EXTRAVAGANCE
By Gary Krist
Extravagance is a gimmick novel that works. The gimmick is an
ingenious parallel narrative that tells a single story, with the same
characters, taking place in 1690s London and 1990s Manhattan. So the hero, Will
Merrick, is a young man come to the big city to make his fortune on the stock
market in both cases. In London he gets involved in the promotion of a special
type of winch for unloading merchant ships. In New York it’s the IPO of a new
Internet technology.
The trick for a book like this is to be seamless in its juxtaposition of past
and present. Krist’s back-and-forth narrative works perfectly. A trip to a
rave merges with a visit to a London mental hospital. A round of golf becomes a
shooting party. Horses are SUVs and Wall Street is ‘Change Alley. It doesn’t
take long before you start to provide your own historical or modern equivalents
even where Krist doesn’t, translating everything into the book’s dual
vision.
Given the technical difficulties that such a novel presents, it’s not
surprising to find the story itself a simple thing. Surrounded by family,
friends and potential lovers, young Will gives in to the forces of Mammon. But
what profits it a man to gain the whole world (by riding a stock market bubble),
if he loses his soul? Krist presents the story the way he does mainly to drive
home the point that the sacrifice of what are social virtues - family ties,
friendship, love - for selfish interests is pretty much a historical constant.
This is probably true, but it doesn’t leave us with anyone to identify with.
In the end, no one in the book is immune to the lure of easy money except a
security guard who loves to listen to classical music on an old radio. And he
is, after all, a security guard.
The other point made by the double narrative is that the stock market has
always been an irrational beast. (In case we miss this one, Krist has the modern
Will Merrick reading Mackay’s Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the
Madness of Crowds at the conclusion of his adventures.) Again, this is
probably something most people today would consider pretty obvious, especially
after the recent tech meltdown, but Krist is wise not to introduce profound or
original historical arguments into what is an already complicated mix. For all
its side interest as a social-historical commentary, Extravagance is
basically a light-hearted comedy. It is bright, sophisticated entertainment that
captures the energy and movement of a glittering age, then and now.
Notes:
Review first published December 14, 2002.
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