A Review of
Ben Hopkins’s Cathedral
Originally Published on the Online Version of the
Rain Taxi Review of Literature, Summer 2021
Cathedral
Ben Hopkins
Europa Editions, $26
In F for Fake,
his fraudulent documentary about fraudulence in the art world, Orson Welles
pauses in his descent into imposture to hold aloft Chartres Cathedral as
perhaps the one true thing that our culture has created. It will be our legacy,
he posits, and it will “testify to what we had it in us to accomplish.”
Cannily, Welles fails to mention that the Gothic grandeur of Chartres was also
founded upon an epic fraud, its majestic marshalling of spiritual and artistic
and economic and political forces predicated on the absurd pretense that the
pilgrimage site housed the tunic that Mary wore while birthing Jesus.
Encompassing a labyrinth of these kinds of interconnected dreams and
deceptions, screenwriter and filmmaker Ben Hopkins’s monumental debut
novel, Cathedral, constructs an edifice whose design ranges from
the most sublime heights of inspiration to the most degenerate political
depths, with all of them counterbalancing each other and maintaining each
other’s intricate facades.
Hopkins begins the novel
with a bit of Wellesian legerdemain, enticing the reader into believing that
this will be a kind of pilgrimage into artistic and spiritual fulfillment, with
stock characters to root for and expect to develop, and the great trick is that
these initial cliches are as enjoyable as they are blatantly dubious. There’s
the visionary master-builder who’s visited the newly constructed Gothic
cathedrals of medieval France and who’s been given charge of redesigning the
cathedral of Hagenberg, a burgeoning city on the Rhine, in this soaring new
style. Then there’s his callow disciple, who we expect to grow to
self-realization and mastery of his own over the long course of the
building’s bildung. Then there’s the master-builder’s outrageously
idealized muse, an ethereal magician’s daughter whose beauty and purity stretch
the reader’s credulity and patience. Countering these three, there’s the
Bishop’s treasurer, a brilliantly Machiavellian schemer who holds the purse
strings for the cathedral’s construction and who has no problem manufacturing
heretics to squash in order to plunder their loot. In a traditional novel of
this sort, he would be the dark underside of the matter that the author
portrays as important and true, but in Hopkins’s medieval world of realpolitik,
he and his kind are this novel’s true matter.
The nave of Chartres Cathedral |
Rapidly subverting the
agony-and-ecstasy cliches of the artistic Bildungsroman, Hopkins
largely discards the idealistic cathedral theme and plunges the reader into the
most brutally pragmatic political machinations, taking as much time and
interest in teasing out the intricacies of the local clergy, nobles, merchants,
and bureaucrats as he does in explicating the vast Papal and Imperial intrigues
that keep the locals in constant adaptation and evolution. A truly Darwinian
novel, Cathedral never remains static as its denizens build
and rebuild the structures of their lives, both in competition and in symbiosis
with each other. Alliances and friendships arise and fall and rise again in new
forms as they balance and rebalance against all the other forces around them,
the characters’ anthill associations scattering and regathering like a sped-up
version of the incessantly redrawn and renegotiated plans for the cathedral,
which despite everything continues its ascent.
Readers looking for medieval
literature’s cathedral-like summa aesthetics—and
ever-ascending spiritual edge-play—may be disappointed by this novel’s
ultimately ghostless machine. A great Gothic cathedral is like the cosmos, with
its every section and subsection forming itself into an ever-fractaling and
ever-ornate atomic density. Visiting the lacy whorls of Strasbourg cathedral is
like walking up to an enormous thumbprint that becomes more astoundingly
elaborate with each step forward, as if you were gradually descending into an
electron microscope. Hopkins’s novel is nothing like this. His prose isn’t at
all lapidary, but instead rapid and vigorous, and you don’t pause on it in rapt
wonder, but rather get swept along by its force. He has a powerful vocabulary,
but his readers won’t get the easter-egg-hunt joy of searching the dictionary
or internet five times a page to discover the names of clothes and carriage
parts and architectural details that they’ll recognize from medieval paintings,
as they do when reading Victor Hugo’s Notre-Dame de Paris. They
also won’t find themselves immersed in a heady web of Scholastic theology, as
in Henry Adams or Jorge Luis Borges or Umberto Eco. Nor will they encounter a
penetrating exploration of the math that consumes some of the book’s characters,
with the “sacred geometry” that undergirds the great Gothic cathedrals going
completely unmentioned. Hopkins’s master is history, not aesthetics or
metaphysics.
Ben Hopkins |
—David Wiley
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