AVERAGE THOUGHTS ABOUT ABOVE AVERAGE BOOKS
Photo by David Holt |
In December of 1989 the Romanian Revolution resulted in the ending of the regime of Nicolae Ceausescu. The central character and narrator in TLHD is an unnamed British man that I imagine to be in his early 20s. He gets a job teaching at a university in Bucharest, but from there, instead of learning about his teaching and his classes, we learn what the narrator learns about Bucharest, the Ceausescu regime, and what it is like to live in a society characterized by constant surveillance and that is totally saturated by the State. For me, the most memorable passages come early in the book:
"For all the grotesqueness and brutality, it was normality that defined our relations: the human capacity to accommodate ourselves to our conditions, not the duplicity and corruption that underpinned them. This was also our greatest drawback -- the routinisation of want, sorrow, repression, until they became invisible, until they numbed you even to atrocity."