Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Language
  
English

Pages
  
298 pp (Hardback)

Originally published
  
1996

Publisher
  
Little, Brown and Company

Publication date
  
1996

ISBN
  
0-316-87807-3

Author
  
John David Morley

Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSWYSfDtNbcYs4kgp

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Genres
  
Fiction, Philosophical fiction

Similar
  
Passage, In the Labyrinth, The Case of Thomas N, Ella Morris, Pictures from the Water Tra

Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities (1996) is a novel by John David Morley. Beginning in 1934 and ending in 1990, the book comprises a psychological history of modern Germany over several generations.

Contents

Summary

Following in his father Magnus's footsteps, Jason Gould travels to Germany in 1961 but, unlike Magnus, Jason never returns to England, remaining to witness the construction of the Berlin Wall and the division of the country, meanwhile falling in love with the daughter of a woman whom his own father had once hoped to marry. Conceived alongside the unification of Germany in 1990, the novel confronts haunting questions about the collective guilt of the Holocaust, the oppressive ideological constraints of life in the GDR and the radical terrorism of the Red Army Faction. The narrative explicitly evokes Kleist’s Michael Kohlhaas and Caspar David Friedrich’s Chalk Cliffs on Rügen, while tracing the evolution of a cultural identity inescapably overshadowed by a political history of perennial trauma.

Reception

Reviewing Destiny in The Independent, Robert Hanks declared it “an uncommonly satisfying book, richly thoughtful and informative, balancing ideas and their symbols with bewitching preciseness.” For Valentine Cunningham, writing in The Times Literary Supplement: “Morley’s modern Germany is given us as a sequence of impossible — shocking, monstrous, buried — facts, which, like the blood of Abel that in the Bible ‘cries out from the ground’, demand explanation. And no one method will, it seems, suffice by itself as an entrée into these horrors. Destiny refuses to settle for any one thing: story, history, art history, documentary, essay, travel-writing. It will be all of these things in turn. And some of these kinds are done with great power.” In his review of the book in The Spectator, Tom Hiney said of Morley's prose: "His writing has soul as well as brains and it is this that makes his fiction engaging."

References

Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities Wikipedia