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Zoran Zivkovic and
Kurodahan Press

Here’s an odd pairing: Kurodahan Press, an independent publisher
specializing in English translations of Japanese literature (including
the essential LAIRS
OF THE HIDDEN GODS and
KAIKI horror anthologies) and the
quintessentially European author Zoran Zivkovic, arguably the most
consistently brilliant purveyor of modern surreal fiction. But odd
pairing or not, Kurodahan’s Zoran Zivkovic publications are nifty, being
strikingly crafted and eye-pleasing, not to mention affordable and user
friendly in design and layout.
Having spent much of the past year engaged
in something of a crash course in Zivkovic’s fiction, I can attest that
the five Zivkovic titles put out by Kurodahan in 2010 are very
representative. All are collections, a form Zivkovic especially favors,
and all were translated from the Serbian by Zivkovic’s frequent English
translator Alice Copple-Tošić.
The stories of these books take place in
undefined contemporary settings, where (mostly) nameless protagonists
engage in various odd doings. Thematically interlinked anthologies are a
Zivkovic trademark, with stories that complement and even complete one
another in various arcane ways. The books under discussion are all quite
short, with unerringly focused and easy-to-read prose, but don’t be
fooled: Zivkovic’s fiction is among the most thoughtful and complex of
any author.
What follows are brief summaries of Zoran
Zivkovic’s five Kurodahan Press titles, all of which are worth your
time. For the benefit of both the Zivkovic novice and the more seasoned
fan, I’ve arranged them numerically in order of least to most bizarre,
starting with…
1.
THE LIBRARY
A fast, easy read: a collection of six
stories centered on books and their (mostly adverse) effects on various
lonely, solitary individuals. A writer discovers a website claiming to
have every book ever written available for download, a man finds a
succession of thick books turning up in his mailbox, another is trapped
inside a library containing books of people’s lives and another in a
“reformed” hell, which has been fashioned into a giant library as both
punishment (because so few people read) and therapy to the inferno’s
denizens. In the final tale a snooty collector discovers a paperback in
his cherished hardcover collection and attempts to expel the offending
book--which, it turns out, is the very book under review here.
2.
AMARCORD
This one is slightly more complex in its
design. It features ten stories, each named after a famous work of
literature ("The Magic Mountain," "The Book of Laughter and Forgetting,"
"Fahrenheit 451," etc), and all centered on themes of memory. In the
first story a nameless man finds his memory has been artificially
removed due to some unspecified crime he committed, while in the last
story another nameless man (the same one?) learns a far more
momentous truth about himself and his memories. There’s also an antique
shop where one can buy others' memories, a doctor who discovers an
amnesiac's "backup memory," a machine that retrieves deceased people's
past experiences from DNA stored in their body parts, "memory agencies"
that purchase especially exciting and dramatic memories, a man who
suffers from "double memories" and another who can recall various
different timelines of any single event. A fun and endlessly provocative
little book.
3.
MISS TAMARA, THE READER
As in THE LIBRARY, this beguiling
collection attests to Zivkovic’s all-encompassing love affair with the
printed word. Here the stories, all centered on a compulsive reader
identified only as Miss Tamara, are linked by repeated actions and some
very pointed symbolism, specifically different types of fruit. Each
story is named after a particular fruit that figures in it--“Apples,”
“Lemons,” “Bananas” and eventually “Fruit Salad.” Among other oddities,
Miss Tamara is lured to various locations by a series of postcards she
finds in library books, roped into reading a chapter of a book to a
blind man in a park, given new reading glasses that cause the words in
her books to gradually disappear as she reads them, and becomes obsessed
with deciding the last book she’ll read before she dies.
4.
COMPARTMENTS
This six story mind-boggler is short and
straightforward yet contains enough manic invention to fill a sci fi
trilogy. The title piece is a novella-length exercise in dreamlike
frission, with a hapless man led into a succession of increasingly odd
encounters with several highly eccentric individuals on a train. “The
Square” achieves an equivalent level of imaginative bizarre, with four
workaholic protagonists undergoing similar experiences that draw them
into a town square, where a certain ecstatic transcendence is in store.
A further standout is “The Teashop,” which like “Compartments” involves
a fateful train ride--in this case, though, the protagonist, an
inquisitive young woman, begins the tale by disembarking from a train.
She enters a teashop and, upon ordering a “Tea Made of Stories,” gets
quite an earful. Rounding out the collection are “The Telephone,” about
a man who receives a series of suspicious phone calls by someone
claiming to be Satan, and “First Photograph,” whose narrator attempts to
explain a photograph of himself as an infant with his ear intently
pressed against his mother’s stomach; apparently he was listening for
the heartbeat of his unborn twin brother, who chose to shrink himself
down to quantum size rather than be born.
5.
FOUR STORIES TILL THE
END
One of Zivkovic’s absolute strangest books, a
veritable mini-epic of interconnected surreality as weird as anything
he--or anyone else!--has ever written. In the first story a condemned
man receives visits in his cell from four unexpected individuals: his
lawyer, his prosecutor, his judge and a prison guard, all of whom have
bizarre stories to tell that involve artistry and death. The following
three tales likewise feature nameless protagonists confined to various
claustrophobic settings--a hospital room, a hotel room and an
elevator--where they're each visited by four people, all of whom have
bizarre stories to tell involving artistry and death. Those stories are
showcases for Zivkovic's consistently oulandish sense of invention, in
accounts of a missionary vanishing into a painting; a circus usher
determined to kill every spectator whose name has at least two vowels by
placing dangerous insects on tickets; a hotel containing a zinc mine,
slaughterhouse and cemetery; an elevator dining room; a serial killer
who atones for his sins by painstakingly cutting out letters from books,
with which he then creates "literature preserves." Wow.
--7/18/11 |