Daniel Kehlmann's <i>Fame</i>: The Self in the Cyber Century (AUDIO)

Daniel Kehlmann's: The Self in the Cyber Century (AUDIO)
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is a very funny, very philosophical young fictionist from Germany who will make you want more like him -- and more playfully engaging books like his
, a novel in nine linked short stories, or "episodes." A number of
who seem not to have read the book suggest that
Fame
is all about celebrity, which it's not at all. It's an imaginative probe into the YouTube universe and the always-online feel of our emergent cyber-humanity -- into cell-phone effects on our self-hood, or Facebook effects on our fantasies. It is also a storyteller's bright-eyed rumination on what the digital range and speed of our lives have made possible, or impossible, in stories themselves. The new taken-for-granted info tech has realized the yearning in endless fairy tales, for example, for telepathy: if only I could whisper a word to the lost beloved... It has enabled double-lives and resurrections that used to happen only in dreams. At the same time, the ways we connect now have collapsed, among other things, the "big goodbye" scene in prose or on the movie screen. How could we summon a surge of tears nowadays hearing Ilsa tells Rick, "We'll always have Paris...," when we know that two minutes later, in today's world, would come the first text message?

Listen to our ranging conversation the other night in the Harvard Bookstore:

Flickering in the Kehlmann background are deeper, more delightful riddles. One of the central stories in
Fame
introduces Rosalie, an older woman with terminal cancer, making her way to an assisted-suicide clinic in Zurich. En route she rebukes the author of her story and pleads with him to save her: "Is there no chance, she asks me. It's all in your hands. Let me live." To which the author replies: "This isn't a life-affirming story. If anything, it's a theological one."

Kehlmann's theology, in our conversation, is richer than what we've often heard about authors playing God with their characters:

Any story puts me, as the writer of the story, into the godlike position of creating people to make their life difficult, to make them suffer because I have a plan for them. The plan is just to get the story as good as possible. There is a kind of teleology in getting the story right, because all the things happening to a character, causing pain to the character, ruining the life of this character, they are there for the greater good of getting a good story. And so this is exactly the same position in classical theology where the theologian tries to justify god: we are told that yes, you are suffering, but you are suffering because there is a plan. You might not understand this plan, maybe you never will, but you should trust that there is such a plan and that's why you should accept your suffering.

When I made Rosalie protest against this, and tell the writer "don't do this to me. I don't care about your plan," it wasn't just a metafictional game. It was a very real point that in the face of basic human suffering the whole idea of a bigger plan justifying all that seems ridiculous. To me this was a very serious theologically, philosophically charged story which also had a very personal twist because Rosalie is also telling the writer "one day all this will happen to you, you will be in pain, you will be dying, you will hope that somebody, against the plan, will just save you and it will not happen." It's true, and she was not just talking to some abstract writer, at this moment she was talking about me and the fact that it will happen to me too.

... Even when I started the story, I had always intended the ending that the writer interferes and ruins the story and saves the character. Then the writer also says "I hope someday somebody will do the same for me." I think, well, as you say in English, "fat chance!"

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