The Bellwether Revivals. By
Benjamin Wood. Viking. $26.95.
A big, determinedly
old-fashioned, engrossing novel that reads like an expansive Victorian
indulgence updated for the 21st century, The Bellwether Revivals is a book for readers who like to immerse
themselves in an author’s world and simply soak in it for a good long
time. Reading in some ways like a
400-plus-page version of The Fall of the
House of Usher, Benjamin Wood’s novel is firmly set in the present but
consistently feels as if it is taking place in a slightly skewed alternative reality. The characters have depth – more of it than
those in many of its Victorian forebears – but they feel slightly unworldly, a
touch difficult to grasp or pin down.
And that becomes a large part of their charm and the pleasure of the
story itself.
It is not, at bottom,
a complex story: an outsider named Oscar Lowe, having surmounted his
mean-streets background, is working in the storied city of Cambridge, England,
when he encounters members of the old, wealthy and insular Bellwether family,
and becomes enmeshed in their close-knit group of acquaintances and their
faintly sinister interests (this does
sound like Poe’s Usher, doesn’t
it?). Those interests, which revolve around
music, are part of the initial bond between Oscar and Iris Bellwether and, more
chillingly, represent the genius – or mania – of Iris’ brother, Eden. The brother and sister have a very close and
faintly unnatural relationship that is sure to end badly (more echoes of Poe
there), and their hangers-on are swept into their orbit by the sheer force of
the Bellwether personalities and determination.
At the core of the
novel is the power of music – what that power is, who can invoke it, and what
its limits are. This is heady and
sophisticated material for a 21st-century novel, and Wood handles it
very well indeed. Early on, Eden
describes Iris as a “Cognitivist” with “some very cold-hearted ideas about how
music works,” contrasting her with himself as an “Emotivist” and a believer in
the notion that music not only has charms that can soothe the savage breast but
also has genuine healing power – power that Eden believes himself capable of harnessing
through the theories of Johann Mattheson (1681-1764), a composer and noted
music theorist. Mattheson was a friend
of Handel, but the two later became enemies and Mattheson almost killed the
more-famous composer in a duel – after which the men were reconciled. This much is history, but Wood has Eden
invoke Mattheson in a stranger way, as the supposed discoverer of musical means
that can make people feel certain things,
can control them, and – of particular interest to Eden – can heal them.
The way Wood has Eden
describe these outlandish notions makes them seem far-fetched but not totally
unreasonable – after all, music can and does evoke specific emotions, making
listeners feel happy, sad, uplifted, depressed, and so forth. Furthermore, Wood discusses enough real-world
effects of art – the symphonies of Gustav Mahler, the poems of Sylvia Plath –
to pull readers along toward the idea that there may be other effects not yet
discovered or explored. That the
exploration will prove dangerous, even fatal, is abundantly clear from the
Prelude (actually closer to a postlude) with which the novel begins; besides,
this is just that sort of story, with a kind of “dance of doom” aura about
it. But Wood so skillfully sweeps
readers into this dance that curiosity about how things will play out overcomes
the reality of knowing, from the start, just how badly matters are going to
turn out in the end.
The erudition of The Bellwether Revivals is pervasive but
not intrusive. It shows itself in
evocative chapter titles: “A Reversible Lack of Awareness,” “The Harmony of
What Exists,” “The Treatment of Our Mutual Friend,” “Ibidem,” “A Light Went Off
in the Organ House.” It pervades much of
the descriptive material and a great deal of the dialogue, even though here
Wood sometimes slips into banality (as when Iris tells Oscar, “Somehow I feel
like I could tell you anything”). The
casual references to Plato, Pythagorean planetary theory, Descartes, Thomas
Aquinas, Nietzsche, Rupert Brooke, Frankfurt School philosopher Walter Benjamin
and other people and ideas fit neatly into the Cambridge university aesthetic,
but there is always something sinister just beneath the learning and coexisting
with it, for example when Eden – with Iris’ complicity – puts a nail through
Oscar’s hand.
The skill with which
Wood develops subsidiary characters is a big part of the book’s charm. The most interesting of these secondary (but
still important) people is Dr. Paulsen, a patient at the local nursing home
where Oscar works and a character about whose earlier life as an English
professor at Cambridge readers may want to know more – this is still a man of
whom Wood writes, “There were more books in his room than anything else, in
fact; more novels and poetry collections and anthologies than stripes on the
wallpaper.” Making an elderly
nursing-home resident such as Dr. Paulsen come alive while also limning the
oddities and preoccupations of a group of rich, bored and mentally unstable youths
is quite an accomplishment. So is Wood’s
way of encapsulating characters’ reactions to each other, as when Oscar thinks
about Iris’ parents, “They had that impossible confidence that comes from
wealth, the self-righteousness that comes from piety.”
Wood does tend to
overdo such often-overdone techniques as foreshadowing: it is obvious that something
really awful is going to happen when he writes, as Iris is driven away by her
father, “the reflection of the dimming sky came sweeping over the glass to
vanish her.” And the book sometimes
depends rather too heavily on coincidence as a mover of events – another
respect in which it resembles its Victorian predecessors. But The
Bellwether Revivals is, finally, old-fashioned in all the right ways: deep,
paced slowly but not glacially, populated by believable characters whose
interactions are driven by their personalities as much as by the exigencies of
the plot. It is not, however, a book
that invites rereading, partly because its dour and drab final pages balance so
uneasily between being an inevitable conclusion and a disappointing one. But this is Wood’s first novel – in all
likelihood, there will be others to explore in the future.
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