Time Control
Tomorrow at 2pm I'll be interviewing novelist Tom McCarthy at the Storefront for Art and Architecture here in London. McCarthy's excellent book Remainder – which just last month won the fourth annual Believer Book Award – is about a man in London who is hit on the head by "something falling from the sky."
He thus goes into a coma; he is involved in a lawsuit upon waking; he's awarded £8.5 million in damages. This all takes place in the first few pages.
[Image: Tom McCarthy and Remainder].
The rest of the book is about the narrator's attempt to figure out what exactly to do with all that money – as well as how he can recreate, to a hilariously precise extent, a building in which he might (or might not) have once lived.
What happens is that he's struck by a moment of déjà vu while in the bathroom at a friend's party, and so he realizes, with a sense of overwhelming purpose bordering on religious epiphany, that he must use his new-found funds to reconstruct the exact circumstances of the moment to which that déjà vu referred. If he can't remember everything about that déjà vu in its entirety, in other words – well, then, he'll just physically recreate it. It's a "forensic procedure."
After all, he's got £8.5 million. What else is he going to do?
To facilitate this projective act of mnemonic reconstruction, he first gets in touch with real estate agents. In Chapter 5 – a chapter which should be required material in certain architectural design courses – we read:
He soon meets up with Nazrul Ram Vyas, a representative of the firm.
Three quick questions, then:
He thus goes into a coma; he is involved in a lawsuit upon waking; he's awarded £8.5 million in damages. This all takes place in the first few pages.
[Image: Tom McCarthy and Remainder].
The rest of the book is about the narrator's attempt to figure out what exactly to do with all that money – as well as how he can recreate, to a hilariously precise extent, a building in which he might (or might not) have once lived.
What happens is that he's struck by a moment of déjà vu while in the bathroom at a friend's party, and so he realizes, with a sense of overwhelming purpose bordering on religious epiphany, that he must use his new-found funds to reconstruct the exact circumstances of the moment to which that déjà vu referred. If he can't remember everything about that déjà vu in its entirety, in other words – well, then, he'll just physically recreate it. It's a "forensic procedure."
After all, he's got £8.5 million. What else is he going to do?
To facilitate this projective act of mnemonic reconstruction, he first gets in touch with real estate agents. In Chapter 5 – a chapter which should be required material in certain architectural design courses – we read:
- I spoke to three different estate agents. The first two didn't understand what I was saying. They offered to show me flats – really nice flats, ones in converted warehouses beside the Thames, with open plans and mezzanines and spiral staircases and balconies and loading doors and old crane arms and other such unusual features.
"It's not unusual features that I'm after," I tried to explain. "It's particular ones. I want a certain pattern on the staircase – a black pattern on white marble or imitation marble. And I need there to be a courtyard."
"We can certainly try to accommodate these preferences," this one said.
"These are not preferences," I replied. "These are absolute requirements. (...) And it's not one property I'm after," I informed her. "It's the whole lot. There must be certain neighbors, like this old woman who lives below me, and a pianist two floors below her, and..."
He soon meets up with Nazrul Ram Vyas, a representative of the firm.
- "I have a large project in mind," I said, "and wanted to enlist your help." "Enlist" was good. I felt pleased with myself.
"Okay," said Naz. "What type of project?"
"I want to buy a building, a particular type of building, and decorate and furnish it in a particular way. I have precise requirements, right down to the smallest detail. I want to hire people to live in it, and perform tasks that I will designate. They need to perform these exactly as I say, and when I ask them to. I shall most probably require the building opposite as well, and most probably need it to be modified. Certain actions must take place at that location too, exactly as and when I shall require them to take place. I need the project to be set up, staffed and coordinated, and I'd like to start as soon as possible."
"Excellent," Naz said, straight off. He didn't miss a single beat. I felt a surge inside my chest, a tingling.
- "What tasks would you like them to perform?"
"There'll be an old woman downstairs, immediately below me," I said. "Her main duty will be to cook liver. Constantly. Her kitchen must face outwards to the courtyard, the back courtyard onto which my own kitchen and bathroom will face too. The smell of liver must waft upwards. She'll also be required to deposit a bin bag outside her door as I descend the staircase, and to exchange certain words with me which I'll work out and assign to her."
"Understood," said Naz. "Who's next?"
Three quick questions, then:
- 1) On the most basic level, how different are some of the narrator's requests from the precise, arcane, and well-practiced moves of 19th-century butlers and other house attendants? In other words, what appears to be mania in a person hit on the head by an unidentified piece of technology falling from the sky is seen as tradition, class structure, and ritualistic social role in the lives of others.
2) What on earth would it have been like to work for someone like the legendarily eccentric Howard Hughes, who had not £8.5 million to spend on strange projects but literally billions? Or, more interestingly, from the standpoint of a novelist, what other, far more ambitious demands could Hughes have made of his staff? I'm tempted to pitch a novella in which Howard Hughes has sent a small team of actors deep into the Andes where they are required to build a house just like his own, to change their names to Howard for exactly one year, and to act out forgotten moments from his own past on a precisely worked out schedule. There are bells, alarms, and inspections. Until one of them gets fed up...
3) There was an interesting article in The New Yorker several months ago about the use of immersive, 3D simulations of war scenes from Iraq to help treat post-traumatic stress disorder in returning soldiers. The general idea was that, by confronting, over and over again, the very thing that once traumatized you, you could nullify its long-term psychological effects. But what if these immersive simulations didn't have to take place on computer screens inside military labs? Perhaps a returning soldier – the son of a refrigeration billionaire – will take matters into his own hands on a large estate in South Dakota, building vast stage sets... Remainder 2: Return to Basra.
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It sounds reminiscent of Stanislaw Lem's Gruppenfuehrer Louis XVI, in which a group of Nazis go into hiding in a jungle where they attempt to recreate the Ancien Regime.
To a lesser degree, this also reminds me of Charlie Kaufman's 'Synecdoche, New York", more precisely the point of building a life-size replica of New York inside of a warehouse.
No offense to Tom McCarthy or anything, but the ideas at the end of your post seem far more interesting than the ones in the book.
Think I'll wait for the novella.
Annoying: I would have come by for the event but only just saw now that this was on. Perhaps you could slavishly re-enact the interview for me, with re-enactors playing the rest of the audience?
The strange thing about Remainder is that it's hard to re-read: first time round, it skips from idea to idea, fizzing along nicely. Second time round, the narrator seems absurdly narcissistic and the situation beyond plausibility.
So we have a book about repetition which itself resists any re-enactment of the reading performance. By the time I'd slogged to the end I was no longer sure if that reinforced or undermined McCarthy's point.
Men In Space looks good though.
"What on earth would it have been like to work for someone like the legendarily eccentric Howard Hughes, who had not £8.5 million to spend on strange projects but literally billions? Or, more interestingly, from the standpoint of a novelist, what other, far more ambitious demands could Hughes have made of his staff?"
You really, really need to read I caught flies for Howard Hughes by Ron Kistler, one of the most entertaining books ever written.
It will particularly interest those curious to know
1 how high can used tissues be piled
2 what are the consequences of a diet consisting entirely of Hershey bars
3 how many times can one naked man watch Ice Station Zebra?
Ian, I'll definitely keep my eye out for that book.
And, Rodcorp, I wish you'd been there! I'll try to enlist McCarthy for a re-enactment of the interview soon...
I agree with jack's comment. The book had its moments, but it was way too long and didn't develop the ideas with the most interesting potential. I was really disappointed, especially after reading the Believer praise. I bought McCarthy's book on an impulse after seeing it in the Believer, and I really wish I hadn't wasted my money. You can read my own review here.
I'd love to see his answers to these questions. Transcription? Please?
Picked this book up on your recommendation and I am thoroughly enjoying it. Like matt, would love to see a transcription of your interview or, even better, a podcast?
Transcript, definitely - podcast probably. Still checking the recordings for legibility. Will know more soon!
I've uploaded an edited MP3 of the conversation; you can check it out here: Spaces, Repeating: An Interview with Tom McCarthy. Have fun - and let me know what you think.
I had the same problems with this book that tooshytostop did -- interesting ideas, badly developed. I describe it as the protagonist from Camus' "The Outsider" in Chuck Palahniuk's "Survivor," and it's not an enjoyable combination. still, it does make one start to wonder...
In response to your Howard Hughes question, you should look up "Fitzcaraldo," the movie by Werner Herzog & his book about the experience, "Conquest of the Useless." A particularly poignant point is when he demands from the movie studio that an entire huge wooden ship is built in the Amazon jungle, then hauled over a mountain by the natives-- and makes very clear that it cannot be on a set or stage or miniaturized, and then goes to the amazon to do exactly that. "Conquest of the Useless" indeed. Perhaps this could be fodder for a future post?
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