Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Overview
An ingenious new work of fiction from the Nobel Prize? winning author of Disgrace
J . M. Coetzee once again breaks literary ground with Diary of a Bad Year, a book that is, in the words of its protagonist, ?a response to the present in which I find myself.? Aging author Senor C has been commissioned to write a series of essays entitled ?Strong Opinions,? of which he has many. After hiring a beautiful young typist named Anya, the two embark on a relationship that will have a profound impact on them both? especially when Alan, Anya's no-good boyfriend, develops designs on Senor C's bank account. Told in these three voices simultaneously, Coetzee has created any entirely new way of telling a story, and nothing less than an 'involving, argumentative, moving novel' (The New Yorker).
Synopsis
An ingenious new work of fiction from the Nobel Prize winning author of Disgrace
J . M. Coetzee once again breaks literary ground with Diary of a Bad Year, a book that is, in the words of its protagonist, “a response to the present in which I find myself.” Aging author Senor C has been commissioned to write a series of essays entitled “Strong Opinions,” of which he has many. After hiring a beautiful young typist named Anya, the two embark on a relationship that will have a profound impact on them both especially when Alan, Anya's no-good boyfriend, develops designs on Senor C's bank account. Told in these three voices simultaneously, Coetzee has created any entirely new way of telling a story, and nothing less than an “involving, argumentative, moving novel” (The New Yorker).
The Barnes & Noble Review
J. M. Coetzee's 2003 novel Elizabeth Costello opens with a bold announcement: "We have left behind the territory in which we were. We are in the far territory, where we want to be." In Diary of a Bad Year, it is safe to say we are still there. Taken together with 2005's Slow Man, Coetzee's most recent novels form a strange conceptual trilogy: he seems to have abandoned the familiar shores on which he built his Nobel Prizewinning reputation to engage with the more troubling underside of his vocation. There is, beneath the increasingly experimental turn in Coetzee's 21st-century incarnation, a sort of extreme ethical urgency about what exactly, if anything, fiction can offer.
Editorials
Louis Begley
Diary of a Bad Year is an ingenious work that rivets the reader's attention, and it cannot have been easy to write.—The Washington Post
Richard Eder
J. M. Coetzee's novel Diary of a Bad Year is something of a self-managed funeral, but a lavish one: mordant, funny and wise. Mr. Coetzee writes circles around any attempt to pin him down…Mr. Coetzee moves through the country of old age as if it were a fresh journey, this one traveling second class. As C. explores the place, he shifts from arrogance to anger to humility and finally to something like mystical acceptance. All this indicates what Diary does, and quite misses what it is: Mr.Coetzee somewhere close to his most serious, and having—and giving—lovely fun. I think of the childlike simplicity of late Beethoven on a profound return trip from profundity.—The New York Times
Kathryn Harrison
Diary of a Bad Year coerces us to harden what Coleridge identified as "that willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith" into a willed suspension of disbelief, an act that is conscious, purposeful and informed. To want to be told a story built up "out of nothing," to have our edification with a spoonful of fiction, would seem to be an old-fashioned, even prelapsarian desire. This novel's fall from the grace of a purely imagined world is a matter of self-conscious nakedness, of insisting we see undisguised rhetorical tricks we might prefer cloaked with artifice.—The New York Times Book Review
Publishers Weekly
Nobelist Coetzee's 19th book features a stand-in for himself: Señor C, a white 72-year-old South African writer living in Australia who has written Waiting for the Barbarians. C falls into a "metaphysical" passion for his sexy 29-year-old Filipina neighbor, Anya, and quickly plots to spend more time with her by offering her a job as his typist. C's latest project is a series of political and philosophical essays, and Coetzee divides each page of the present novel in three: any given page features a bit of an essay (often its title and opening paragraph) at the top; C's POV in the middle; and Anya's voice at the bottom. C's opinions in the essays are mostly on the left (he despises Bush, Blair & Co., and is opposed to the Iraq War) and they bore Anya, who wants something less lofty. Meanwhile, Anya's lover, Alan-a smart, conservative 42-year-old investment consultant who's good in the sack, and who stands for everything C despises-becomes increasingly scornful and jealous, and eventually concocts an elaborate plan to defraud C. of money. Unfortunately, Anya is little more than a trophy to be disputed, and Alan as an unscrupulous, boorish reactionary is a caricature. While C's essays, especially the later ones inspired by Anya, hold some interest, this follow-up to Slow Yearis not one of Coetzee's major efforts. (Jan.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationO The Oprah Magazine
Coetzee is one of the English-speaking world's great tragic storytellers. . . . [This novel] offers exciting formal evidence of a literary artist's capacity to keep up with the chaotic malfunctions of our time.Richard Eder
J. M. Coetzee's novel Diary of a Bad Year is something of a self-managed funeral, but a lavish one: mordant, funny and wise. Mr. Coetzee writes circles around any attempt to pin him down.— The New York Times
Library Journal
Señor C, an aging and ailing writer in Australia, has been asked by his publisher to contribute political essays to a book called Strong Opinions. Having become infatuated with Anya, a beautiful young woman who lives in his apartment building, he hires her to type his manuscript. While Señor C is writing his essays on politics and morality, a morality tale of a different sort is playing out in his apartment, as the young woman's boyfriend tries to tap into the old writer's online bank account. The result reads like a literary hybrid of fiction and nonfiction, with each page alternating between Señor C's observations for Strong Opinionsand dialog among him, Anya, and her boyfriend, Alan. As Anya remarks, we've all got opinions, but if you tell a story at least people will shut up and listen to you. Nobel prize winner Coetzee's thought-provoking and cerebral novel is recommended for academic and larger public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ9/15/07.]
—Leslie Patterson
Kirkus Reviews
The 2003 Nobel winner's latest (Inner Workings: 2000-2005, 2007, etc.) is another drama shaped as intellectual argument, unhappily akin to its immediate predecessors Elizabeth Costello (2003) and (the somewhat livelier) Slow Man (2005). Its protagonist, an eminent and aging author initially identified as Se-or C., has agreed to contribute his thoughts about the state of the contemporary world to a volume presenting its several contributors' "Strong Opinions." As C. undertakes this task, he simultaneously develops an avuncular relationship with Anya, the gorgeous young woman he meets in their building's laundry room, and eventually establishes a more formal acquaintance with Anya's lover Alan. The latter is an "investment consultant" who tests Anya's resolve by suggesting strategies to exploit C.'s evident appreciation of her beauty, and embezzle funds from his presumable great wealth. In a narrative that we read both from top to bottom of each page and horizontally, following arguments continued on facing pages, C. fulminates, Anya frets and Alan schemes. C.'s strong opinions consider the formation of political states; the current administration's rampant contempt for law and the related "crimes" of its enablers; radical feminism's attacks on pornography; the inhumane treatment of animals and indifference to their rights; the devaluation of modern culture; and the "authority" with which great writers (notably Tolstoy) render the warp and woof and detail of human experience. Late in the book, Coetzee's serial drone, the aforementioned Elizabeth Costello, shows up (doesn't she always?), and any pretense that C. is not Coetzee is airily abandoned. Otherwise, there's no development. C.brandishes his erudition. Anya is, fleetingly, intriguingly fiery. And Alan is a bloody bore. There's something wrong with a novel in which a twisted, exploitative sexual relationship is far less interesting than are dozens of pages of discursive commentary. But that's the new, improved Coetzee for you. Maybe we should blame the Swedish Academy.The Barnes & Noble Review
J. M. Coetzee's 2003 novel Elizabeth Costello opens with a bold announcement: "We have left behind the territory in which we were. We are in the far territory, where we want to be." In Diary of a Bad Year, it is safe to say we are still there. Taken together with 2005's Slow Man, Coetzee's most recent novels form a strange conceptual trilogy: he seems to have abandoned the familiar shores on which he built his Nobel Prizewinning reputation to engage with the more troubling underside of his vocation. There is, beneath the increasingly experimental turn in Coetzee's 21st-century incarnation, a sort of extreme ethical urgency about what exactly, if anything, fiction can offer.Diary of a Bad Year is the story, if one can call it that, of "Se?or C," an aging South African writer who meets a beautiful younger woman named Anya in the laundry room of his apartment building. C hires Anya as his typist, and the resulting plot -- the novel's only real gesture of deference to traditional narrative -- is embedded within a series of essays entitled "Strong Opinions" that C is writing at the behest of his German publisher. Like the orations that provide the structural mortar of Elizabeth Costello, C's essays comprise the bulk of the text. Alongside these inflammatory expositions unwinds the story of their making, Anya transposing the words of the lustful writer.
Coetzee's tandem construction of these separate strands is visually jarring. Every page is partitioned into segments, each progressing at its own pace and often breaking disruptively. Beneath the essays, we have C's take on his budding relationship with Anya, then Anya's own. It's as if Coetzee decided to be as taxing on the eye as he so often is on the soul. The result is a typesetter's nightmare. And Coetzee's flight of structural fancy poses a dilemma not least for his reader: it's hard enough to read a novel built upon a series of unconnected philosophical pronouncements, but harder still when faced with uncertainly about where even to direct one's gaze. Do we read according to the logic of story, or as the pagination dictates? It is, as Anya laments, "difficult to get into the swing when the subject keeps changing."
But Coetzee is not a showman. If he adopts a measure of formal ostentation worthy of Pynchon, it is because his interests, at least of late, involve pushing the parameters of fiction to the brink. In Diary, the flamboyance of the postmodern exists at the service of a grander concern about how the ethical sensitivity of the novel, and by extension of the novelist, might exert a force on the world immediately around them. Given the extent to which our present political climate appears in its foreground, Diary represents a timely expansion of Coetzee's long-standing fascination with fiction's singular capacity to command our empathy.
Diary of a Bad Year begins gruffly, as C's "Strong Opinions" are just that -- disquisitions on the ills of modern life that, if more often than not accurate in their diagnoses, have a distinctly curmudgeonly bent. "Someone should put together a ballet under the title Guantanamo, Guantanamo!," C writes. "A corps of prisoners, their ankles shackled together, thick felt mittens on their hands, muffs over their ears, black hoods over their heads, do the dances of the persecuted and desperate...In a corner, a man on stilts in a Donald Rumsfeld mask alternately writes at his lectern and dances ecstatic little jigs. One day it will be done, though not by me." While there is a certain shock in seeing the ignoble figures of our headlines appearing in the pages of a novel, C's essays are less a coherent reaction to their wrongdoings than a sequence of angry riffs. Topically, they are wide-ranging, from an attack on Tony Blair to meditations on Australian immigration policy and more abstract matters of writerly authority and "national shame."
How best to parse the connection between what is expressed in these opinions and the stance of their author, between the quasi-fictional C and his creator J. M. Coetzee, is perhaps the greatest mystery of Diary. Unlike Coetzee's previous alter ego, Elizabeth Costello, or the third-person boy of his memoirs, C would seem to represent Coetzee's unmediated voice. In addition to sharing some of the technicalities of Coetzee's biography -- a relocation from South Africa to Australia, a strict adherence to vegetarianism -- C at one point dispels all doubt with an allusion to one of his earlier works, Waiting for the Barbarians. And yet, the story of C's relationship to Anya feels every bit like the fiction it is. Coetzee has elsewhere described the "unmistakable accents of personal truth" that may unintentionally leave their mark on an author's fiction, and Diary of a Bad Year simply doesn't have them. There is something too unbelievable in the immensity with which C and Anya come to bear on each other's lives.
In particular, Anya's voice is almost aggressively tone deaf to the realities of feminine consciousness (echoes of the deficiencies that plagued Marijana in Slow Man -- both are vessels for the desires of others more fully than they are people). "El Se?or's eyesight isn't that good, according to him," she observes. "Nevertheless, when I make my silky moves I can feel his eyes lock onto me. That is the game between him and me. I don't mind. What else is your bottom for? Use it or lose it." Her boyfriend, Alan, is an even rougher character sketch. A right-winger with a monomaniacal faith in the free market, Alan hatches a plan to profiteer off C.'s ill-managed bank account. His worldview -- one in which "the economic not only sums up the individual, but it also transcends it" -- settles into too easy a polarity with the earnest politics of C, whom Alan dismisses as a "leftover from the Sixties." Meanwhile, the hapless Anya is left to navigate the breach.
Diary, ultimately, makes for a thin story. As a treatise, it is equally thin. Where does this leave us? Somehow, against all the odds, Coetzee has managed to find at the intersection of these two endeavors a striking addition to his exploration of the responsibilities of fiction. Without the collapse of theory into story, of sweeping moral claims into the texture of lived experience, both halves of the equation come up short. It is not until the second half of the novel that this collapse fully completes itself. In contrast to the cantankerous homilies C. offers up in his "Strong Opinions," the pieces in his "Second Diary" are softer, more self-aware, their bitterness supplanted by a wistful irony. As C himself acknowledges, "Do I really qualify as a thinker at all, someone who has what can properly be called thoughts, about politics or about anything else? I have never been easy with abstractions or good at abstract thought." The second set of essays is written privately, not for publication but for Anya, in answer to the criticisms she has levied: "You bring things to life," she offers cannily. "If I have to be honest, the strong opinions on politics and so forth were not your best, maybe because there is no story in politics, maybe because you are a bit out of touch, maybe because the style does not suit you."
Coetzee's gift for self-subversion, his willingness to play with the fact of his own didacticism, is what rescues Diary of a Bad Year from the weight of its ambition. As C.'s political tracts and Coetzee's initial plotline are each rendered hollow, something honest begins to emerge in their wake: a work of genuine engagement between our political world and the fictional characters who move through it. Anya's voice may still ring with an intermittent falsity, but in the personal digressions that are the product of her influence, it is possible to see how her promise of empathy has enlivened C's writing, restoring his ability to create a work of authentic force. Where Diary of a Bad Year fails to join the ranks of Coetzee's greatest novels, it leaves no question that he is one of our great minds. --Amelia Atlas
Amelia Atlas's reviews have appeared in the New York Sun, 02138, and the Harvard Book Review.