BlackOxford's Reviews > The Tunnel

The Tunnel by Ernesto Sabato
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it was ok
bookshelves: spanish-american

Just as Opaque the Second Time Round

In The Tunnel, Ernesto Sabato has a mysogonistic, puerile, obsessive, apparently psychopathic murderer tell the reader his every thought about a folie a deux with his victim and its rationale. My first time through The Tunnel left me bewildered. Of what literary rather than ideological merit is this work? For whose edification or amusement is it meant? My original conclusion: It’s a difficult book to be interested in much less like.

But I picked up on a hint by another GR reader and found that Sabato was a scientist before he was a writer and had incorporated quantum physics in The Tunnel as a sort of hidden metaphor. Indeed there is a short book by Halpern and Carpenter which outlines the way in which the metaphor is meant to work at key points in the book (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Quantum-Mech...).

This led me back into The Tunnel for another look. Halpern and Carpenter suggest that Sabato followed Borges in his interest in the ‘labyrinthine’ character of history through which the world changes direction at critical nodes. They also point out Borges allusions to alternative and even parallel universes that were of interest to Sabato. They contend that Sabato builds on these Borgian tropes to create scenes of discontinuous time in his story.

Maybe so. But I find the argument of Halpern and Carpenter to be somewhat tendentious. But even stipulating their observations, I don’t see the point. The metaphor, if there, is certainly not central to this tale of murder and psychopathy. Of course there are always alternative trajectories for any story, or for any historical reality. But the idea of using the ‘collapse of the quantum wavefront’ as the signal for a decisive turning point seems to me trivial and fatuous.

True, the protagonist, Juan Pablo, is continuously analysing his situation in terms of alternative possibilities, as in this internal monologue:
“I constructed an endless series of variations. In one I was talkative, witty (something in fact I never am); in another I was taciturn; in still another, sunny and smiling. At times, though it seems incredible, I answered rudely, even with ill-concealed rage. It happened (in some of these imaginary meetings) that our exchange broke off abruptly because of an absurd irritability on my part, or because I rebuked her, almost crudely, for some comment I found pointless or ill-thought-out.”
But this is a symptom of madness not a symbol of impending quantum resolution. Even the speaker recognises that “this damned compulsion to justify everything I do,” isn’t normal

Consequently it seems to me that the metaphor of quantum physics does nothing to explicate Sabato’s very dark story. Juan Pablo is a misanthrope without any mitigating, not to say redeeming, features. The Tunnel, therefore, doesn’t get any more interesting with a possible metaphorical foundation. Unless of course sabato’s intention was simply to create a sort of quantum uncertainty about this very foundation. In any case: not terribly stimulating.

My original review us here:

Cui bono?

I have been trying to finish this short novel for weeks. But I can only get through 10 pages at a time. I've finally given up. I don't get it. Is there something beyond an obsessive/compulsive folie a deux that I am simply unable to comprehend? Someone please explain where I am going wrong.
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Reading Progress

May 6, 2017 – Shelved
May 6, 2017 – Shelved as: to-read
May 17, 2017 – Started Reading
May 28, 2018 – Finished Reading
November 10, 2018 – Shelved as: spanish-american

Comments Showing 1-24 of 24 (24 new)

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David Sorry that you didn't "get it" Michael. Yes it's an obsessive love triangle but it was the intensity of that obsession (the tunnel) that hooked me. The obsessive artist is now rather cliche but Sabato was a forerunner written back in 1948. I guess some of us gravitate to human weaknesses, myself included.


message 2: by Ms.pegasus (new)

Ms.pegasus Amusing for me to see that there were some books that even you could not make it through. Better luck with your next read!
Pat


Glenn Russell Sorry you didn't like it. I read it a few times over the years. And also wrote a review.


Fernando Have you read Dostoyevsky? Well... some sort of.


Christine Lapping Don't worry, I really struggled through this and was irritated by all the characters. The book was saved for me by a paragraph on page 93 of my copy, where Mimi is explaining why she was unable to finish Russian novels; the rush of recognition I had and the humour had me laughing out loud.


BlackOxford Christine wrote: "Don't worry, I really struggled through this and was irritated by all the characters. The book was saved for me by a paragraph on page 93 of my copy, where Mimi is explaining why she was unable to ..."

Aha! Perhaps that is the key I needed. Thanks, Christine.


BlackOxford BlackOxford wrote: "Christine wrote: "Don't worry, I really struggled through this and was irritated by all the characters. The book was saved for me by a paragraph on page 93 of my copy, where Mimi is explaining why ..."

Christine, I just found this, which may turn everything I thought upside down: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Quantum-Mech...


Glenn Russell BlackOxford wrote: "BlackOxford wrote: "Christine wrote: "Don't worry, I really struggled through this and was irritated by all the characters. The book was saved for me by a paragraph on page 93 of my copy, where Mim..."

As readers probably know, Ernesto Sabato was one of the young shinning stars as an up and coming physics student at the Sorbonne in Paris. In his novel The Angel of Darkness Sabato relates how he told his physics mentor that he was dropping physics for literature. The physicist turned his back on Sabato as if his student was a young lady who decided to abandon high society to paint her face and become a prostitute of the streets. But obviously, as outlined in the book you reference, Sabato could incorporate his background in advanced physics into his literature.


BlackOxford Glenn wrote: "BlackOxford wrote: "BlackOxford wrote: "Christine wrote: "Don't worry, I really struggled through this and was irritated by all the characters. The book was saved for me by a paragraph on page 93 o..."

Thanks Glenn. This puts a whole new slant on things.


Christine Lapping BlackOxford thanks gor the link but it doesn't really help me like the book or characters any better. I am so glad to have finally finished it. Off now to a more engaging read (for me at least) Shalamov ' s Kolyma Tales 😊


BlackOxford Christine wrote: "BlackOxford thanks gor the link but it doesn't really help me like the book or characters any better. I am so glad to have finally finished it. Off now to a more engaging read (for me at least) Sha..."

I can understand. But I’m giving it another go shortly. Wish me luck.


message 12: by david (new)

david I feel you. I sorta gave up on this one years ago.


message 13: by Czarny (new)

Czarny Pies I had similar problems with L'age des ténébres. It could be chronic with Sabato.


BlackOxford david wrote: "I feel you. I sorta gave up on this one years ago."
Stay tuned. Thanks.


BlackOxford Czarny wrote: "I had similar problems with L'age des ténébres. It could be chronic with Sabato."

No doubt about it - he is dark and dense.


message 16: by Julie (new)

Julie It strikes me that black holes in space are also dark and dense -- so he hasn't strayed that far from his first love, in physics, but moved further into it. : /

I think this one would frustrate me to no end so thanks for the warning buoy.


BlackOxford Julie wrote: "It strikes me that black holes in space are also dark and dense -- so he hasn't strayed that far from his first love, in physics, but moved further into it. : /

I think this one would frustrate m..."


Julie, that’s exactly the description I was looking for - a black literary hole.


David Too bad that this book didn’t impress you but it was such a dark book, I can understand why. I guess it hit the mark for me (although dark, bleak novels are not my my usual read). Must have been something in the air when I read it.


message 19: by david (new)

david Ha, Blackie. Well you were determined to finish it. So, you can wear that badge.


BlackOxford David wrote: "Too bad that this book didn’t impress you but it was such a dark book, I can understand why. I guess it hit the mark for me (although dark, bleak novels are not my my usual read). Must have been so..."

David, you don’t live anywhere near the Flint River, do you? 🙀


BlackOxford david wrote: "Ha, Blackie. Well you were determined to finish it. So, you can wear that badge."

I’ll add it to my woodcraft badge. Something else I can’t unsee.


Terence M - [Quot libros, quam breve tempus!] Ahhh ... good to see you, too, have a DNF shelf! Mine holds over 100 audiobooks, but with more than 4,000 unheard, it matters not a jot!


BlackOxford Terence M (Restored Disposition :)) wrote: "Ahhh ... good to see you, too, have a DNF shelf! Mine holds over 100 audiobooks, but with more than 4,000 unheard, it matters not a jot!"

We’re too old to persist with crap. The young have higher tolerance levels... and less taste apparently.


Terence M - [Quot libros, quam breve tempus!] BlackOxford wrote: "We’re too old to persist with crap.
The young have higher tolerance levels... and less taste apparently."


Absolutely spot-on!


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