to lay it all out for me. Granted, this isn't a dry
history lesson; it's an actual story about our hero, Jacob de Zoet,
a mild mannered clerk stationed on Dejima, where he works for the
Dutch East India Company. Now if you don't know what Dejima is, you're
not alone. Apparently it's in Japan. Along with that, there are all
sorts of places mentioned, most of which either no longer exist or
have changed names several times since. It's hard enough figuring
out the governments and social strata of Japan in 1799, let alone
the difference between Java, Zeeland and why a company based in Japan
has the word India in it. There is also the fact that Japanese names
are backwards, I have trouble remembering the difference between a
shogun and a samurai and the majority of the dialogue flows through
Japanese translators translating Dutch to Japanese and Japanese back
to Dutch, so you're never quite sure if the translation is correct,
accurate or tinged with misunderstanding or political hesitance.
Challenging read aside, the narrative proceeds at a good clip, introducing
us to a core crew of folks on the Dutch East India side as well as
the many Japanese working in Dejima and throughout the mainland. Not
having much of a clue about Japanese history, it was clear that Mitchell,
who has definitely delved into modern and ancient Japanese society
in at least a couple of his former books, did his research here (or
at least seemed that way to me). He captured the feeling of the closed
country and their stifled sense of self throughout. Rank is everything,
so Mitchell spends a good deal of the book subtly explaining the delicate
balance of the society that is at once rigid and mysterious to outsiders,
but also rotting from the inside with corruption and decay due to
the lack of any kind of outside influence or checks. Our main character,
Jacob, has to wend his way not only through the politics of his own
Dutch company, but the bizarre and paranoid world that he's living
in. He also has to deal with his own career aspirations, as well as
an unsettled global landscape back in The Netherlands and a budding
romance with a Japanese woman that is totally verboten. That's the
funny thing about this book, and probably what motivated Mitchell.
When it comes down to it, this is really just a soap opera set against
a really complicated backdrop.
At the heart of our soap opera is Jacob, who is honestly kind of a
hard character to like. The guy is kind of an uptight, religious do-gooder
who is both a company man as well as a guy with hidden aspirations
that he buries in righteousness. He's that kid in class that gets
straight As, never goofs off and is smug as hell in his goodness.
The issue here is that everyone else around him is either corrupt
or on the edge of corruption. Though, again, what I may take as corrupt
may just have been how they did business back then. Either way the
Dutch East India folks all seem to be out for themselves and the Japanese
officials, while less obvious about it, are also just as bad, but
in a really restrained kind of way. The drama revolves around our
man Jacob and his dealings with this co-workers as well as his trying
to avoid losing his head (literally and figuratively) as he delicately
sidesteps the politics of the company and the Japanese hierarchical
craziness. Throw in the chaste, unrequited, and at times inextricable
love for a scarred Japanese woman and you have the perfect storm of
what for Mitchell seems like a pretty straightforward plot--just set
in a place you'd never expect. Throughout the book there are many
history and cultural lessons, political intrigue, mystery and dynamic
character studies. It's really an amalgam of several genres, but all
genres not formerly explored by any of Mitchell's novels. I can't
say I don't miss the old stuff, but if I'm to ignore my knowledge
about his past and concentrate just on this book, I can honestly say
I like the new version of this author. Maybe next time he'll give
us the intricate plot, but leave out the samurai swords.
Other titles by David Mitchell:
Black Swan
Green
Cloud Atlas
Ghostwritten
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