7.4 /10 1 Votes7.4
Language English Pages 352 p. Dewey Decimal 813/.54 19 Genre Historical Fiction OCLC 17648856 | 3.7/5 Goodreads Publication date 1988 ISBN 0-399-13355-0 Originally published 1988 Country United States of America | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Joseph Heller books Closing Time, Good as Gold, Portrait of an Artist - as an Old Man, No Laughing Matter, Something Happened |
Picture This is a 1988 novel from Joseph Heller, the satiric author of the acclaimed Catch-22.
Contents
The novel is an eclectic historical journey across multiple periods of history, all connected by a single painting: Rembrandt van Rijn's Aristotle Contemplating a Bust of Homer. The work jumps from the golden age of Athens, to 17th Century Holland, to the rise of the American Empire; hopscotching from Aristotle, to Rembrandt, to Socrates, and back to Heller and even Jimmy Carter. It examines fundamental dichotomies in human existence under the guise of satire.
Plot introduction
Like in Heller's version of King David's story, God Knows, the author changes little in the storyline of the original – he execrates narrative, and denies historical counterpoints, both explicit and implicit. Incomprehension may have contributed to a critical redemption of this book, along with less weight for humour and a sobering conclusion.
Major themes
Heller concludes that we do not learn from history (and in fact so much of history may be nonfactual that learning may be impossible). Being a pessimist chronicler of the American Century, his main unspoken theme is of course parallels between the onetime Hellenic overlord respective the onetime ruler of the Seas, and his home country.
This is most apparent in his treatment of the peak and downfall of Athens, when after the victory over Persia, Athens formed the Delian League, and got embroiled in the Peloponnesian War. Heller describes a beacon of democracy that destroys its own greatest advances or transforms them into tools of abuse, turns on its own allies just to demonstrate its power, and loses to weaker enemies due to self-deception.