A reader’s life often travels along confusing paths. In Thomas Bernhard’s Woodcutters, which was the very first novel I read in German, the characters discuss Henrik Ibsen’s play “The Wild Duck”. Of course, I had to re-read “The Wild Duck” in order better to understand Bernhard’s novel. After doing that, I started wondering if other authors had been inspired by the play in their own work. This is how I came across the Norwegian writer Dag Solstad and his novel Shyness and Dignity.
It is an excellent novel. The main character is a 53-year-old high school teacher of Norwegian literature named Elias Rukla. At the beginning of the novel, he tries to share with his students his original new reading of Ibsen’s “The Wild Duck.” The students are completely indifferent to his efforts, and Rukla ends up having a massive freak out right in front of the students. As he walks home after this debacle, the teacher thinks about the events in his life that led him to this point.
Shyness and Dignity is a short novel. It’s one of those breathless, very European narratives that offer a glimpse into the mind of an everyday neurotic. If you’re into this kind of writing and like to follow all of the little psychological clues that the author drops throughout the novel, then the seemingly mundane ending of the book will strike you as absolutely explosive. If, however, you do not believe that the daily life of everyday people is the most fascinating thing imaginable, then you will find the novel boring. The book starts slow as the readers get to experience the tedium of a failed class in Norwegian literature that Elias Rukla is teaching, but after that the novel really picks up the pace and becomes downright addictive.
I loved Shyness and Dignity. It is hard to say based on only one novel, but it is possible that I have found a new favorite writer.