
W. G. Sebald’s Vertigo was published in 1990. He’s a favourite author of David
Foster Wallace and several other writers I like so I decided I’d better read
him. This one, chosen randomly from those available from the Wellington Public
Library, is four linked stories about men traveling, (mis)remembering, being in
a state of greater or lesser anguish. Sebald’s theme, according to the blurb,
is “the vertiginous unreliability of memory.” I was not entirely gripped by any
of it. Resolved to try another of his books before too long.
I’ve been a James Meek fan since he came to Wellington Writers’ and Readers some years
ago, and I read The People’s Act Of Love,
a grim and complicated story about how to live a moral life. Meek’s latest, The Heart Broke In is a ramble of a
book with many characters and time shifts. It’s about becoming part of the
long-term stream of life, for example, by having children or doing science. It
also deals with love and betrayal and guilt and self-justification, especially
through the vile, self-serving celebrity, Richie.
Richie tended to
divide his memories into two categories: things that happened to him and things
that happened to other people while he was there.
The idea that modern life lacks a moral compass
features in this book, too. A key idea seemed to me to be the question of how to be
moral without religion. Maybe.