How
does art survive a hostile social and political environment? Can it survive?
How does an artist flourish, or even muddle through, when the inspiration and
sources for one’s art gradually leave, one after another, eventually leaving
the artist alone?
These
are the questions behind Everyone
Leaves, Cuban writer Wendy Guerra’s semi-autobiographical novel of
growing up in Cuba in the 1970s and 1980s, translated by Achy Obejas. It tells
the story of Nieve (“Snow”) Guerra, who watches her family and those of her
friends fracture and fall apart under the weight of a deadening communist
regime. Most eventually leave the country for Miami or Europe (everyone leaves,
she keeps reminding herself); some “leave” or disappear within the country.
Nieve
is an artist who gradually stops painting. She is also a survivor, due in no
small part to the diary she begins to keep as a young child and maintains
through adolescence and into young adulthood. The journal entries, in fact, are
the structure of the book, beginning as brief if pointed and intelligent
observations and continuing as longer entries as Nieve grows older. And there
are gaps, which we can fill based on what we know and what we will know.
Through
her diary, we follow Nieve from the small city of Cienfuegos to the mountains
and finally to Havana. We watch her experience her parents’ separation, their custody
battle over her, her life with a brutal, alcoholic father, and finally a reunion
with her mother. We see her grow as a young artist, and we watch as she
continues to behave very much the independent in a society that demands
conformity and acquiescence. We observe her friends gradually leave, and her
acceptance of her isolation.
The
diaries are important. It is through her written (if hidden from others) words
that Nieve finds personal survival, the only place she can be herself. She
understands the dangers, but the worse danger will be not writing at all.
“”Because
of what I write,” she says, “I hide my Diaries in the loft at home, under the
boards. The humidity destroys them, but I copy over the letters with blue ink
and I don’t write everyday in the new notebooks so they’ll last a while…My
Diary is a luxury; it’s my medicine, what keeps me standing. Without it, I
wouldn’t live to see twenty. I’m it, it’s me. We’re both wary.”
The
words are stark and spare, heightening Nieve’s description of isolation and
abandonment. There is much she comes to accept, only because she can live in
the words of her diary. Everyone Leaves
is a moving and often disturbing book, written with a sense of detachment, the
detachment one needs to survive in a society that flattens individual
expression.
Sounds very good!
ReplyDeleteYesterday I came across a quote from Hemingway about writers' truth. It seems to be the point of all this talking to ourselves to be occasionally overheard--to understand what is happening to us and tell the truth about it. Anyway, when Hemingway had writer's block he would, "Write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know." http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/ernest-m-hemingway
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