Rod
Kierkegard’s Adultery: The Scarlet Alphabet is a comic gem, a cerebral masterpiece of contemporary social satire
slumming as breezy sex farce, with a bit of trenchant literary criticism thrown
in for good measure. The author’s razor-like wit is stropped with just the
right amount of cynicism, which he employs not so much to lay bare the paradox
and folly of modern life as to gleefully vivisect the whole animal, pulling
back layers of pretense and self-deception like tissue to reveal the fragile, frightened
egoist’s heart beneath—all the while managing to be funny as hell for more than
300 pages.
Orlando
Plummer is a tenuously tenured professor of Traditional English Literature at upper-Manhattan’s
ultra-PC Lumumba University (three guesses as to what that reference oh-so
thinly veils). A self-described academic “performance artist” with the veneer
of an Oxbridge pedigree and not a single creative or ambitious cell in his body,
Orlando is the ultimate pretender, the archetypal outsider, ever fearful of
being found out, yet still somehow content to coast (and/or screw) his way
through life in a miasma of alcohol-dazed indifference, leaving his
long-suffering Chinese TA to actually do most of his work, and almost every
major life-decision to the wife he loathes but cannot leave.
Don’t draw the wrong conclusion.
Don’t think for a minute that I don’t love my wife. Love is far too mild a term
for my feelings. I loathe my wife. I hate her guts. Worse, I dislike her
company. She is a crashing Seven-Sisters educated—which is to say woefully
uneducated and willfully ignorant—bore. She is, however, always right about
everything, particularly money, the sea of green that is her birthright, her
native element, the source of her elemental power. I despise my wife. I also desire
her. And I’m attached to her. Most of all I fear her. She is an object of horrid
fascination to me, a fetish object. Her real name is not Valeria Messalina, of
course; I have changed the names of everyone who will appear in these pages
except for one.
Orlando
is virtually egotistical in his passivity, constantly surprised and bewildered
by his own feelings—so much so that the very awareness of complex emotion seems
to arrive unbidden, catching him off-guard every time.
I am well enough aware of any
reader’s reaction to the Dr. Bovarys, the Leoppold Blooms, the George Smileys
of literature; the craven, put-upon hero, the cuckold, the timorous wimp who
allows his woman to walk all over him. Or, in my case, women.
He
is, as he himself puts it, a man without a heart, incapable of feeling guilt,
only fear. And there is much to be afraid of in this labyrinth of Orwellian
academic bureaucracy where PC culture has run not merely amok, but deep into
the province of the surreal, where New Age psychobabble and deconstructionist
gobbledygook have assumed the solemnity of cultic scripture, and where a career-ending
sexual harassment complaint is only a direct look in the eye away.
In the early 90s when I first
escaped north London for the University of East Anglia, there was a song then
very popular on Radio 1 and in the dorms, Enigma’s “Principles of Lust.” In
Val’s honor, the song should have been renamed “The Rules and Regulations of
Lust.” However, in fairness to my wife,
most swappers—excuse me, members of the Consensual Adult Community—are
invariably very big on regulating lust; apportioning it, doling it out like
dessert or a child’s allowance, establishing rules and “boundaries.” They are
very principled people. That is one of the many ways in which they resemble
university administrators.
Accordingly,
in response to Orlando’s obsessive philandering, Val arranges a series of “couples
dates” with the wealthy Roger and Arabia Fliederman
Befriending another married couple
is almost always a mistake. Hence, the relative safety of
casual, consensual, or in our case, Val’s and mine, stage-managed adultery. One
avoids all the usual pitfalls of “couples-dating” by going straight to bed,
thus achieving the boredom and monotony of the physical intimacy of marriage at
a single bound. You may call this swinging, wife-swapping, or polyamory if you
like. I prefer to call it adultery.
Ultimately,
of course, wackiness and extremely expensive polyamorous group-therapy ensues. Love
triangles, meanges à quatre, impromptu
quintets, poly-quads, and dysfunctionally sexless sextets form and disintegrate
with the manic promiscuity of some microscopic multi-celled community, the
narrative convolutions a gaudily variegated mosaic of multi-cultural
intercourse.
References
to Japanese No and Kabuki theater are a sort of recurring literary symbol in
the novel, a principle of continuity that effectively holds the structure up
despite its sprawling eclecticism. Other marvelously arcane references abound,
everything from the Tale of Genji to
the Orlandos of Ariosto and Virginia
Wolf, the novels of Thackeray and the short stories of Irwin Shaw. (Kierkegaard
is no doubt aware of his famous namesake’s Diary
of a Seducer, though this seems to be the only obscure literary reference not included in the novel!)
Then
too, much of Adultery with its hyper-intelligent,
highest-common-denominator humor put me in mind of what is probably my favorite
novel of all time, Josef Skvoreky’s vast, darkly comic 1977 grand opus, The Engineer of Human Souls. Both
Skvoreky’s political émigré college professor Daniel, and Kierkegaard’s stranger-in-a-strange-land
Orlando share the same wry, vaguely bemused contempt for their students, a
bunch of bored, lazy, shallow, over-privileged, hyper-entitled plagiarists, whom
they nonetheless have no qualms seducing. Skvoreky’s novel is cleverly structured like
the syllabus of the course on American literature Daniel teaches at Edenvale College,
the small, vividly imagined Canadian liberal arts institution set in a mythic wilderness,
far from the crushing heartbreak—if never far from the memory—of the 1968 Prague Spring. Kierkegaard’s Orlando
is neither so well-organized, ambitious, or politically aware, and yet, one
senses an undeniable kinship between the two characters; they share an uncannily similar cynicism, the same benignly jaundiced way of looking at the world. One cannot help imagining the kind of conversations the two might have over a drink at some academic conference outsides the confines of time. Yet another happy
surprise!
Adultery: The Scarlet Alphabet
is enthusiastically recommended with several extra soupçon of pure full-throated gusto. Run,
don’t walk, to get your hands on a copy of this one!
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