SEVERAL CHAPTERS ARE set in the narrator's childhood, and I was taken by surprise by how familiar the world of these chapters seemed. I say "by surprise" because even though Cartarescu and I are in the same age cohort--I am two years older--Romania in the late 1950s and early 1960s must have been a very different place than the American Midwest during the same period. Or so one would think. But the atmosphere of the institutions, the slightly stricken look of the streets, the lingering traces of life as it was before the Second World War, were apparently similar enough that the landscapes of Solenoid, physical and spiritual, seemed eerily recognizable to me.
The young Cartarescu and the young me were growing up under very different kinds of government, of course. Soviet troops only left Romania when Cartarescu was two years old, and Nicolae Ceaușescu came to power when the novelist was nine. The novel only occasionally glances at the political, however, and perhaps the Cold War era as lived in in the lower-profile regions of the East was somehow comparable to the same historical experience in the lower-profile regions of the West.
Ceaușescu is never mentioned by name in the novel, but we still get a sense of a lowering sky, of a grayness, of painfully circumscribed opportunities, of a vaguely oppressive something or other that gets in the way of any kind of flourishing or renewal. All this may be Cartarescu's way of rendering life in a totalitarian society. And the novel's recurring sense that there is another possibility, a fourth dimension, mysterious but possibly accessible, may have a political aspect: it may represent, among other things, the feeling that there is another way to live, that Communism might come to an end. The tesseracts, Klein bottles, and unreadable manuscripts may all be pointing to the idea that the unrealizable may be realized after all, in some other realm, some other time, some barely imaginable transfigured future.
The end of the book, when Bucharest seems to emerge out of a state of suspended animation into some kind of transformation, both devastated and remade, perhaps renders the cataclysm of 1989. There are no specific references to those events, which in Romania were particularly terrible. But the sense that we have emerged into a different world, unfamiliar but alive with potential, make for a hopeful ending.
