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Review: Eight White Nights

Will lust melt the frost?

March 16, 2011 12:00
An enigmatic, New York, wintry love affair

By

Moris Farhi,

Moris Farhi

2 min read

By André Aciman
Atlantic Books, £14.99

It is Christmas Eve - a popular festive occasion for New York's affluent Jews. In the snow-blanketed city, an extravagant party is in full swing in a penthouse by the Hudson River. The guests, mostly progeny of European Jews who had either fled Nazism or survived the Holocaust, have been leavened by the artistic and intellectual interests that wealth and cosmopolitanism endow.

A man of 28, a guest at the party, invited not by the host but by a mutual friend - hence an outsider - is accosted by a beautiful woman. She introduces herself genially: "I am Clara". Thus starts a turbulent love affair that repairs to the New Year's Eve party, at the same venue, where, possibly, it will obtain its meridian. I emphasise "possibly" because André Aciman does not narrate how the lovers, who until then have failed to achieve full rapport, let alone consummate their relationship, will finally manage to attain that meridian; instead he chooses to intimate it while the man, en route to the New Year's Eve party, deliberates his future.

One might be tempted to say that, after painstakingly chronicling seven days and nights of an intense relationship wherein the man, persistently overanalysing words, feelings and actions, reduces the mysticism of passion to a pernickety mind game, Aciman runs out of steam. But that would be unfair. Aciman, author of Out of Egypt, that memorable memoir of his Alexandrian youth, writes with enviable mastery, intelligence and erudition. Consequently, I would suggest that the reason he opts for an ambivalent ending, is to goad the readers to draw their own conclusions.