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Anil's
Ghost, written by Michael Ondaatje
A book review
by Maribeth Griffin
Associate Director of Housing
Western Connecticut State University
I'll admit
it right now. I'm a sucker for historical fiction - made up stories about
real events. Anil's Ghost was, for me, a sublime read. It's not at all
the traditional fiction, full of action and adventure (although it lacks
for neither). Instead, it is a slow, hot, oppressive hunt for the "truth"
of human rights violations and political murders in Sri Lanka during the
1980's and 1990's. And, like Ondaatje's most well-known work, The English
Patient, Anil's Ghost leaves us with almost as many questions as it answers.
Anil Tissera
is a native Sri Lankan who left for school in the West 15 years earlier
and never returned. A forensic anthropologist, she is assigned by the
human rights organization for which she works to return to Sri Lanka to
investigate the political murders that have been occurring for the last
few decades. Sarath Diyasena, an archeologist, is her appointed government
partner. The two form an uneasy alliance, and, like Anil, we are unsure
of Sarath's loyalties - are they to the truth the two are allegedly seeking,
or do they reside with the Sri Lankan government who may be behind the
murders being investigated?
The story
centers around the discovery, during one of Sarath's archeological digs,
of bones which definitely do not come from centuries before. "Sailor"
is the name given to one of these skeletons. His bones reveal pieces of
his story: that he was initially killed and buried elsewhere, then dug
up and moved to the place of his discovery; that he was partially burned
before being buried; that he worked in a plumbago mine. Anil's job is
to build these clues into the story of a man, and that is the task that
joins her to Sarath in the novel.
What I
found most fascinating about Anil's Ghost is that the beauty of the prose
comes not in the descriptions of the lives and memories of the two main
characters, but in the moments we glimpse of the lives and deaths of incidental
characters. For instance, there's Leaf, a co-worker from New Mexico with
whom Anil had an intense relationship. After disappearing for 6 months,
Leaf suddenly calls and asks Anil to meet her at the Very Large Array
in the New Mexico desert, greeting her with the devastating news that
she has developed Alzheimer's and is dying.
'Do
you think they can hear us? Leaf asked? That giant metal ear in the
desert. Is it picking us up too? I'm just a detail from the subplot,
right?'"
The most
exquisite scene of this sort is the death of Palipana, Sarath's former
teacher and mentor. He has retreated to the jungle in his old age, now
all but blind and living with his niece, who has been mute since witnessing
the murders of her parents. The two have settled into a quiet, compassionate
life. When the niece knows of her uncle's impending death, she begins
to construct a fitting tribute to this archeologist.
She
had already prepared a pyre for him on the edge of the pokuna, whose
sound he loved. She had already cut one of his phrases into the rock,
one of the first things he had said to her, which she had held onto
like a raft in her years of fear. She had chiseled it where the horizon
of water was, so that, depending on tide and the pull of the moon, the
words in the rock would submerge or hang above their reflection or be
revealed in both elements... the girl who stood waist-deep and cut it
into the rock in the last week of Palipana's dying life and carried
him into the water beside it and placed his hand against it...so that
in the last days of his life he was accompanied by the great generous
noise of her work just as if she was speaking out loud. Just the sentence...just
a gentle sentence once clutched by her...
It is these
glimpses of love, of honor, of the search for truth in the midst of unimaginable
horror - these flashes of brilliance in ordinary lives, which weave this
incredible tale into a rich, delicious tapestry for all your senses. If
you read for answers, this book will disappoint. If you read for insight
and honor, for courage in the face of personal loss and hopelessness,
Ondaatje cannot disappoint.
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