‘Hangman’ by Maya Binyam (2023) – 194 pages
I struggled with this novel. So much of it made little sense to me, but every once in a while there would be a stunningly original insight that would redeem my efforts to comprehend what was going on.
‘Hangman’ is a novel that pushes the boundaries of fiction. A word that is often used in the reviews for ‘Hangman’ is “enigmatic”. Perhaps my problems stem from the fact that the unnamed narrator is quite confused himself.
He has been kicked out of the country he has lived in for 26 years and returned to the African country where he was born. The author is deliberately vague about the country he was kicked out of (although there are hints that it is the United States) or the African country to which he is returned.
“In the morning, I received a phone call and was told to board a flight. The arrangements had been made on my behalf. I packed no clothes, because my clothes had been packed for me. A car arrived to pick me up.”
He still has a brother, a son and an ex-wife (She is always referred to as “my son’s mother”) in this African country. I suppose returning to a country you were born in after 26 years away would be very confusing.
“I wanted to apologize to everyone, myself included. I wasn’t used to being a confused person, but that was how life was. Sometimes the events of the world were clear, and at other times they rearranged themselves in such a way that nothing made sense, and even if they did, they made no discernible sense to me. Either that or I was jet-lagged, which was another possible explanation.”
The sentences are short, and the words used and the ideas presented are not at all difficult. Those are not the problems I had with ‘Hangman’. One of the main problems I did have is that our narrator is constantly running into people who are deliberately described in a surreal fashion. None of the characters are named. These encounters with assorted local people include a group of missionaries, a zookeeper, a bank teller, and a taxi driver. Even his encounters with his brother and his ex-wife seem almost aimless and arbitrary.
“I thought to ask about their lives, but I was sick of hearing about people’s lives, which were made up of stories that were not even true. People liked to talk, because talking made them feel like their experiences amounted to something, but usually the talk turned those experiences into lies.”
The reviews praised ‘Hangman’ for its deadpan humor in these encounters, but in most cases I did not get the joke.
So what kept me reading ‘Hangman’? Perhaps the reviewer Houman Barekat said it best: “Refreshingly, there is none of the dreary didacticism or syrupy sentimentalism commonly found in novels about migrant diasporas.” I knew there was something important in ‘Hangman’ if only I could find it.
Meanwhile, there was one other reason I kept reading, some of the profound statements that these random characters and our narrator make. Here is one from ‘Hangman’ which applies to Putin and other authoritarians:
“The world was experiencing such an extreme consolidation and sequestering of wealth that it had become almost impossible to compete with agents of exploitation.”
Another astute insight:
“No matter who was suffering, anyone could feel something for them, even people who found them abhorrent, because even abhorrent people reminded us of ourselves and all the things we had gone through or assumed we one day would.”
About politicians, Maya Binyam is particularly sharp.
“She told me that politicians pretended to have personalities, but their idiosyncrasies were just traits they developed in order to get elected. For most voters, it was less important for a candidate to have a coherent ideology than it was for them to have a dog, a second home, or a familial sense of humor.”
So I found ‘Hangman’ extremely exasperating, yet also valuable. Is that even possible?
Grade: C+
Posted by mementominnie on November 27, 2023 at 9:22 PM
No intention of reading this..just struggle with a book of 194 pages being regarded as a novel.
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Posted by Anokatony on November 27, 2023 at 10:03 PM
Hi mementominnie,
When a book is described as “surreal”, that is probably a good tip-off that it will be hard to follow and comprehend. “Surreal” is one of the words a reviewer used to describe ‘Hangman’. .
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Posted by kimbofo on November 28, 2023 at 2:07 PM
It sounds kinda interesting!
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Posted by Anokatony on November 28, 2023 at 4:52 PM
Hi Kim,
Yes, A reader misses a lot by avoiding troublesome books.
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Posted by JMN on December 2, 2023 at 11:34 PM
In answer to your last question, yes, it’s possible. Your candid review is good. I focus a lot on reading poetry, and have experiences similar to the one you have with this novel. I always brace for the “surreal” to be dreamlike, illogical, opaque, hermetic and the like.
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Posted by Anokatony on December 3, 2023 at 8:27 AM
Hi JMN,
I usually try to avoid the more surreal, dream-like works of fiction as well as of poetry. I guess I lean more toward the down-to-earth works in both areas. A problem I have got with poetry is giving up on a poem or a poet if I can’t figure it or them out quickly. I’m always looking for poets I can enjoy, but it happens fairly rarely. It sounds like you are farther along in the appreciation of poetry than I am.
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Posted by JMN on December 6, 2023 at 9:17 PM
I’m not sure I’m any further along in poetry than you are. The only thing I can claim is a certain disposition (inexplicable) to keep fighting with it. I’ve been friends with Charles Behlen in years past, and in some correspondence we had last year he directed me to your review of one of his books. That was my introduction to your blog. Since then I enjoy keeping abreast of your reviews. Best regards — Jim (JMN)
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Posted by Anokatony on December 7, 2023 at 6:48 AM
Hi Jim,
I really liked the poems in Charles Behlen’s book of poems ‘Failing Heaven’. They reminded me of my childhood experiences on our dairy farm. There doesn’t seem to be a workable way now to separate the good poets and poems out there from the not-so-good poets and poems, so good work gets ignored.
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Posted by JMN on December 8, 2023 at 7:45 AM
With Charles’s help I’ve acquired all his work, I think. My project is to read it at a leisurely pace. He and I hail from similar parts of the country. Interesting to know of your dairy farm background. Keep up the good work, Tony.
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