The Dream Life of Balso Snell
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The Dream Life of Balso Snell is Nathanael West’s first novel.
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[edit] Plot summary
The novel presents a young man’s immature and cynical search for meaning in a series of dreamlike encounters inside the entrails of the Trojan Horse. Balso, the protagonist, comes across the horse in the tall grass around Troy and promptly seeks a way to get in: “the mouth was beyond his reach, the navel provided a cul-de-sac, and so, forgetting his dignity, he approached the last. O Anus Mirabilis!” The literary critic Leslie Fiedler reads much into this and sees the whole novel as “a fractured and dissolving parable of the very process by which the emancipated Jew enters into the world of Western Culture.” [1] Inside the Trojan Horse Balso encounters an array of odd characters whom, he realizes, are all “writers in search of an audience”. These characters also represent various religious and artistic ideals. Balso hears their stories systematically, only to discard them one by one, in a strictly nihilist fashion.
[edit] Literary significance & criticism
The lack of a coherent plot structure, the juvenile humor and the abundant scatological details are all intended to aggravate, perplex and annoy readers. The desired result, according to West, is a book that is “a protest against writing books”[2]. The juvenileness and incoherence of the novel prompt critics to disregard it as merely “a sneer in the bathroom mirror at Art” (Alan Ross[3]), “squalid and dreadful” (Harold Bloom[4])and “a hysterical, obscure, disgusted shriek against the intellect” (James F. Light[5]). Nevertheless, by its complete and disgusted rejection of all religious, political and artistic ideals The Dream Life of Balso Snell foreshadows the nihilism of West’s next novels.
[edit] Publication History
West began developing material for The Dream Life of Balso Snell as early as 1924; he worked on the novel during his stay in Paris in 1926 and finished a complete draft in New York City between 1927 and 1929, under the title The Journal of Balso Snell. The manuscript was rejected twice before finally getting accepted, largely due to a favorable appraisal by William Carlos Williams. The book was published in New York City by the Paris-based Contact Editions in August 1931 in an edition of 500 copies. There were no other printings during West’s lifetime. After West became famous (years after his death) for Miss Lonelyhearts and The Day of the Locust, Balso Snell was reprinted in a single volume edition of his complete novels, as well as in the Library of America edition of West's collected works.[6]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Fiedler, Leslie. “Master of Dreams, the Jew in a Gentile World.” The Collected Essays of Leslie Fiedler. New York: Stein and Day, 1970. 183.
- ^ quoted in Raban, Jonathan. “A Surfeit of Commodities: The Novels of Nathanael West.” American fiction, 1914-1945. New York: Chelsea House, 1987. 378.
- ^ Ross, Alan. “The Dead Center: An Introduction to Nathanael West.” The Complete Works of Nathanael West. New York: Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, 1957. xii.
- ^ Bloom, Harold. Introduction. American fiction, 1914-1945. New York: Chelsea House, 1987. 16.
- ^ Light, James F. Nathanael West: An Interpretative Study. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1971. 64.
- ^ West, Nathanael. Novels & Other Writings: The Dream Life of Balso Snell, Miss Lonelyhearts, A Cool Million, The Day of the Locust, Other Writings, Letters. Ed. Sacvan Bercovitch. New York: The Library of America, 1997.