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A place to ponder books.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

#2 Shibumi by Trevanian

 Shibumi lives up to its name in the way it unveils an array of unusual topics.  Among these topics are ideas which most people stray from mentioning.
 

Through a horrendous series of circumstances involving the duty that comes with a warrior's honor and the evils of World War II, Nicholai Hel winds up tortured and imprisoned.

A linguistic genius, he acquires a way to study and train in solitude. His goal of Shibumi and mystic sense of proximity allows him to find purpose in the seemingly meaningless activity of decoding anything he can get his hands on.

Nicholai seeks to perfect skills which at first, appear almost silly repetitions. Though, understanding Basque (language), becomes one of his greatest assets in life. Through it he acquires his loyal friend, Beñat Le Cagot.

For a moment, I griped at Nicholai’s arrogance. Though he understands he is intelligent and others may never see things his way, he fails to recognize this fatal concept, just so.  He hides from the outside like a disease, and this is where we get our antihero.

Nicholai has been trained to kill with ordinary household objects like pencils or drinking straws.  This man is a mystic, a genius, the most artful lover, and he knows it. The modesty factor is only slightly lacking.  But, his opinionated thinking provokes a strong reaction from the world. And as it is, Nicholai Hel exists either as a highly admired or hated man.

Kishikawa-san says to Nicholai, “....You will have to live in this future, my son. It will do you no good to dismiss the American with disgust. You must seek to understand him, if only to avoid being harmed by him.”

This wisdom really applies to all. If you know your perception of the world is different than a large percentage of the population, then you still must strive to understand them. It is for your own benefit that you use your intellect to understand other people.

The author Trevanian has a good bit to say about the world, and his views should not be taken as nonsense. There is certain truth about the illusions of government and the corruption that comes with capitalism. And there are several philosophic lessons amongst the superficial concepts that paint the ultimate escape through a tunnel of racing waters beneath a bottomless cave.

Most of all, I appreciate the mentioning that most main characters have become a genre of mediocrity. Between your average mistake-stricken hero and your mystical super-genius assassin, we may just have, the protagonist of absolute greatness.

And for the record, I really enjoyed Le Cagot's character.

Trevanian.  Shibumi (New York:  Broadway Paperbacks, 2005), 104.

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