Saturday, January 12, 2019

The Painted Bird



The Painted Bird
by Jerzy Kosinski
read: 2018
Time 100 NovelsGuardian 1000 Novels

One of my friends opines that novels considered literature are invariably depressing. That is definitely the case with The Painted Bird, whose protagonist is a young boy sent away by his parents during the spread of Nazi Germany's power. He throws himself on the mercy of various peasant villages he finds, invariably suffering abuse, indignities, and misery as he goes. Eventually, only at the age of 10 or so, he learns that the world is governed by a heartless code:
From the moment of signing a pact with the Devil, the more harm, misery, injury, and bitterness a man could inflict on those around him, the more help he could expect. If he shrank from inflicting harm on others, if he succumbed to emotions of love, friendship, and compassion, he would immediately become weaker and his own life would have to absorb the suffering and defeats that he spared others.
Much of his journey involves attempting to make sense of the world through this kind of pattern recognition. Ultimately, he finds little purpose or meaning. The encounters he has harden him into a cold, terrifying youth of the streets. On paper, the story has a happy ending, but it feels as bleak and pessimistic as any novel I've read.

No comments:

Post a Comment