A review by danielad
The Street of Crocodiles and Other Stories by Bruno Schulz

3.0

This is one of the most odd, most curious books I've recently read. The two collections feature an unstable father, a maid Adela, and a few others. Schulz's metaphors are almost sickeningly ubiquitous, so much so, that is, that I too often found myself daydreaming - not, of course, that I don't usually drift off while reading, dreaming without intending, imagining alternative stories when the ones I'm reading become dull - and forgetting the plot. Not that there is much of a plot, just descriptions, metaphorical descriptions, with characters turning in and out of animals, insects, sanity, the stamp album, Schulz's sacred book featuring Franz Josef I: "I had reason to believe that the album was predestined for me. Many signs seemed to point to its holding a message and a personal commission for me. There was, for instance, the fact that no one felt himself to be the owner of the album, not even Rudolph, who acted more like its servant . . ." (153). So I would need to read the collection again in order to provide a more authoritative analysis. I don't know that I will, maybe a few stories again, here and there, perhaps. But like Jonathan Foer, I felt that "[t]he language was too heightened, the images too magical and precarious, the yearnings too dire, the sense of loss too palpable - everything was comedy or tragedy. The experience was too intense to be pleasant . . ." (ix). But this is, perhaps and as Schulz's admits, because "[there are things] that cannot ever occur with any precision. They are too big and too magnificent to be contained in mere facts. They are merely trying to occur, they are checking whether the ground of reality can carry them. And they quickly withdraw, fearing to lose their integrity in the frailty of realization" (ix).

With that said, I will now quote my two favourite passages:

(1) "Mother had no influence over him, but he gave a lot of respectful attention to Adela. The cleaning of his room was to him a great and important ceremony, of which he always arranged to be a witness, watching all Adela's movements with a mixture of apprehension and pleasurable excitement. He ascribed to all her functions of deeper, symbolic meaning. When, with young firm gestures, the girl pushed a long-handled broom along the floor, Father could hardly bear it. Tears would stream from his eyes, silent laughter transformed his face, and his body was shaken by spasms of delight. He was ticklish to the point of madness. It was enough for Adela to waggle her finders at him to imitate tickling, for him to rush through all the rooms in a wild panic, banging the doors after him, to fall at last on the bed in the farthest room and wriggle in convulsions of laughter, imagining the tickling which he found irresistible. Because this, Adela's power over Father was almost limitless." (20)

(2) "One day, during spring cleaning, Adela suddenly appeared in Father's bird kingdom. Stopping in the doorway, she wrung her hands at the fetid smell that filled the room, the heaps of droppings covering the floor, the tables, and the chairs. Without hesitation, she flung open the window and, with the help of a long broom, she prodded the whole mass of birds into life. A fiendish cloud of feathers and wings arose screaming, and Adela, like a furious maenad protected by the whirlwind of her thyrsus, danced the dance of destruction. My father, waving his arms in panic, tried to lift himself into the air with his feathered flock. Slowly the winged cloud thinned until at last Adela remained on the battlefield, exhausted and out of breath, along with my father, who now, adopting a worried hangdog expression, was ready to accept complete defeat." (23)