Once a Bad Girl,
Always a Bad Girl
Mario Vargas Llosa is known for weaving
stories like threads into an ultimate, seamless tapestry that far exceeds its
individual components. He is also an enigma in that he gained acclaim as a
writer while in his birthplace of Peru, became involved in politics
there, grew disenchanted and then renounced his Peruvian citizenship. He moved
to Spain.
But he continues to write about Peru.
I’ve just finished reading his novel, “Bad
Girl”, a novel where Llosa unequivocally answers the age-old question, “Which
is the weaker sex?” Meet Ricardo Somocurcio, a 1950s Peruvian teenager living in
Lima. He falls
pathetically in love with “Lily”, who’s just arrived from Chile, with her
exotic manner and colloquialisms. She allows Ricardo to hold her hand and no
more, calling him “the good boy”. When her Chilean history is exposed as false,
she vanishes.
And so she continues to disappear and
reappear throughout this poor dog’s life, tugging on his leash the entire time.
Whether she is Madame Arnoux, wife of a UNESCO official, or Kuriko, mistress of
a sinister Japanese businessman, she is constantly reinventing herself with a
smokescreen of lies, designed specifically for her own gains. She snaps her
fingers and he comes running, even if it is half-way around the globe, to
repeat “that sentimental crap” that amuses her so. Although their sexual forays
revolve around what pleases her, she somehow remains detached the entire time,
paying little or no attention to his desires. More than not having a
conscience, she is truthful and proud of pursuing goals that exclusively
revolve around her gains, be they physical, financial, or an elevation in her
social status.
As with all of Llosa’s novels, we receive
an historical backdrop, ranging from Paris and London in the Sixties, Tokyo
in the Eighties and Spain
in the Nineties. Because Ricardo stays in touch with his uncle in Lima, the author is also
allowed to expound on the cultural and political climate and changes in his
“former” country throughout nearly half a century.
Just as Everyman is a morality play that
attempts to define human nature, Llosa seems to be writing his version of Everywoman,
with a clear message of who he thinks is really the stronger sex. Randle McMurphy
explained it best in “One Flew Over the Cookoo’s Nest” when he told the ward
psychiatrist, “You know how it is, Doc. When they put that thing in your face,
ain’t a man alive who will turn it down”.
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