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Something Will Happen, You’ll See by Christos Ikonòmou – a trip to a Greek working class neighborhood
Something Will Happen, You’ll See by Christos Ikonòmou (2010) French title: Ça va aller, tu vas voir. Translated from the Greek by Michel Volkovitch.
Something Will Happen, You’ll See by Christos Ikonòmou is our Book Club read for January. It’s a collection of short stories published in 2010 by a young Greek writer. According to the afterword from the French translator, Michel Volkovitch, most of the stories were actually written before 2008 and the subsequent Euro crisis in Greece.
All the stories are set in a blue-collar neighborhood of Athens. The characters are employees, factory workers, dockers or unemployed. They all struggle to survive in a world with a slow economy. Jobs are scarce, several characters have just been laid-off and they don’t have much hope to find something else soon. Even when they work, money is tight because they are in low-paid jobs (one works in an ice factory) and sometimes, their employer doesn’t have enough cash to pay everyone. They come home without pay.
Ikonòmou describes a country whose working class walks on the edge of a financial abyss. Several characters haven’t paid their rent for a few months, others couldn’t afford their mortgage. The ghost of eviction is at their door and steals their sleep. In several stories, the protagonists can’t sleep and invent various stratagems to keep insomnia at bay or survive the night. We all know how a small worry can become a huge issue after nightfall. They smoke, they stay on the stairs outside their building to monitor the street, they tell each other stories. A man talks to his spouse all night to lull her into sleep.
We see people who can’t afford food. We see a country where its senior citizens spend the night on the pavement in front of the community clinic because they want to be the first in the waiting line when the clinic opens the next day. A woman dies in the hospital because the person who brought her to the ER didn’t know her name and they couldn’t check whether she had insurance.
All the stories are bleak, the country seems to be about to crumble and indeed, it did a few years after Ikonòmou wrote these stories. Basic public services like drinkable tap water are not a sure thing.
We see a country with deep differences between the rich and the poor and no security net, which is common for a US reader but shocking for a European reader.
All the stories are bleak because of the characters’ circumstances but they are lit from inside by people’s love for each other. Spouses stay close, comfort and love each other. Friends take care of friends. Families try to help with small jobs or loans. The times are hard but the family unit stays strong and close-knit.
The people we meet here are breathless, holding their breath for what is yet to come or trying to catch their breath after another fortnight without wages. Their fear of tomorrow suffocates them. Some are hungry. A lot are nostalgic of the past. Most of them underwent forced changes in their lives: they had to move out of their house, to change of neighborhood, to accept a job only to make ends meet and pay the bills.
Men are raised to provide for their families and can’t anymore. They feel useless and it chips at their identity and maybe even at their sense of virility.
People have to survive and make the most of what they have. They live in the Piraeus neighborhood and Ikonòmou takes us there, in its street and by the sea.
Ikonòmou’s prose reflects his characters’ struggles. He alternates long and short paragraphs. Some sentences repeat themselves in a story, like thoughts are played on a loop in someone’s mind when they are sleepless with worry. The rhythm of the sentences mirrors the characters’ breathlessness, the way their financial worries choke them. Their hardship puts their sanity at stake. Ikonòmou shows a people beaten down by capitalism and a poor management of the country. They are bruised and battered by life but there’s still hope in love, friendship and solidarity.
Ikonòmou gives us a vivid picture of today’s Greece and I do recommend this collection of short stories.
Currently reading
- Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
- The Pen and the Brush: How Passion for Art Shaped Nineteenth-Century French Novels by Anka Muhlstein
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Upcoming billets:
- Snow Country by Kawabata
- La valse des arbres et du ciel by Jean-Michel Guenassia
Other billets
- Three crimes is a charm : England in the Middle Ages, high tech in Virginia and a haunting past in Finland. January 29, 2023
- The Black Dahlia by James Ellroy – great literature. January 21, 2023
- Last Man in Tower by Aravind Adiga – the dark sides of real-estate in Mumbai and of human behaviour. January 15, 2023
- The Hot Spot by Charles Williams – it’s a question of hooks January 8, 2023
- My 2022 reading highlights : another excellent year with books January 1, 2023
- Happy New Year 2023! Bonne année et bonne santé! January 1, 2023
- The Bottle Factory Outing by Beryl Baindridge – it puts the reader on edge December 28, 2022
- Joyeux Noël from France! December 25, 2022
- Five crime fiction books, all different December 21, 2022
- Literary Escapade: the Proust Exhibition at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris. December 18, 2022
My little boxes
Les copines d’abord are currently reading
- January: La valse des arbres et du ciel by Jean-Michel Guenassia
- February: Grey Bees by Andrei Kurkov
Other readalongs:
- January : Mistress of the Art of Death by Ariana Franklin
- February: Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann
Join us if you want to.
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