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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

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In Baia Luna, a small village of some 250 self-sufficient souls hidden away at the base of the Carpathian Mountains, “today was like what yesterday was and tomorrow would be.”

But not for long. On the contrary, a time of great change awaits. It’s November 1957, and the fictitious nation of Transmontania is about to be sucked whole-hog into the socialist bloc. Communism is of course on the cards, and whomsoever stands in the way of the Conjucator shall surely be squashed.

“About to turn sixteen [and] stuck in a swamp halfway between a boy and a man,” Pavel Botev has more immediate problems to attend to at the outset of The Madonna on the Moon, the first novel by Rolf Bauerdick, an award-winning German photojournalist. Raised by his aunt and his grandfather, a “formerly commonsensical” sort convinced that the body of the Virgin Mary is on the moon, Pavel becomes caught up in a bizarre conspiracy which will dog him to the end of an era that has hardly started.

No on in Baia Luna had the slightest doubt that the source of Ilja Botev’s visions was not some luminous gift of prophetic insight, but the delusions of a wandering mind—least of all me, Pavel, his grandson. When I was a little boy, I shrugged off my grandfather’s imaginings as foolish fancies, the result of the influence of the Gypsy Dimitru Gabor. Dimitru never gave much of a hoot about the laws of reason and logic. But later, as the solid ground of good common sense grew progressively thin and crumbly beneath Grandfather’s feet, I myself played no small part in the old man’s getting more and more hopelessly tangled up in the net of his fantasies. It was certainly not my intent to have Grandfather make himself the town idiot, the butt of everyone’s jokes, but what could you say about a tavern owner who sets off in a horse and cart on a secret mission to warn the president of the United States about the rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, a mysterious Fourth Power, and an impending international catastrophe? Armed, by the way, with a laughable top secret dossier, a treatise on the mystery of the corporeal Assumption of the Virgin Mary, handwritten and triple-sewn into the lining of his wool jacket.

More than half of The Madonna on the Moon has passed before this actually occurs, but it’s a smart move to pave the way for this peculiar plot in the prologue. Without it, the beginning of Bauerdick’s exuberant book would be that much more mundane, whereas with it, we wonder what the seeming suicide of Pavel’s distressingly drunk teacher could have to do with the Catholic Church, whilst considering the deeper meaning of the disappearance of parish priest Johannes Baptiste. Narrative addicts that we are, we attempt to link this fact to that, imbuing everyday events with a sort of supernatural significance.

The Madonna on the Moon Rolf Bauerdick UK cover

As it happens, there are two discrete mysteries in play in this distinctive debut, and though there’s some small crossover between the pair, the prologue suggests a greater sense of connection. This is misdirection, make no mistake, but I enjoyed The Madonna on the Moon all the more because of it. And Bauerdick’s playful way of misleading and indeed deceiving his readers—for much of what we think we know, we don’t—goes further. Perhaps too far, in fact…

In the early going The Madonna on the Moon rather resembles a novel by Carlos Ruiz Zafon: in its protagonist’s fascination with enigmatic matters and its impeccable sense of setting. The colour and culture of Baia Luna is simply brilliant, and Transmontania too rings at times tragically true. Last but not least, the larger than life characters populating the tale are an absolute riot, particularly Dimitru and the late parish priest.

Sadly, the less successful second half tends too often towards the tedious, though the ambition of the entire is to be admired:

Today, as I look back over my life, the Age of Gold seems like the rise and fall of a distant star, a sun that gives light and warmth for a while, expands into a huge red giant, and finally collapses under the weight of its own mass. In the end, all that remained of the New Nation was a greedy black hole that had devoured years of my life and turned the ardent dreams of my youth to ice.

In short, what was charming about the book in the beginning becomes increasingly cloying as The Madonna on the Moon goes on, and the resolution, when it arrives, is rushed, rendering much of the foundational fun redundant. I’ll grant that there’s a certain circularity to it, but the conclusion is contrived, and far too tidy, finally.

Books like The Madonna on the Moon—books that pivot on mysteries—are made or broken by the promise that they’ll come together wonderfully. Rolf Bauerdick’s debut doesn’t, leaving me in two minds about it, in truth. It’s pretty much magnificent initially—winningly whimsical, witty and wise, such that I loved at least half of this book wholeheartedly—alas the laborious last act left me feeling disheartened rather than outsmarted.

 

The Madonna on the Moon is available now in the US from Knopf and is coming to the UK from Atlantic Books in 2014


Niall Alexander is an extra-curricular English teacher who reads and writes about all things weird and wonderful for The Speculative Scotsman, Strange Horizons, and Tor.com. He’s been known to tweet, twoo.

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