Jeremy's Destiny example essay topic
Jeremy's destiny is therefore to be in some way determined by the influence of the Zulu chieftain Shaka, the Indian erotic drama of Shakuntala, a Ukrainian coal-mining town called Shaktyorsk, and good old Shakespeare. What follows is part romance, part murder-mystery, and part satire - basically, a wandering sequence of events featuring a grown-up Jeremy as a lecturer at a university in Montreal, supported by a cast of richly eccentric characters with names such as Ralph Stilton and Drew B ludd (of the band High Mass of the Funky Ass). The increasingly flaky Uncle Gerard makes a number of fleeting appearances. Jeremy falls in love with - or believes he is destined to fall in love with - a mysterious woman, a Czech-Indian-Irish-Canadian, with hairy armpits, and "a night-black thunder-cloud that hung over her eyes". The woman is called Milena and is a kind of urban post-feminist 21st-century multi-cultural Dark Lady of the Sonnets. She has secrets.
There's hardly any breathing space in the book at all, it's so full of quirks and quick-turns, wit and erudition. Entertaining and exhausting, it's reminiscent of the early John Irving. When Jeremy passes by a tramp o the street, for example, even the tramp can't let him go without claiming to be a "Prophet from Pluto and a follower of Kull a, the Sumerian god of bricks". Milena describes Jeremy as "a die-hard delusion ist, a hopeless fantasist" - and there are many other similarities, one suspects, between the author and his hapless hero... Ian Sansom is the author of The Truth About Babies (Granta).