Zorba The Greek

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Books: Life Force Time.

com
Monday, Apr. 20, 1953
ZORBA THE GREEK (311 pp.)—NIkos Kazanfzakis—Simon & Schuster ($3.50).

Nikos Kazantzakis, 68, was runner-up for the Nobel Prize in Literature last year.* Born
in Crete and author of some 30 novels, plays and books on philosophy, Kazantzakis is
one of Greece's leading men of letters. When Zorba the Greek appeared in Britain seven
months ago, British critics tossed cheers around like "well dones" at a cricket match. Said
the Times Literary Supplement: "Mr. Kazantzakis . . . has created in Zorba one of the
great characters of modern fiction." Said the New Statesman & Nation: "A minor
classic." But the British still found it a bit puzzling. Observed the Observer's reviewer: "I
enjoyed it so much that I wish I could define it; not being Greek, I have no word for it."

Zorba the Greek resists easy definition. Like the Odyssey and Don Quixote, it is nearly plotless but never
pointless. Like the heroes of those fictional sagas, its hero, Alexis Zorba, casts a larger shadow on the world
than the world does on him.

Bouncing Grandpa. Who is Zorba? He is Everyman with a Greek accent. He is Sinbad crossed with Sancho
Panza. He is the Shavian Life Force poured into a long, lean, fierce-mustached Greek whose 65 years in the
Mediterranean sun have neither dimmed his hawk eyes nor dulled his pagan laughter. From the moment
when he pounces on the nameless narrator of the story with an abrupt offer—"Taking me with you? ... I can
make soups you've never heard or thought of"—Zorba makes the heroes of most modern fiction seem like
dyspeptic ghosts.

The narrator, who becomes Zorba's boss and foil, is a 35-year-old scholar, tired, bookworm-eaten, a 20th
century Hamlet. Sensing that he ought to get away from his study for a while, he eases off on his definitive
life of Buddha and tries to run a lignite mine. Zorba, the would-be cook, becomes his chief engineer. And
through Zorba, the scholar learns to see the world fresh each day.

As he kicks a stone "downhill, Zorba turns to the scholar and asks: "Boss, did you see that? On slopes,
stones come to life again." Sometimes he is a mythmaker: "My grandfather had a white beard and used to
wear rubber shoes. One day he leapt from the roof of our house, but when his feet touched the ground he
bounced like a ball and bounced up higher than the house, and went higher and higher still till he
disappeared in the clouds. That is how my grandfather died."

"Night Is a Woman." When Zorba is too full for words, he dances in wild leaps like a trout or unslings his
santuri (a kind of dulcimer) and plucks from it the haunting laments of the Levant. Zorba is a great unbeliever
in everything but the abundant life. Pockmarked with bullet scars, he has no faith in war. Full of reverent awe
be fore the universe, he cannot stomach organized religion or priests ("[They] even fleece their fleas"). Child
of instinct, Zorba defines the hours as if he had created them. "Daytime is a man," he explains, "night is a
woman."

On many a night Zorba heads for the home of Bouboulina, a blowzy, scow-bottomed "old siren," once the
darling of admirals and of fleets. When his boss refuses to make love to a young, appetizing widow, Zorba
warns him: "Every man has his folly, but the greatest folly of all ... is not to have one." The boss takes
Zorba's advice to heart and the young widow to bed. Meanwhile, Zorba never misses a chance to ask such
puzzlers as: What is a woman? Who made the stars? Why do men die? The boss's widow is murdered by
puritanical peasants, Bouboulina dies, the lignite mine fails—and all these calamities lead to the heart of
Zorba's message: live as if one were to die the next minute.

Zorba is too full of juice to die onstage. Author Kazantzakis tries to kill him off in a letter. His last words: "I've
done heaps and heaps of things in my life, but I still did not do enough . . . Good night!" But Author
Kazantzakis reckons without his own talent. He has created Zorba, but he cannot kill him.
*The winner: France's null Mauriac (TIME, Nov. 17).
Read more:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,822801-2,00.html#ixzz16O7xbkfs

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