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Looking for the Summer
Robert
W. Norris
Robert W. Norriss Looking
for the Summer is a graceful autobiographical novel that breathes fresh life into a
perennial genre: the spiritual bildungsroman.
The theme of a questing expatriate who renounces Western materialism in favor of an exotic
pilgrimage to the East will be familiar to anyone who has fallen under the spell of W.
Somerset Maughams The Razors Edge or Jack
Kerouacs The Dharma Bums. Norriss
protagonist and narrator is David Thompson, an aspiring novelist and self-proclaimed
romantic anarchist. Bitterly disillusioned while serving in the Air Force
during the Vietnam War, David chooses to become a conscientious objector. Its a
decision that lands him a year in military prison charged with willful
disobedience. After the war, he seeks solace and literary inspiration in Paris. A
chance encounter with two businessmen, one from Iran and the other from Afghanistan,
results in David joining them on a trek across Europe and the Far East.
Lacking the brash self-confidence of a radical firebrand, David is
something of a holy fool slouching toward wisdom via the Keatsian mode of negative
capability. He sees himself as representative of a new, lost, paranoid
generation. As his travels immerse him further in Third World geopolitical tensions
and complex ideological struggles, he begins to question his own motivations for the
choices hes made. When an underground cell of Iranian dissidents embraces David for
his perceived anti-Americanism, he confesses to them: I can honestly tell you that
fear and cowardice played a much larger role than courage in taking my stand."
The author is savvy in
recognizing that self-discovery today is as much a psychoanalytical process as a religious
experience. The sight of an elderly shopkeeper in Delhi, for example, triggers an extended
reverie about Davids idyllic childhood in northern California. I realized
suddenly, he tells us, that what I had seen in the face of the old shopkeeper
was the gentle, compassionate, loving visage of my father before all the trouble
began. Moreover, as David gazes upon the poverty and wretchedness of India, he sees
a manifestation of the pain, shame, and frustration that I had caused my
father. Such a solipsistic epiphany may strike some readers as the apex of American
narcissism. But it functions as a wholly believable moment of transformation for the
novels callow protagonist.
For a narrative that revels
in sometimes long-winded philosophical and political discussions, Looking for the Summer contains surprising
elements of suspense. Because the story takes place during the 1970s Cold War era,
Davids road trip in a BMW across Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe is as perilous and
foreboding as anything out of a vintage John Le Carre espionage novel:
We continued into the night toward Bulgaria, the BMW rushing past Soviet military trucks on a winding, rocky road. We arrived at the Yugoslav-Bulgarian border early in the morning. A Bulgarian military guard detained us for two hours before granting our visas at dawn. An eerie feeling possessed me as we passed behind the Iron Curtain. The word that came to my mind most as we passed that day traveling through the despair of Bulgaria was grey. Everything we passed was synonymous with gloom, depression, suspicion. Everything was grey: the hills, the earth, the buildings, the sky.
Behind the wheel of the car is Davids newfound Iranian
friend, Hasan, whose reckless driving and blustery epithets (You never see a Turk
give way to another driver... They are donkeys asses!) provide a welcome touch
of comic relief. Hasan will later prove his mettle in a tense standoff with Kurdish
bandits on a treacherous mountain road along the border between Turkey and Iran.
Although published prior to
the events of 9/11, it is impossible to pick up Norriss novel without a heightened
interest in its vividly depicted locales in a part of the world where our attentions are
now so intensely focused. Several fascinating chapters are devoted to Davids stay in
Afghanistan. Written with a novelists eye for characterization and a reporters
skill for observation, Looking for the Summer is
the kind of small press gem that is often overlooked but is well worth seeking out.
- Bob
Wake