Olivia Laing's second novel, The Silver Book, presents itself as an ode to beauty - extravagant film sets, feasts, dazzling costumes - but beneath its sleek surface lies a hollow exploration of aesthetics. Set against the vibrant backdrop of Italian cinema in 1974, Laing weaves a narrative that appears to promise more than it delivers.
The protagonist, Nicholas, is drawn into a world of artistic intensity, meeting real-life set designer Danilo Donati and becoming embroiled in the production of Fellini's Casanova. Pasolini, a figure of immense allure, is woven throughout the novel as an avatar of creative courage. Laing has skillfully captured the essence of this period, but beneath her prose lies a shallow engagement with the complexities of the time.
Laing's writing can be both urgent and elegantly wrought, yet she struggles to balance the beauty of her descriptions with the weight of the events they portray. Instead of delving into the darker recesses of Salò, Pasolini's notorious masterpiece of fascist brutality, Laing opts for a sanitized narrative that sanitizes its power.
This is a novel trapped in its own medium, bound between book covers and Instagram feeds. It eschews ugliness and unseeable truths for an aesthetic of style, where the artful pose is valued above all else. Even Pasolini's murder, the central event to which Laing hints throughout the novel, remains opaque.
The Silver Book is a novel that sidesteps responsibility by focusing on beauty rather than truth. It presents itself as a celebration of art and creativity but ultimately serves as a shallow exploration of style over substance. This raises questions about the role of the artist in society and our collective culpability in crimes committed under systems we often ignore.
Ultimately, The Silver Book fails to deliver on its promise of depth. Laing risks nothing by exploring these themes, instead opting to safely distance herself from anything she perceives as uncomfortable or difficult.
The protagonist, Nicholas, is drawn into a world of artistic intensity, meeting real-life set designer Danilo Donati and becoming embroiled in the production of Fellini's Casanova. Pasolini, a figure of immense allure, is woven throughout the novel as an avatar of creative courage. Laing has skillfully captured the essence of this period, but beneath her prose lies a shallow engagement with the complexities of the time.
Laing's writing can be both urgent and elegantly wrought, yet she struggles to balance the beauty of her descriptions with the weight of the events they portray. Instead of delving into the darker recesses of Salò, Pasolini's notorious masterpiece of fascist brutality, Laing opts for a sanitized narrative that sanitizes its power.
This is a novel trapped in its own medium, bound between book covers and Instagram feeds. It eschews ugliness and unseeable truths for an aesthetic of style, where the artful pose is valued above all else. Even Pasolini's murder, the central event to which Laing hints throughout the novel, remains opaque.
The Silver Book is a novel that sidesteps responsibility by focusing on beauty rather than truth. It presents itself as a celebration of art and creativity but ultimately serves as a shallow exploration of style over substance. This raises questions about the role of the artist in society and our collective culpability in crimes committed under systems we often ignore.
Ultimately, The Silver Book fails to deliver on its promise of depth. Laing risks nothing by exploring these themes, instead opting to safely distance herself from anything she perceives as uncomfortable or difficult.