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"Sleep" focuses on the moral degradation and consequent alienation of its protagonist, Oskar Voxlauer. Debased and scarred by his front-line experiences during World War I, Oskar emerges as a quintessential representative of blighted youth. Shorn of frivolous idealism, Oskar nevertheless tries to reconcile his repressed hope for a coherent life with his silent resignation to the cruelty of the world and the absolute irrelevance of politics. Indeed, Oskar's passivity and unwillingess to accept personal risk for ideas (even for defending one of his few friends, a Jewish tavern-keeper, from the facist onslaught) is part naturalist impotence, part stoic refusal to acknowledge pain and part selfish desire to lead an invisible life. Regardless of Oskar's motivation to avoid direct confrontation with life, he disdains any political movement as unworthy of commitment. After all, his own life's experiences, as a soldier for a purportedly noble cause, as a companion to a Ukranian woman under the iron grip of Bolshevik excesses or as a irrelevant gamekeeper to his Jewish friend's landholdings, have proven the worthlessness, even the danger, of adherence to ideas.
Unfortunately, the banality of evil as the cause of facism is not groundbreaking philosophy. Wray's single greatest failure is to shed any new light on this perception. The people who surround Oskar never receive adequate depth. Even his Nazi adversary, Kurt, fails to arouse much disgust. Ironically, Mr. Wray, in writing about disaffection, disillusion and lack of connection, composes his work in much the same vein. If that weren't disappointment enought, his publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, permits him to use an absolutely arcane method of dialogue, one which requires the reader to not only wonder who is speaking, but when and if the spoken word has begun or concluded. The simple and proper usage of quotation marks would have made "Sleep" more comprehensible. Equally confusing is Wray's inexplicable replacement of Oskar's valuable first-person flashbacks mid-way through the novel with those of the Nazi Kurt. What is a successful and thoughtful inclusion becomes an irrelevancy.
"The Right Hand of Sleep" proves that works about Nazism, Jew hatred, and the rise of facism are not easy compositions. Despite the rich possibilities of dealing with the horrific loss of dignity and conscience of raw recruits in World War I, the novel never maintains dramatic tension or serious character development. Consequently, this well-intentioned work falls far short of its hopes.
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