MJ Nicholls's Reviews > If on a Winter's Night a Traveller
If on a Winter's Night a Traveller
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You are about to read Mark Nicholls’s review of Italo Calvino’s postmodern classic If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller. You might want to position yourself in a comfortable chair before you begin, or place a cushion behind your back, as we know how arduous it can be to read things off the internet. You might also care to prepare a coffee, a light snack, or to switch a light on before beginning.
You might be thinking that this review is not going to interest you, since book reviews on books you haven’t read can often be frustrating. For starters, the writer delves into details about the plot which spoil the surprises a blind reading of the book might create, and likewise you are unable to form an opinion yourself and share your thoughts on the text in question.
Conversely, you might have read the text and are familiar with the second person narration that addresses the reader directly and places them as a protagonist in the book. You might think this review an obvious imitation of Calvino’s unique style, and become irate as you read on, wondering when the reviewer is going to get around to summarising the plot.
In fact, you become so irate, you search for the book on Amazon, but are incandescent when you notice each review is also written in the same imitative style, and the gimmick becomes so irritating you have to leave the room for a moment to calm yourself down.
As you leave the room, someone knocks on the door. It is a door-to-door salesman offering copies of Italo Calvino’s novel If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller at a reduced price. He begins his sale by saying: “You are wondering whether or not this novel is for you, or whether you might find a novel with the beginnings of ten separate novels included as part of the plot somewhat bemusing or distracting. You are unsure whether to slam the door in my face, or to go get your credit card.”
You slam the door in his face. As you return to the living room, you notice that Mark Nicholls has broken into your house and is sitting naked on the couch reading Italo Calvino’s novel If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller. You are very confused and frightened. Feelings of arousal and apoplexy stir up inside you. You decide to call the police, but Mark Nicholls springs up from the chair as you move towards the phone.
“You are wondering whether to phone the police to remove Mark Nicholls from your house. You are deeply confused as to why this reviewer whose opinions you find facile and banal is suddenly sitting naked on your couch reading the very book you were reading about,” he says. You look for a blunt instrument to hit him with, but can find only a cup. You throw the cup, but he ducks and it breaks against the wall.
You start to sob. That was your best cup, and there is coffee over the walls and carpet. Furthermore, Mark Nicholls appears to be swinging his penis at you, performing an embarrassing 360° swingaround which slowly hypnotises you into a deep deep sleep.
When you wake up, you are at your desk. Mark Nicholls and the coffee stain has gone. You wonder why there is a grapefruit in your left hand and an antelope on your sofa. Those of you who read only the opening sentence and skipped to the end get a strange feeling of anticlimax.
You might be thinking that this review is not going to interest you, since book reviews on books you haven’t read can often be frustrating. For starters, the writer delves into details about the plot which spoil the surprises a blind reading of the book might create, and likewise you are unable to form an opinion yourself and share your thoughts on the text in question.
Conversely, you might have read the text and are familiar with the second person narration that addresses the reader directly and places them as a protagonist in the book. You might think this review an obvious imitation of Calvino’s unique style, and become irate as you read on, wondering when the reviewer is going to get around to summarising the plot.
In fact, you become so irate, you search for the book on Amazon, but are incandescent when you notice each review is also written in the same imitative style, and the gimmick becomes so irritating you have to leave the room for a moment to calm yourself down.
As you leave the room, someone knocks on the door. It is a door-to-door salesman offering copies of Italo Calvino’s novel If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller at a reduced price. He begins his sale by saying: “You are wondering whether or not this novel is for you, or whether you might find a novel with the beginnings of ten separate novels included as part of the plot somewhat bemusing or distracting. You are unsure whether to slam the door in my face, or to go get your credit card.”
You slam the door in his face. As you return to the living room, you notice that Mark Nicholls has broken into your house and is sitting naked on the couch reading Italo Calvino’s novel If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller. You are very confused and frightened. Feelings of arousal and apoplexy stir up inside you. You decide to call the police, but Mark Nicholls springs up from the chair as you move towards the phone.
“You are wondering whether to phone the police to remove Mark Nicholls from your house. You are deeply confused as to why this reviewer whose opinions you find facile and banal is suddenly sitting naked on your couch reading the very book you were reading about,” he says. You look for a blunt instrument to hit him with, but can find only a cup. You throw the cup, but he ducks and it breaks against the wall.
You start to sob. That was your best cup, and there is coffee over the walls and carpet. Furthermore, Mark Nicholls appears to be swinging his penis at you, performing an embarrassing 360° swingaround which slowly hypnotises you into a deep deep sleep.
When you wake up, you are at your desk. Mark Nicholls and the coffee stain has gone. You wonder why there is a grapefruit in your left hand and an antelope on your sofa. Those of you who read only the opening sentence and skipped to the end get a strange feeling of anticlimax.
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Reading Progress
Started Reading
November 14, 2009
–
Finished Reading
November 21, 2009
– Shelved
October 30, 2010
– Shelved as:
novels
January 25, 2012
– Shelved as:
oulipians
June 4, 2012
– Shelved as:
worshipped
August 26, 2014
– Shelved as:
southern-europe
Comments Showing 1-50 of 138 (138 new)
message 1:
by
Oriana
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rated it 5 stars
Mar 07, 2010 04:54PM
Holy shit, this is fabulous review, not to mention a very fitting tribute to a fantastic book. Well done!!
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i think people parody too much in reviews. but I think this review is really well done. so it's okay this once
a feeling of anticlimax. strange? that lady of "elegies for the broken hearted" did 2nd person too. more more
a lot of the books I've read recently have done some good stuff with second person. german for travellers for one.
I usually dislike parody reviews too. I was trying to parody the parody in true meta style here.
Apparently some second person books are wonderful but as a rule I hate them. I should hate less and love more next year.
Apparently some second person books are wonderful but as a rule I hate them. I should hate less and love more next year.
yay. the ones I've seen recently that do it well don't write the whole novel that way they just periodically use the device.
I normally hate second person narrative (I go more about it in my review of The Rowing Lesson) but this one was quite good. I probably like your review better than the book (because it is shorter)
Ivona wrote: "I wonder what Calvino's favorite quote would be? How about, 'pretentious? Moi?'"
I wouldn't call Calvino pretentious myself. Precious? Particular? Certainly.
I wouldn't call Calvino pretentious myself. Precious? Particular? Certainly.
Lol, gaffe, I thought I was reviewing the book, not your comment, but! like your review way better than the book (now that I read it). As to Calvino, I wouldn't call him precious myself. Poppycock, certainly.
Ivona wrote: "Lol, gaffe, I thought I was reviewing the book, not your comment, but! like your review way better than the book (now that I read it). As to Calvino, I wouldn't call him precious myself. Poppycock,..."
Harsh! I'm not terribly interested in his fables, the Cosmicomics and so on, so this sort of thing is much more divine to me. You may find the opposite to be true.
Harsh! I'm not terribly interested in his fables, the Cosmicomics and so on, so this sort of thing is much more divine to me. You may find the opposite to be true.
OK. So I've just signed up to good reads (what a misnomer, btw. should be badreads given everyother review is a slagfest). I'm set down with my mental ducks in a row (corporate bingo, anyone), for these 10 books I plan to review -and which of course no one will ever read-(aside, I see you've read 409 books just recently, as one does, but more on that later), and Calvino just so happens to be on my list. Now, I was planning on some innocuous comment where I give the guy credit for an original idea but deduct points for broing the crap out of me half way through (except of course I would have said how he loses his surrealistic momentum as prozaic inertia flatilines the plot narrative halfway through, etc and ad nauseaum), when lo and behold, and right from outside the mold, and though I'm still in my square, I come face to face with the Nicholls crown jewels, 'waving' a rood and a pair! Is that a take on the two finger salute perchance, because I'm kinda with you. Now, all I need to do is come up with my own personal seal of 'wank and wonderful' approval, cause I think its a catchy idea. Hmm...what to do...I could say of Calvino, nice to meat you do, I herd your word, to my mons de-lick-tum.
Knig-o-lass: Well, I absolutely adore this book. So my review was a lovey cuddlefest. I'm not into Calvino's fables though. Thank you for putting so much effort into your comment. You'll fit in here.
I just want to make note of the unintentionally hilarious typo-phrase "broing the crap out me".
But I also find this book weirdly delightful where such tricky, artificial concept might be expected to breed tedium from others. Calvino's special skill, to me, lies in his being able to inject such humane insight and life into the most absurd story-formulations. And with a total lack of pretension. But of course reactions vary.
But I also find this book weirdly delightful where such tricky, artificial concept might be expected to breed tedium from others. Calvino's special skill, to me, lies in his being able to inject such humane insight and life into the most absurd story-formulations. And with a total lack of pretension. But of course reactions vary.
Debbie wrote: "It is, trust me."
This is not the forum for slagging this book. This is the we-love-it-because-everything-about-it-is-funny-and-original-and-inspired forum.
This is not the forum for slagging this book. This is the we-love-it-because-everything-about-it-is-funny-and-original-and-inspired forum.
Sorry, I think you can love it and also find it annoying, as others have mentioned. Patience and a lot of time to read and re-read is needed. Didn't mean to be snarky.
BTW, I absolutely LOVED your review, MJ.
BTW, I absolutely LOVED your review, MJ.
Debbie wrote: "Sorry, I think you can love it and also find it annoying, as others have mentioned. Patience and a lot of time to read and re-read is needed. Didn't mean to be snarky.
BTW, I absolutely LOVED your..."
I'm sure you're right, a book of beginnings does sound scary. Or tedious. But I love this one like Therese Raquin in heat.
BTW, I absolutely LOVED your..."
I'm sure you're right, a book of beginnings does sound scary. Or tedious. But I love this one like Therese Raquin in heat.
As you leave the room, someone knocks on the door. It is a door-to-door salesman offering copies of Italo Calvino’s novel If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller at a reduced price. He begins his sale by saying: “You are wondering whether or not this novel is for you, or whether you might find a novel with the beginnings of ten separate novels included as part of the plot somewhat bemusing or distracting. You are unsure whether to slam the door in my face, or to go get your credit card.”
HA, WIN.
HA, WIN.
MJ wrote: "I was trying to parody the parody in true meta style here."
Ivona wrote: "I wonder what Calvino's favorite quote would be? How about, 'pretentious? Moi?'"
@ MJ: I think Calvino has meta his match. That came out less politically correct than I intended (my apologies), but the point remains.
@ Ivona: "Le voyageur, c'est moi!" in imitation of Flaubert and Louis XIV and... Or maybe because the novel is in the second person, "Le voyageur, c'est toi!" (I know Calvino would have uttered this pearl of wisdom in Italian but I have the novel in French translation.)
Ivona wrote: "I wonder what Calvino's favorite quote would be? How about, 'pretentious? Moi?'"
@ MJ: I think Calvino has meta his match. That came out less politically correct than I intended (my apologies), but the point remains.
@ Ivona: "Le voyageur, c'est moi!" in imitation of Flaubert and Louis XIV and... Or maybe because the novel is in the second person, "Le voyageur, c'est toi!" (I know Calvino would have uttered this pearl of wisdom in Italian but I have the novel in French translation.)
A review that starts with you and works all the way up to an anticlimax. What kind of escapism is this?
Ian wrote: "A review that starts with you and works all the way up to an anticlimax. What kind of escapism is this?"
Well anything that starts with me usually ends in anticlimax. Apart from lovemaking and Yorkshire hotpots, I am DYNAMITE at those.
Well anything that starts with me usually ends in anticlimax. Apart from lovemaking and Yorkshire hotpots, I am DYNAMITE at those.
Ha ha. I haven't even tried them. (Do you mean Yorkshire hotpots as defined by Urban Dictionary? I wouldn't even do that to my inflatable sidekick.)
Say no more; clearly if you're awesome enough to write a review this awesome, then everything else you do and the opinions you hold are going to be awesome.
You rate this book 5 stars? This is the next book i'm reading.
You rate this book 5 stars? This is the next book i'm reading.
Jesse wrote: "Say no more; clearly if you're awesome enough to write a review this awesome, then everything else you do and the opinions you hold are going to be awesome.
You rate this book 5 stars? This is the ..."
That is the nicest comment I've ever had. Counting even those romantic/perverse ones from Richard. I hope you enjoy the book.
You rate this book 5 stars? This is the ..."
That is the nicest comment I've ever had. Counting even those romantic/perverse ones from Richard. I hope you enjoy the book.
MJ wrote: "...Counting even those romantic/perverse ones from Richard...."
Mr. Nicholls: I think you entirely mistake my intentions. I am a fan of Flaubert, not Hugo, so I do not enjoy discussing the Romantic movement. I prefer Realism and Naturalism, thank you very much.
Perverse, MOI? I'm not into Rimbaud or Baudelaire either, I'd have you know. Next you'll call me a Dadaist or a Nihilist. The nerve of some people!
Mr. Nicholls: I think you entirely mistake my intentions. I am a fan of Flaubert, not Hugo, so I do not enjoy discussing the Romantic movement. I prefer Realism and Naturalism, thank you very much.
Perverse, MOI? I'm not into Rimbaud or Baudelaire either, I'd have you know. Next you'll call me a Dadaist or a Nihilist. The nerve of some people!
Indeed the nerve: I thought I was your most perverse devotee MJ, and if not exactly romantic, then at least giver of some of the 'nicest' smutty comments.
I was referring to the private missives Richy sends me in the dead of night. Very stimulating. You are my most faithful GR smut provider, but I'm still waiting on your late-night erotic missives.
You are in luck, I am apparently very persuasive at erotic and come-hither PMs, so see you tonite! ;):)
MJ wrote: "I was referring to the private missives Richy sends me in the dead of night. Very stimulating. You are my most faithful GR smut provider, but I'm still waiting on your late-night erotic missives."
Sir, I protest this besmirchment of my good name. Especially since the last book you recommended to me had the word "smut" right in the title.
Sir, I protest this besmirchment of my good name. Especially since the last book you recommended to me had the word "smut" right in the title.
R, at least he finds YOU stimulating, whereas I'm just 'old faithful'. I feel way more besmirched, and I haven't even got a good name to begin with! Why, oh MJ, why? is it 'cause I is old and ugly?' (ah, ali..g.)
There's place for you both in my smut corner. Put on your smutty fungi gloves and let's do this thing.
Knig-o-lass wrote: "Umm, MJ, shouldn't we taking things off rather than putting them on?
Hey Tuck, welcome to the muck."
That rhymed. It reminds me of that bit from the beginning of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:
Pull out his eyes
Apologise
Apologise
Pull out his eyes
Hey Tuck, welcome to the muck."
That rhymed. It reminds me of that bit from the beginning of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:
Pull out his eyes
Apologise
Apologise
Pull out his eyes
While on the topic of fungi:
"One umbrella, were it no bigger than a fairy mushroom, is worth ten such stopgaps."
Who knows what you'd need for a toad's tool?
"One umbrella, were it no bigger than a fairy mushroom, is worth ten such stopgaps."
Who knows what you'd need for a toad's tool?
Ian wrote: "While on the topic of fungi:
"One umbrella, were it no bigger than a fairy mushroom, is worth ten such stopgaps."
Who knows what you'd need for a toad's tool?"
Ian, I think your oxen have been in the sun too long. :)
"One umbrella, were it no bigger than a fairy mushroom, is worth ten such stopgaps."
Who knows what you'd need for a toad's tool?"
Ian, I think your oxen have been in the sun too long. :)
Richard, amid the general vacant hilarity of the assembly, a bell rang. And as usual, that bell was you.
Ian wrote: "Richard, amid the general vacant hilarity of the assembly, a bell rang. And as usual, that bell was you."
I was conjecturing what might be the cause. I had no idea it was my presence among a party of debauchees led by the brazen MJ, even though I am usually less beautiful--er, make that dashingly handsome--than severe. From now on I shall try to refrain the humorous sallies. (That's what the text said, but perhaps Mr. Joyce meant "restrain"? We'll have to consult the literary experts on the matter.)
I was conjecturing what might be the cause. I had no idea it was my presence among a party of debauchees led by the brazen MJ, even though I am usually less beautiful--er, make that dashingly handsome--than severe. From now on I shall try to refrain the humorous sallies. (That's what the text said, but perhaps Mr. Joyce meant "restrain"? We'll have to consult the literary experts on the matter.)
Ian wrote: "Your departure was the signal for an outbreak of ribaldry."
Yes, I thought that as I repaired to the door I heard a murmur of approval arising from all.
Yes, I thought that as I repaired to the door I heard a murmur of approval arising from all.