SKU: rem007120
$6.98
I first read Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita on a balcony of
the Hotel Metropole in Saigon on three summer evenings in 1971. The
tropical air was heavy and full of the smells of cordite and motorcycle
exhaust and rotting fish and wood-fire stoves, and the horizon flared
ambiguously, perhaps from heat lightning, perhaps from bombs. Later each
night, as was my custom, I would wander out into the steamy back alleys
of the city, where no one ever seemed to sleep, and crouch in doorways
with the people and listen to the stories of their culture and their
ancestors and their ongoing lives. Bulgakov taught me to hear something
in those stories that I had not yet clearly heard. One could call it, in
terms that would soon thereafter gain wide currency, "magical realism".
The deadpan mix of the fantastic and the realistic was at the heart of
the Vietnamese mythos. It is at the heart of the present zeitgeist. And
it was not invented by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, as wonderful as his One
Hundred Years of Solitude is. Garcia Marquez's landmark work of magical
realism was predated by nearly three decades by Bulgakov's brilliant
masterpiece of a novel. That summer in Saigon a vodka-swilling, talking
black cat, a coven of beautiful naked witches, Pontius Pilate, and a
whole cast of benighted writers of Stalinist Moscow and Satan himself
all took up permanent residence in my creative unconscious. Their
presence, perhaps more than anything else from the realm of literature,
has helped shape the work I am most proud of. I'm often asked for a list
of favorite authors. Here is my advice. Read Bulgakov. Look around you
at the new century. He will show you things you need to see. Now Only $6.98
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