REVIEW

Book Review: From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas L. Freidman, and Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart

Written by Shane Hansanuwat
Published July 07, 2008

A year or so ago, I read From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas L. Friedman in an attempt to get my head around the endless conflagrations that dominate the Middle East. At the same time, I was also reading Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart, a comic satire about a former Soviet state that fakes a civil war in an attempt to capture the West’s attention and, more importantly, its money. The result was an odd convergence; Shteyngart’s cartoonish satire seemed to cherry-pick, but amplify, the most salient revelations from Friedman's nuanced consideration of the political and social climate in the region.

From Beirut to Jerusalem is the culmination of the ten years Friedman spent in the Middle East, first as a correspondent in Beirut, then in Jerusalem. The book is a document of Friedman's Middle East education: from a zealous pro-Israeli Jewish teenager in Minnesota to an awestruck journalist in Beirut to a grizzled Middle East observer in Jerusalem. Freidman offers a crystalline analysis of the chaos in the region, perpetuated by “Hama rules,” a reference to a small town in Syria leveled by its own leaders in a brutal display of power. Tribal rivalries and brutal sectarianism have always ruled in Lebanon, trumping peace at every turn.

For Friedman, “Hama rules” illustrated his personal “we’re not in Kansas anymore” moment. The irony of Friedman's outlook is the fact that, despite its success, Israel suffered from similar problems as Lebanon, mainly a political paralysis caused, at its root, by tribalism. Friedman concludes, “in Lebanon they called the paralysis ‘anarchy’ and in Israel they called it ‘national unity,’ but the effect was the same: political gridlock.”

To include the word “absurd” in the title of one’s novel would seem a bit on the nose. It has all the subtlety of being slapped in the face by a sturgeon. And that’s the effect Gary Shteyngart is going for in his satirical novel, Absurdistan. It’s the story of Misha Vainberg, a gluttonous man-child (aka Snack-Daddy), the only son of the 1,238th-richest man in Russia, living in a state of arrested development, pining for all things American in Russia’s post-Soviet capitalist carnival. To avoid his father’s enemies, Misha tries to circumvent diplomatic roadblocks and buy his way to America via the tiny Caspian oil-republic of Absurdistan.

In Absurdistan, Misha is embroiled in a simmering feud between two ethnic groups, the Sevo and the Svanï, who have fought for centuries over which direction Christ’s footrest faced on the cross. When American multi-nationals (“Golly Burton, Golly Burton”) arrive with chants of “LOGCAP and cost-plus contracts,” their schism threatens to explode into a full-blown mediagenic civil war, proving that the only thing more lucrative than oil in the 21st century is... conflict.

Many times, the joy of reading is discovering the serendipitous connections between one book and another. Paired together, Thomas L. Friedman's From Beirut to Jerusalem and Gary Shteyngart’s Absurdistan offer a vivid portrait of political (and tribal) conflicts and capture the passion, bad faith, and human folly that usually lie at their heart.

Shane Hansanuwat writes the Unliterate Review, a literary blog for people who no longer read. He is also a fan of brevity.
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From Beirut to Jerusalem From Beirut to Jerusalem
Thomas L. Friedman
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Absurdistan: A Novel Absurdistan: A Novel
Gary Shteyngart
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Book Review: From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas L. Freidman, and Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart
Published: July 07, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Politics and Affairs
Writer: Shane Hansanuwat
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Comments

#1 — July 7, 2008 @ 23:47PM — Gordon Hauptfleisch [URL]

Inspired pairing, excellent write-up. Looking forward to more. Thanks.

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