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Book Review of The Tin Drum

The Tin Drum
tmulcahy avatar reviewed on + 38 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1


Well, I've certainly never read anything like this before! It is such a strange tale. Shakespeare, the English bard, wrote that life is, "a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."
So it is with this novel tale. The narrator is himself lost in his head, where he contemplates his life and those of the people around him. While he contemplates, he speaks of himself in third person singular, yet he also speaks to himself. It is jarring, at first, because it takes a long time, both to understand what is going on, and to sort out what is real and what is not. This is a tale full of sound and fury, indeed. There is war. The narrator is Polish, during the invasion and occupation by Germany. That alone is enough to shatter minds. But our narrator and main character, Oskar, was already living in another world. Despite that, he manages to survive where so many die. He is the character who plays the titular drum, a drum he plays to the beat of life around him, for that is how he deals with his own mental incongruity, his place in life, and war. And, although he is intelligent and well read, he pretends to have a mental age of three, which allows him to do things most people would not be allowed to do. He knows well that he is faking, but so do we all. He rarely speaks, and never of his true thoughts. He allows his drum to speak for him. As he is also the narrator, he translates his drumming for us. Would that I had his genius to understand the insensate drumming in my own head.