*giggles* |
One of the books I’ve recently read was The Holy Sinner by Thomas Mann. I kept
giggling while reading it, or at least thinking of giggling.
Now, this is not a review. It’s more my impressions,
and what made me giggle so much; there’s a bunch of spoilers too, so proceed at
your own risk. Oh, and there’s religious matter, so if you’re easily offended,
you might be offended by this too.
The story is told by a monk Clemens, in a somewhat
old-fashioned way and in a sugary tone. He tells us of a brother and sister,
twins, of noble birth, who loved each other very, very much. They loved each
other so much that they were expecting a baby (so now you know how they loved each other). Realizing
that they have a problem, they talked to their trusted advisor, who suggested
that the brother went on a pilgrimage, while the sister would go to the advisor’s
castle and have her baby there, in secrecy. Not knowing what else to do, they
agreed.
The sister was oh so mourning being separated from
her beloved brother (the sugary tone, remember?). She gave birth to a beautiful
little boy, whom the advisor wrapped in expensive silk, placed him in a barrel,
put lots of gold and a message on a plate in it, and left the barrel in the
sea, to God’s mercy.
And so on, and so forth; the little boy grew up into
a strong young man, Gregory, who helped a noble woman when her city was under siege,
and married her, and had two daughters with her, only to discover he had
married his own mother. And oh, they were so horrified, and so she went on to
take care of cripples and such, while he went to become a hermit and to sit on
a stone far away from the shore. Still the sugary tone.
And then some more things happened, and then Gregory
became Pope Gregory.
And there’s the Children,
don’t do this at home conclusion (don’t sin, things worked out for them in
the end but they suffered a lot, don’t do it, kids).
Hilarious.
Now, I’m fully aware that there’s more to this book,
that this is Thomas Mann trying to explore some really serious stuff like sin
and evil and so on, but still, it’s hilarious, and if someone tells me Germans
have no sense of humor, I’ll throw this book at him/her. Well, I won’t, because
it’s my mother’s and I gave it back to her, but you know what I mean.
Have you read anything funny recently?
5 comments:
I love humor in books. Even serious books need comic relief.
Wow! That's a heck of a story. No wonder you giggled through the entire thing.
Kelly, I agree, humor is important!
Karen, you might enjoy it, too!
What a story! I love it when humor pops out in unexpected places :)
This one sure was unexpected. :)
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