The Orientalist: Solving the Mystery of a Strange and Dangerous Life - Tom Reiss
This biography examines the life and times of Lev Nussimbaum, a stateless Azerbaijani writer who lived between the two world wars.
The narrative is a bit less on the mercurial, magnetic, and elusive personality of the subject than on the major geopolitical upheavals of the 20th century, such as the collapse of empires after WWI, the rise of Russian Bolshevism, the tragedy of Weimar democracy and the rise of Hitler’s National Socialism.
Reiss departs from the intricate story of Nussimbaum’s short life (from the Caucasus to Central Europe to America to end in Posillipo, Italy) to give primers on the horror of the Cheka; the brutality of the Freikorps; and the global rise of conflicting revolutionary and counter-revolutionary groups. This will interest readers (like me) who knew about such phenomena only superficially.
Reiss’s narrative captures and holds our attention because he continually draws from eyewitness accounts in memoirs and interviews, and Nussimbaum’s letters to intimates and fragments of his autobiography. He compares this evidence against historical sources. Did Nussimbaum soften frightful events due to his own nostalgia? Or conversely when did he see harsh reality but soften it in his fiction? This critical approach allows the biographer to substantiate the claim that Nussimbaum was probably the author Kurban Said, who wrote the iconic novel Ali and Nino (1937).
An exceptional
work. The book is well-worth reading if a reader can’t stop reading about the painful
history of 20th century Europe. Historical figures are presented in
an interesting way (such as the young bank-robbing Stalin knowing the subject’s
mother). The vision of Baku at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries as the
Paris of the East brings us closer to the culture, customs and peoples of the
Caucasus and neighboring regions that are never mentioned in our schools or the
mass media.