Loads of Learned Lumber

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Mircea Cartarescu, _Solenoid_, trans. Sean Cotter

 IT TOOK ME quite a while to finish this, taking a few breaks, but my admiration for it is limitless. Deep thanks to Deep Vellum for bringing it out in the U.S. and to Sean Cotter for a graceful, compelling translation.

My genre designation would be "alternative autofiction." That would be "alternative" as in "alternative history," e.g. Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle or Philip Roth's The Plot Against America, historical fiction that imagines how history might have unfolded had one event or another fallen out differently. Solenoid, I think, is (to some extent) about one of the lives Cartarescu might have led had some episodes in his earl life gone differently. The only comparable novel I have read is Paul Auster's 4 3 2 1, which actually gives four alternative lives to a characters whose starting circumstances closely match Auster's own.

The (unnamed) narrator has literary ambitions as a young man, but a poetry reading that might have been his big breakout moment goes terribly wrong, and he instead becomes a teacher of Romanian at a secondary school in Bucharest. Cartarescu's own youthful literary ambitions bore fruit: he got published, won prizes, became famous. But what if they hadn't? He might easily have ended up teaching Romanian literature in Bucharest, in just such a school as this, with a group of students, administrators, and fellow teachers as idiosyncratic as the cast of a Wes Anderson film.

The building itself has its idiosyncracies, for that matter, subterranean passages and outbuildings that house unlikely objects (e.g., a kind of demonic, David Cronenberg dentist's chair) and contain mysterious portals. The world of Solenoid is somewhat comparable to that in Alasdair Gray's Lanark, a grimy urban setting that somehow exists alongside, or parallel to, or behind a weirder, more fantastical one. A kind of European magical realism, maybe, as in Bruno Schulz or Gunter Grass? 

The novel's mysterious parallel other world may be the one in which Cartarescu is a celebrated novelist. Is that world better? Maybe, maybe not. The crucial notion is that it is there. The novel persuades you that the world you know in its three familiar dimensions is not the only world there is--that fourth and fifth dimensions are out there, to be fleetingly glimpsed in dreams, or in the visionary theories of Nikola Tesla, or the inscrutable language of the Voynich Manuscript, or in the humming power of the giant solenoid buried under the narrator's house, which enable him and his girlfriend Irina to levitate during sex.

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