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Afterlands
 
 

Afterlands [Hardcover]

Steven Heighton
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Books in Canada

It's 1876. A piano recital with a difference is underway in a packed Connecticut concert hall. Punnie, a ten-year-old Inuit girl, plays Mendelssohn with the skill and flair of a professional musician.
Although enjoying the "tremendous novelty" of the performance, two members of the audience argue playfully about the girl's nationality, one claiming her for the U.S., another for Canada and the British Crown. Meanwhile, the young pianist struggles with a growing cough. Seated in the front row, Tukulito, Punnie's mother, is worried.
The nationalist tug of war echoes the traumatic real-life events of the 1872 Polaris Arctic expedition. Forced to abandon ship, 19 people-including Punnie, her interpreter mother Tukulito, and hunter father Ebierbing-are stranded on a shrinking ice floe for several months. Apart from Punnie, her parents and another Inuit family, the company is made up of an Englishman, two Americans, and a number of Germans.
Poet and novelist Steven Heighton has woven a fictional account of the thoughts, the fears and loves of the Polaris survivors. Thrust into the centre of the drama-both historically and in Heighton's novel-is a published memoir of the Polaris misadventure written by the American lieutenant, and official commander on the ice, George Tyson. Tyson's Arctic Experiences, at times quoted verbatim, at times "rearranged, conflated, compressed, and occasionally invented," according to an author's note, is, to modern eyes, a testimony to late 19th century jingoism. As events on the ice cause fear and hardship to gnaw at Tyson's nerves, his memoir reflects mounting xenophobia and distrust of all things un-American.
Heighton's drama opens two years after the publication of Arctic Experiences. Accepted as fact by the public, Tyson's book has plunged the other Polaris survivors into disgrace. Heighton's on-ice narrative, which takes up the bulk of Afterlands' first half, intersperses Tyson's thoughts and feelings with those of Tukulito and the Polaris' Second Mate, Roland Kruger, a German war veteran. To Kruger, Tyson is a man who needs, "constant proofs of strength". Kruger believes that if such proof doesn't materialize, "he will find ways of engineering [it]." We first come across Kruger in November, 1876. Living in New York but unemployable in the wake of Arctic Experiences, he jumps from the South Ferry crossing toward Brooklyn. When the icy water envelops him, the memory of life on the floe returns and with it the face of Tukulito. He remembers how the Inuit woman had "ruddered and renewed him . . ." during the Polaris ordeal.
Although Tyson believes him to be the prime motivator of the plotting among the Germans, Kruger is in fact a perpetual outsider. The Second Mate distrusts the "idiot willingness to choose sides" which "feeds the abattoir of history," and is just as repelled by German nationalism as he is by Tyson's brand of racial bigotry. On the ice, he is labeled a spy by Tyson and by his own countrymen.
Kruger is in love with Tukulito and is incensed by Tyson's betrayal of her in Arctic Experiences. Tyson writes, "Esquimaux are like all semi-civilized people, naturally improvident; while they have, they will eat, and let tomorrow take care of itself." Yet it is Tukulito's husband, Ebierbing, who keeps the party alive with his hunting, and Tukulito herself who helps preserve Tyson through the cold.
In manners and custom, Tukulito is half-Victorian lady, half-Inuit. Though scrupulously formal, she holds to Inuit values of communal living. When she sees Tyson shivering at night, she presses herself close up to him, an act Tyson misconstrues as an invitation. It is the resulting embarrassment and sense of shame that causes the fiercely proud Tyson to launch a tirade against Tukulito in the daily journal which will become Arctic Experiences.
Heighton's descriptions of the Arctic are exceptionally vivid and appropriately ominous when they reveal something about the crew's psychological state. The Inuit, we are told, see the aurora borealis as the "spirits of those who have died by violence, with heavy loss of blood." "Today," the narrative continues, "the shivering involutions are coral, crimson, golden . . ."
Heighton captures the deluded exhilaration of half-starved people as the ice floe shrinks and cracks. The Germans' self-appointed leader, Meyer, thinks about the "rare opportunity [their] presence here affords!" Taking control of the arms, his followers begin ignoring Tyson's orders and strut like soldiers around the ice floe. The black American cook is shackled as the suspect responsible for the mysterious diminishment of supplies, and Tyson writes deliriously about his fear of the Inuit "reverting" to promiscuity and cannibalism.
As starvation hovers, each of the main characters comes under pressure to betray his or her own moral and intellectual convictions. Tukulito has to urge her husband not to desert the others, who rely on them for survival. Kruger comes close to perpetrating the violence he so despises. And Tyson, though filling his journal with glib affirmations of a divine plan, inwardly despairs of any hope that there is a God.
While the shrinking ice floe is the battleground during the Polaris ordeal, the Inuit people themselves, especially Tukulito, become that arena in the aftermath. Punnie dies not long after her recital. At her funeral, Kruger comes close to attacking Tyson, but pulls back in disgust at the last moment, and subsequently leaves the country.
Beginning a second, impoverished life in Mexico, Kruger takes up with a Sina woman, Jacinta, who reminds him of the still-married Tukulito. Jacinta recoils from the association Kruger automatically makes between her and another indigenous woman. But the thematic core of Afterlands soon expands to include Kruger's own identification with the threatened Sina people.
While in the Arctic, Kruger found himself rebelling against "civilization" together with all the notions of patriotism and progress the term implies; Tyson was the "waving flag" he most resented. In Mexico, he slips into a similar philosophical niche but encounters a far more potent antagonist than Tyson. His path crosses that of Captain Luz, a roving military commander who "sees conquest as a moral science." Luz systematically empties the land of indigenous settlements which stand in the way of a planned railroad.
Dragooning Kruger into his genocidal enterprise, Luz rides towards the very Sina settlement that is home to Jacinta. While Luz despises the indigenous people he eradicates, he reveals to Kruger that he is a scholar and linguist, perhaps the only "civilized" man to fully understand the Sina tongue. To Kruger, Luz provides a chilling vision of a future when "men . . . want to become the curator[s] of what they destroy."
Feeling like a spy once more, Kruger knows he must work out a way to save the village from catastrophe. He confronts his aversion to violence as he did on the ice and examines the idea that to "murder Luz would be to murder his own beliefs." Intellectually and dramatically, this climactic episode reprises and magnifies the period of conflict on the ice. In neither situation does Heighton attempt to provide an easy resolution.
The landscape descriptions in Afterlands are uniformly rich and persuasive. The author captures the essence of the North, endowing it with sensuous delight through descriptions like, "the pewter moon was a sliver shy of full." Heighton clearly knows how nature affects the senses, and the reader is never in doubt that he is familiar with the Arctic and the multitude of southern terrains he describes.
Heighton also has a remarkable grasp of the workings of minds in peril and the contradictory impulses that enable the simultaneous presence of fear, compassion, and courage. Weakened by hunger and desperation, Kruger challenges Luz, ever aware of "the voluptuous temptation to yield to his conqueror."
Occasionally, the philosophical sheet of Afterlands comes close to overwhelming the dramatic structure. Not long after Kruger muses about Marcus Aurelius, his nemesis, Luz, also mentions the Roman Emperor and his struggles to "deal with the Christians." It may be just plausible for two educated minds on different sides of an argument to think of the same historical figure at the same time, but many will feel the author is showing his hand too freely.
This, however, is a small gripe. Afterlands is a major work by any standards, uniting beautiful writing, unforgettable characters, and profound ideas on the lessons offered by history.
Paul Butler (Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly

The retrofitted U.S. Navy tugboat Polaris set out on an expedition for the North Pole in 1872. After getting stuck among ice floes off the coast of Greenland for months, its multinational crew of 25 (plus eight women and children) were separated, with half trapped on the ship and the others trapped on an ice floe onto which they had temporarily decamped. Poet and novelist Heighton (The Shadow Boxer) brilliantly riffs off (and presents snippets of) the diary and memoir of real-life Lt. George Tyson, who was among the ice floe denizens; they survived seven more months before being rescued. When the captain dies under mysterious circumstances, Heighton focuses on Kruger, a German nonconformist who believes "the idiot willingness to take sides is what feeds the abattoir of history." Latent romantic feelings between Kruger and the group's married Esquimau translator, Tukulito, or "Hannah," further complicate an already desperate situation. Tyson, who eventually took command, skillfully manages to steer the diminishing floe to waters frequented by sealers and steamers. Heighton is terrific on the group's isolation and Tyson's often laconic responses to it. He's less good in dramatizing the postexpedition lives of Tukulito, Tyson and Kruger, but this novel's scale, its delight in detail and its psychological insight make it an exceptionally satisfying adventure.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "It's never too late to become the man you might have been.", Jun 3 2010
By 
Friederike Knabe (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Afterlands (Paperback)
Three memorable historical figures are at the centre of this admirable historical adventure story, set in the last decades of the nineteenth century: Roland Kruger, German second mate hired for the 1871-72 Polaris expedition, his superior and increasingly his nemesis, Lt. George Tyson, and Hannah (Tukulito) Ebierbing, the first professional translator of the Inuit (then called Esquimau) language. During a heavy winter storm part of the Polaris crew is adrift in the passage between Greenland and Baffin Island. Canadian novelist Steven Heighton takes the historical accounts and Tyson's later published book on the astounding six-months survival in the Arctic as the starting point for this extraordinary novel.

Superbly framed by an insightful introduction to the primary characters, and an extensive concluding section consisting of the three "after-stories", Heighton re-imagines the endurance and survival of a motley crew of different nationalities and two Inuit families, nineteen in total, caught with few supplies on an ice floe of constantly decreasing size, and shifting directions. Not surprisingly, the desperate conditions of the group, confined to a small space and under extreme circumstances deteriorate to infighting, violence and unreasonable and even dangerous behaviour. The situation is exacerbated by the growing personality clashes between Tyson and the German crew on the one hand and between Tyson and Kruger on the other. By stark contrast, Tukulito, who plays a special role in the hearts of both, Tyson and Kruger, and her husband Ebierbing exude calm, patience and diligence. With previous experience as guide, hunter, cook they are the overall survival experts without whom the crew would perish.

With his outstanding aptitude for character development and for creating believable scenarios, the author juxtaposes selected excerpts from Tyson's book account (tweaked to suit the story line) with his own version of what might have happened during the six months on the ice. Inserting in addition several of Tyson's original field notes, thereby illustrating discrepancies in fact and tone to the book version, Heighton leads the reader to question Tyson's honesty and even his sanity. In fact, he presents the reader with two alternative realities, one increasingly diverging from the other. By contrasting Tyson's notes and book excerpts with his own version, the author gives a voice to different players, in particular Kruger, the only German with a inquiring mind and without strong allegiances. His behaviour, though, is seen with growing suspicion by the other crewmembers, including his and Tukulito's subtly courteous interactions.


The central section - the survival in the Arctic - may appear somewhat drawn out and long. However, careful reading opens the reader's eyes not only to the extraordinary dangers of the venture and shifting behaviour patterns among the crew, but also to subtle personality changes in the central characters. Tyson's admission that "it is never too late to become the man you might have been" does not only apply to him. Kruger's search for the other person in him is an ongoing struggle.

In fact, Kruger emerges as the most interesting and appealing character. He can be seen as a kind of moral compass for human behaviour in extreme crisis situations. His inner conflicts - between obeying authority and becoming a "patriot only to the truth", between duty and emotion - weave like a leitmotiv through his life and through the novel. Kruger has no longer country to believe in; he is "his own country". Still, the need to belong to a group cannot be easily suppressed. Committed to be understood as "a pacifist objector", his resolve is nevertheless fundamentally challenged by circumstances.

In the novel's major "Afterlands" section that compellingly closes the frame around the Arctic events, Heighton follows each of his three central characters as they continue their lives. Each has to live through more periods of external or internal tests before inner peace can even be seen as a possibility. Where historical records existed the author weaves them into his novel, as he does for Tyson and Tukulito. In the case of Kruger, where nothing much was known about his life, except that he left for the south, Heighton creates a most captivating and believable "after-story". Kruger, deeply disillusioned, ends up in the Sierra Madre region of Mexico, hoping for peace and a quiet life. Nobody, however, can easily jump out of his skin. Neither can Kruger escape more conflict, misunderstanding and abuse. At this stage, Heighton introduces new characters into the novel to complement Kruger's portrait. Among these, he introduces Kruger's new nemesis: the mysterious, highly intelligent and multilingual "Padre". Despite his high ideals, fed by French philosophers and admiring the German example, the Padre is, in effect, not a church representative, but a colonel and "an army onto himself". His function is to suppress the indigenous peoples in the region, to "pacify" the region and eliminate all who resist. Kruger's encounters with the Padre are memorable. He is forced to engage with his counterpart's game of power, control and his interpretation of progress. It forces Kruger to question his long-held belief of himself as a person, committed "to do no harm". How will he respond?

Heighton's exquisitely written novel is so very rich in narrative, characters and philosophical and moral questions raised that a review can only touch on selected essential points. In his most recent novel, Every Lost Country, the author further expands on some of these fundamental issues, yet set in a contemporary context.W hile at one level a captivating adventure story, AFTERLANDS is also an invitation to the reader to reflect on the deeper questions that are so well woven into the story. [Friederike Knabe]
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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)

13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book that stays with you, April 20 2006
By Dartmouth '96 (Ithica NY) - Published on Amazon.com
Afterlands is a densely but beautifully written novel. It's not an overnight read or a beach read, yet the main story is so gripping that you feel driven to read it fast, while also savouring the language. The characters are all richly developed and they stay with you after you finish, like the story itself.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A flawless, multi-faceted gem of a book., Jun 14 2009
By Cipriano "www.bookpuddle.blogspot.com" - Published on Amazon.com
I consistently read upwards of 50 books a year.
Afterlands is definitely the best book I have read so far this year, and I cannot imagine another one being better for me in 2009.
It is now up there in my opinion with the greats, like Alias Grace, and As The Crow Flies, and Libra, and stuff like that.
I don't even know where to start, [a great synopsis of the book is shown, above].
It's really two novels in one. The Arctic episode. The Mexican episode.
After the Arctic portion of it, the author follows the protagonist Roland Kruger into Mexico, and to further adventures so epic in scope that, as I say, it is almost like reading a second novel. Yet all remains so intertwined [woven], so intricately connected to the themes of displacement and alienation, peril and rescue. Love and loss.
Kruger emerges a hero, but not a super-hero.
There is not one aspect of this novel that is flippant. Nothing is under or over cooked. And let's face it, both things can give one indigestion.
It is a thriller, a page-turner, a stay-awaker, but not a potboiler. Because it is based on actual events, it could be considered historical fiction, yet does not have the feel, in any typical sense, of the genre.
The perfect blend of wild invention and bone-numbing reality.

The white bird, an albino vulture, slouches in a niche in the canyon wall, like statuary in a satanic chapel. Its bald gory head is half turned away, as if feigning disinvolvement or anonymity. [p.320]

Come on now!
That is gorgeous, perfect, writing. And the whole entire book is that good. A lyrical, word-perfect gem.
It's a perfect ten of a book and had me riveted from start to finish.
I encourage you one and all, Afterlands cannot disappoint you.

10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars after Afterlands..., Mar 10 2006
By Mr. Bark and Hiss - Published on Amazon.com
A fantastic story written well.
I was afraid I was going to lose interest after the main plotline seemed to end 2/3rds of the way through and the author had to start inventing his own story a bit more, but it only got better.
Recommended.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 8 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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