----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2002 5:31 AM
Subject: reference
Cheers, R. Mastilovic
Reference
London Review of Books, 14 November
2002
Short Cuts
Thomas Jones [on The Quiet American]
[...] There is an interesting
comparison to be made with Lolita, which was published in the same year as The
Quiet American. Nabokov
was delightfully scathing of 'an otherwise
intelligent reader who . . . described Lolita as "Old Europe debauching young
America"'.
The notion, once he's put you in mind of it, is
nonetheless hard to shake off: Fowler's Pyle and Humbert's Lolita, America
through
the eyes of a condescending and infatuated Europe. To say that Pyle
has grown up into George W. Bush would be a little too neat,
and one of the
lessons of The Quiet American is that anything that looks straightforward should
be distrusted: this applies both to
supplying renegade 'Third Forces' with
powerful weapons and to reducing entire nations to graspable stereotypes. The
last time
they see each other, Pyle says to Fowler: 'You talk like a
European, Thomas. These people aren't complicated.' Fowler replies: 'Is
that
what you've learned in a few months? You'll be calling them childlike next.'
Pyle says: 'Well - in a way.' And Fowler tells him:
'Find me an uncomplicated
child, Pyle. When we are young we are a jungle of complications. We simplify as
we get older.'