| Dark Tangos | ||||||||
| Lewis Shiner | ||||||||
| Subterranean Press, 207 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Seamus Sweeney
As Lewis Shiner's narrator observes, while the absolute numbers of dead (thirty thousand or so in the processo) is
not near as high, the evil and determination to utterly destroy The Other is reminiscent of the Holocaust. In
the novel, the narrator, Robert Cavenaugh, works for a fictional American corporation whose Buenos Aires office
was, it turns out, complicit in all this. He himself is a relative innocent, a frequent visitor to the city even
before the posting, and recovering from the breakup of his marriage. This is, for him, far from a hardship
posting; he is keen to master the tango, and embraces the Buenos Aires lifestyle, the antithesis of the suburban
commuter life he knew, with gusto.
Shiner has weaved a compelling and sharply observed tale. The tango is Robert's key to the nocturnal, sensuous
world of Buenos Aires nights, and Shiner takes the reader into this culture with subtle, unshowy erudition. I
have never been to Buenos Aires myself, but Shiner manages to create a convincing portrayal of a vast, vibrant
city with the intimacy of a village. There is plenty of local colour, but it does not overwhelm.
What follows is a by turns entertaining, erotic and disturbing account of how Argentina's and America's pasts
and presents intersect and interact. Falling in love with Elena, a beautiful Argentinian he sees one day at his
workplace and meets one night at the tango, Rob enjoys a blissful interlude of eroticism, suddenly cut short by
Elena withdrawing all contact. Determined not to let this relationship just end, Rob insists of entering her
world, and through this determination is drawn into the darker heart of Argentinian politics. The darkness of
Argentina's past is counterpointed with the bright, romantic world of the tango, and the gentleness of the
love story counterpoints the viciousness of the political plots.
At times I found some of the contrasts Shiner's narrator drew between Americas North and South a little
laboured; Argentina, too, is the New World. However they are perhaps necessary for us to understand the
transformation from political innocent to someone whose involvement goes beyond the superficial, touristic
liking of a country to something deeper. Shiner, whose short story collection
Love In Vain I reviewed, has written a "straight", mainstream novel
that reminded me most of all of Graham Greene's tale of painful moral awakenings and difficult
comittments. There is no real speculative element to this fiction; when you read the torture scenes, and
read about the tragedy of Argentina in the last half century, you'll wish that these were the products of
imagination rather than grim reality.
Seamus Sweeney is a freelance writer and medical graduate from Ireland. He has written stories and other pieces for the website Nthposition.com and other publications. He is the winner of the 2010 Molly Keane Prize. He has also written academic articles as Seamus Mac Suibhne. |
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