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Book Review: 'Draining The Sea: A Novel' By Micheline Aharonian Marc

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  • Book Review: 'Draining The Sea: A Novel' By Micheline Aharonian Marc

    BOOK REVIEW: 'DRAINING THE SEA: A NOVEL' BY MICHELINE AHARONIAN MARCOM
    By Jane Ciabattari

    Los Angeles Times
    April 4 2008
    CA

    An evocation of the Guatemalan genocide of the 1980s and its echoes
    of the Armenian genocide in the early years of the 20th century.

    IT's unsurprising that Micheline Aharonian Marcom, whose first two
    novels, "Three Apples Fell From Heaven" and "The Daydreaming Boy,"
    explore the massacre of Armenians nearly a century ago, has turned
    her attention to Guatemala.

    She is among a growing number of contemporary novelists writing about
    the inhumane landscape of genocide. The title of her new novel evokes
    the military's savage "scorched earth" policy toward Guatemala's Maya
    population during the most gruesome years of that country's 36-year
    internal conflict. About 200,000 Guatemalans, mostly Maya, were killed,
    most with incredible cruelty by paramilitary "death squads."

    "The guerrilla is the fish. The people are the sea," noted Gen.

    Efrain Ríos Montt, who led the 1982 coup that precipitated some of
    the worst atrocities. "If you cannot catch the fish, you have to drain
    the sea." (The phrase is rooted in a pronouncement of Mao Tse-tung's:
    "The guerrilla must move amongst the people as a fish swims in the
    sea.") Ríos Montt was simply building upon decades-old policy; in
    1970, one of his predecessors, President Carlos Arana Osorio, made a
    similarly chilling comment: "If it is necessary to turn the country
    into a cemetery in order to pacify it, I will not hesitate to do so."

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Marcom's incantatory voice shows promise in the opening pages of
    "Draining the Sea." Her unnamed narrator is a lonely American man,
    half-Armenian, who collects garbage, which often includes canine
    corpses, in Los Angeles. "He drives along the streets of this city,
    to the sea and up the tarmac hills, along the remote spoors of the
    Santa Monica Mountains, which are today the 405 Freeway, and here he
    is a driver and the world is seen and separated by glass, plastics,
    metal, and it is speed he seeks, and a girl also. . . . " He fantasizes
    obsessively about an Ixil girl he calls Marta, brought to him in 1983,
    in the basement of the Polytechnic School, in Guatemala City, where it
    seems he was complicit in the interrogation and torture of suspects:
    "I am aroused when I see you and when I see you I burn you with my
    cigarettes and I cut off your hands before I kill you, tomorrow,
    because I have been officially trained and educated in these things,
    because it is my job."

    As the novel progresses, he addresses Marta with endearments,
    speculates about her after assignations with prostitutes, compares
    her to his Armenian mother, descended from survivors of the Armenian
    genocide. He begs Marta's forgiveness, implores her sympathy, pities
    himself: "Love me back, come back to me, make your way back from
    the dead corners of your republic and the interstices of historical
    rendering where you have been: buried: please return; I am sorry,
    I swear it, sorrow's sorrow is my fleshy foolish history. . . "
    This soon strains the limits of a reader's empathy.

    Marcom's fractured narrative -- mixing shards of the narrator's
    memories (rape, torture, dismemberment) with images of other atrocities
    and the narrator's familiar comforts (ice cream, reality TV, his "green
    and padded armchair") -- becomes increasingly incoherent. By my third
    reading, I wished for a search engine that could unwind the narrative
    knots and tease out their strands so I could make sense of them.

    An accompanying timeline signals the author's overarching intent. She
    begins with 10,000 BC. ("Seafaring culture in modern-day southern
    California") and moves forward, through the centuries, to the 1915-17
    massacre of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire and on to the Guatemalan
    slaughter. She includes maps and photographs (of the Polytechnic,
    where torture and interrogations took place; the cemetery in Acul,
    site of a massacre of Maya villagers; the narrator's ancestral village
    of Kharphert).

    Emphasizing the facts behind her fiction, Marcom samples "collected
    phrases" from key documents, including "Guatemala: Never Again!,"
    the April 1998 report of the Human Rights Office of the Guatemalan
    Archdiocese, which broke the silence with heart-rending testimony
    from survivors and witnesses, and "Guatemala: Memory of Silence"
    (1999), the 3,600-page report of the U.N. Commission for Historical
    Clarification, which confirmed the genocide. In an afterword, she
    notes, "As stipulated by the peace accords, the CEH [Commission
    for Historical Clarification] was not allowed to name individuals
    responsible for human rights crimes in its report. This book is,
    in many ways, an interrogation into untold or denied histories --
    it is, however, a work of fiction."

    Despite her worthy intent, Marcom's ambition here overshoots her
    execution. Perhaps she needed more time to distill her material. It
    is not an easy matter to push against the boundaries of language to
    express unimaginable horror. More likely, her design is flawed.

    Yoking the Guatemalan genocide with the Armenian one -- and with
    the extermination of Southern California's indigenes, the building
    of the Los Angeles aqueduct, the transformation of the Los Angeles
    River into a concrete "river freeway" and the alienating effects of
    modern life -- is a tall order.

    And there are no glimpses of courage amid the depravity, no recognition
    that human rights workers, survivors, witnesses, investigators
    (including judges) and at least one brave bishop risked their lives
    to extricate the truth from a labyrinth of lies, cover-ups, terror
    and intimidation.

    "Draining the Sea" is a noble effort but so flawed as to be
    largely unreadable. A redeeming factor: It spurred me to reread
    "The Art of Political Murder," Francisco Goldman's 2007 account of
    the Guatemalan military's murder of Bishop Juan Gerardi, two days
    after he released "Guatemala: Never Again!," and Victor Perera's
    "Unfinished Conquest"(1995), an eloquent history of the decimation
    of four Maya villages in paroxysms of state-sponsored terrorism. I
    recommend them both.

    Jane Ciabattari, author of the story collection "Stealing the Fire,"
    is president of the National Book Critics Circle.

    --Boundary_(ID_SY5ZffZqzZrlPd5D8Dx1Rg)--
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