Book: 11/52
The Unbearable Lightness of Being - Milan Kundera
My Rating: 4/5
Sometimes I surprise myself with my own naivete :) As it happened, when I picked up this book thinking it was from another Indian writer (welcoming brickbats for not knowing anything about Mr Kundera till yesterday). The first page introduction opened my eyes to the fact that he happened to be a Czech writer who had lived in France since 1975 (precisely when I was born). I should have read his name more like the Italian city I love big time, I guess. His books are translated into English by various elite people, as it goes, and they still make it any easier for mango people like me. And guess what, this book was banned for quite a few years after its publication, as Milan is not only very straightforward when it comes to writing from the heart, I can debate that he never wrote this one, at least from his head. His own theory of meaningless life is told through four of his protagonists, who go through so much in their lives in the mid 20th century, while the world goes through so many tumults. Especially the Russian invasion of a nearby country, one of which happens to be my favourite character, a surgeon whose life’s mission was to go through as many affairs in life as possible. On his last count, he had as many as 200 women in his life, other than ofcourse his wife, who herself wasn’t as faithful as you might think. Why? There is no reason why he does what he feels like, just like the author himself, who believes in questioning everything and doing what your heart tells you to do without any regrets. Ofcourse there is so much more going on in his love and life story that kept me surprised with each chapter. After Russion invasion, they simply forbade him from practising medicine as a punishment for something he wrote against the regime, and he went on to wash windows for a living around Prague and Vienna for a change.
What I loved about this book (merely 300+ pages) which was too short for the subject it covers and Milan’s theories. Almost all four of his main characters are unfaithful to their partners at one point in time or another. One of the author’s theories, which I will never forget, is when he makes his characters debate God’s existence. He says if there was a God (he says Jesus precisely), he must have a mouth, so he for sure will have intestines and certainly will eat and poop too, right? Now, can we beat that in any way? And let me not get into details anymore, as you get the drift and can read it in great detail in the book for yourself. I personally don’t believe in God and feel I am more of a science guy, so I totally agreed with his theory, dunno how my parents will read this one, and it will be very interesting to know the names they are going to call this guy :) If I send them this book. But no doubt I totally loved his theory of meaningless life, where we actually get no feedback, as there is no coming back from the dead to know if we lived it well. Or as if life is going to give us another chance to relive and do it any better this time, as one life passes into an unknown abyss. He justifies the title in a simply amazing way through his character’s stories so well that I was totally sold on the unbearable being myself, but is there alternate to it? Need to pick up a few of his other works to know if he offers any solutions in any of them.
Do let me know if you have read The Unbearable Lightness of Being or any other Milan Kundera book. I would love to give it a try.

No comments:
Post a Comment