''The Following Story'' ( nl, Het volgende verhaal) is a 1991
postmodern novel by the Dutch writer
Cees Nooteboom
Cees Nooteboom (; born 31 July 1933) is a Dutch novelist, poet and journalist. After the attention received by his novel ''Rituelen'' (''Rituals'', 1980), which received the Pegasus Prize, it was the first of his novels to be translated into an ...
. Translations into German (''Die folgende Geschichte'') and French (''L'histoire suivante'') also appeared that year. After the novel was awarded the 1993
Aristeion European Literary Prize, its English translation appeared in the UK (Harvill, 1993) and USA (Harcourt Brace, 1994).
Plot
Herman Mussert, formerly a schoolteacher of Latin and Greek and later a travel writer, wakes one morning in a hotel room in
Lisbon
Lisbon (; pt, Lisboa ) is the capital and largest city of Portugal, with an estimated population of 544,851 within its administrative limits in an area of 100.05 km2. Grande Lisboa, Lisbon's urban area extends beyond the city's administr ...
. His last memory had been falling asleep the night before in his
Amsterdam
Amsterdam ( , , , lit. ''The Dam on the River Amstel'') is the Capital of the Netherlands, capital and Municipalities of the Netherlands, most populous city of the Netherlands, with The Hague being the seat of government. It has a population ...
apartment, but now he has Portuguese currency in his wallet and room service finds nothing strange in his ordering breakfast. Moreover he remembers the room from a love encounter twenty years before with a colleague’s wife. This had come about when his favourite student, the beautiful and talented Lisa d'India, had an affair with Arend Herfst, another master in the school. In revenge, Herfst's wife Maria Zeinstra, who taught science in the same school, had seduced Mussert. Eventually this leads to a public fight between the two men, after which Herfst drives away with Lisa and she is killed when he crashes the car. In the ensuing scandal, all three teachers are dismissed from the school and Mussert becomes a successful but facile travel writer under the name of Strabo.
Mussert recalls some of this as he wanders about Lisbon and later boards a ship sailing to Brazil and then up the
River Amazon
The Amazon River (, ; es, Río Amazonas, pt, Rio Amazonas) in South America is the largest river by discharge volume of water in the world, and the disputed longest river system in the world in comparison to the Nile.
The headwaters of t ...
. Travelling with him are a Spanish boy, an Italian monastic, an Arabian airline pilot, an English journalist, a Chinese professor and an unidentified woman. One by one the males tell how they had come to die until it is Mussert's turn. The only audience left to him, apart from the readers of the book, is the woman - now revealed as his former star student, Lisa d'India - to whom he relates "the following story".
Reception
The reviewer in ''
The Independent
''The Independent'' is a British online newspaper. It was established in 1986 as a national morning printed paper. Nicknamed the ''Indy'', it began as a broadsheet and changed to tabloid format in 2003. The last printed edition was publis ...
'' (UK) noted that the novel had won the European Literary Prize and that it was likely to appeal to philosophers and scientists alike, as well as to both classicists and followers of modern literature:
Yet beyond the learning so wittily displayed, there is something deeper that might speak to anyone: a voyage around memory and death, myth and disillusionment. By the end, Nooteboom has shown himself a master of ironic wisdom, but also of elated, elegiac feeling.
Autobiographical elements drawn from Nooteboom's career that are shared by the character Herman Mussert are his Classical education and the fact that he is a travel writer. Though Mussert is deprecatory about his own performance in the latter role, it shows in his skilful but restrained description of Lisbon. Beyond that, his narration is discursive and his performance reveals him as an able phrase-maker and
epigram
An epigram is a brief, interesting, memorable, and sometimes surprising or satirical statement. The word is derived from the Greek "inscription" from "to write on, to inscribe", and the literary device has been employed for over two mille ...
matist.
In the essay "Memoirs of the Undead" that
Douglas Glover devoted to the novel, it is noted that one of its points of departure is
Ambrose Bierce
Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce (June 24, 1842 – ) was an American short story writer, journalist, poet, and American Civil War veteran. His book ''The Devil's Dictionary'' was named as one of "The 100 Greatest Masterpieces of American Literature" by t ...
's story "
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
"An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" (1890) is a short story by the American writer and Civil War veteran Ambrose Bierce. Described as "one of the most famous and frequently anthologized stories in American literature","An Occurrence at Owl Creek ...
", with its similar narrative of a man's illusion of escaping his hanging even as it takes place. According to this reading, the entire action of Nooteboom's book is packed into the two seconds that it takes Mussert to die in his Amsterdam apartment, the clues to which begin on the very first page. He comments there on coming to in his Lisbon hotel room that "I had woken up with the ridiculous feeling that I might be dead".
But the theme of death in life turns out to have punctuated all of his existence: a neighbour has the impression that Mussert looks dead when in fact he is concentrating on a book; at school his students refer to him ambivalently as a "dead language teacher". Death also invades the occasions in which Maria and Mussert audit each other's lessons. Maria's deals with the ovulation of the
sexton beetle
Burying beetles or sexton beetles, genus ''Nicrophorus'', are the best-known members of the family Silphidae (carrion beetles). Most of these beetles are black with red markings on the elytra (forewings). Burying beetles are true to their name ...
in its mate's corpse; Mussert's with the death of
Phaethon
Phaethon (; grc, Φαέθων, Phaéthōn, ), also spelled Phaëthon, was the son of the Oceanid Clymene and the sun-god Helios in Greek mythology.
According to most authors, Phaethon is the son of Helios, and out of desire to have his par ...
. As Mussert comments in one of his philosophical asides, "The world is a never-ending cross-reference". The allied theme of eternal recurrence, rather than linear progression, is discussed by other characters, the whole leading towards the final page in which the audience he addresses is returned to the moment of his death at the start, at which "the following story" begins.
Sinéad Rushe later adapted the novel for a two-person performance, launched in 2001 at the
Battersea Arts Centre
The Battersea Arts Centre ("BAC") is a performance space specialising in theatre productions. Located near Clapham Junction railway station in Battersea, in the London Borough of Wandsworth, it was formerly Battersea Town Hall. It is a Grade ...
, London. This describes Mussert as seen through the eyes of the two women who served as "his mistress and his muse".
Sinéad Rushe website
/ref>
See also
* 1991 in literature
* Dutch literature
Dutch language literature () comprises all writings of literary merit written through the ages in the Dutch language, a language which currently has around 23 million native speakers. Dutch-language literature is the product of the Netherlands, Be ...
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Following Story, The
1991 novels
Dutch-language novels
20th-century Dutch novels
Postmodern novels
Novels by Cees Nooteboom