My kingdom is dying by Evald Filsar
Slovenian fiction
Original title – Moje kraljestvo umira
Translator – David Limon
Source – review copy
You ever have that situation where you have had a run of great book then have a reading slump straight after that well this was the last book in a good run of books since e I finished it five days ago I haven’t finished a book in fact last night and this morning is the first time I got back into a book. This is a book that could be called a pandemic book. Evald Filsar is maybe the best-known and most well-travelled Slovenian writer. This book came out in 2020 it is perhaps a fever dream of a literary man stuck at home, imagining various writers and situations. I am not sure of this, but given that it came out in 2020, the book’s first part is about the writers’ conference in Kolkata, then it moves on around the world,d various famous encounters along the way.
I never dreamed that I would find myself among the crème de la crème of the world’s short prose writers. The congress was attended by John Updike, Susan Sontag, John O’Hara, Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer, Gabriel García Márquez, José J.
Veiga, Joyce Carol Oates, Chang Tien, Jasar Kemal and I could go on. A dwarfish participant whispered to me that, in spite of the general conviction that he would not, even Jorge Luis Borges had turned up. I pushed my way to the front.
And it was true, at a table by the wall sat the blind Argentine of whom André Maurois wrote that he “composed only little essays or short narratives, yet they suffice for us to call him great because of their wonderful intelligence, their wealth of invention, and their tight, almost mathematical style.”
The guest at the conference
The book follows a writer who suffers from writer’s block at a conference in India. This was years earlier, and Borges opened the conference. He is. Recurring character in the story, where he spends time with several great writers, there is a theme of East European writing and various themes. Then, he is sent by his publisher to a Swiss clinic due to his writer’s block. He meets a collection of writers who also suffer from writer’s block. These are the crème de la crème of the writers from Filsar and my generation, Graham Greene, Amis senior and junior, and Borges, all there as they all talk about their writing and try to help our writers by telling their stories. I loved that he includes Infante here, a writer who should be better known. He then talks about being a Booker judge in a year that was very famous for a speech by Fay Weldon. Then he wins the Nobel. I love how he drifts and mixes real characters around his narrator and writer’s block. But also mixes past and present.
That’s not true, shouted a fat lady from Italy. What about Chekhov, what about Katherine Mansfield and other impressionists, whose stories are often merely extended expositions, emotional locks that are only unlocked in the last sentence? And Moravia, whose stories are notes on the mental state of a handful of characters, often just one?
And Borges, whose stories are, at least on the surface, naked formalistic games, mathematical experiments? (We all looked round the auditorium, but Borges was not present.) Wasn’t it clear, she continued, that there were as many stories as authors? That some were not better than others because of a different creative approach, but because of a better connection between intention and effect? In short, some stories achieve their goal, while others, exhausted and distorted from excessive effort, fall by the wayside.
and so on
The swiss clinc and the writer with short story writers.
I can see this being framed by a writer who loves talking about books and travelling, like Filsar, who has been the head of PEN in his country. This is maybe him escaping his own writer’s block, or a book written in the early. Months of the pandemic. I’m not sure it is an ode to the generation of writers he grew up with, Amis, Borges, Greene, Infante, and all of them are writers I grew up with, but some of them are mentioned less than they were, Bellow, for example. Graham Greene is another writer who was huge maybe twenty years ago, but I rarely see people singing his praises now. This is a must-read for anyone who is a fan of these writers or what it is like to be a writer, the chances they have, like the conference to be a prize judge. It is an excellent book from a writer who loves writers of his generation so much it drips off the pages. Do you have a favourite book about writers?
























