Finished
Pirate Freedom last night. This was my first time to read Gene Wolfe. I happened to find a pristine hardcover for $2 at 2nd and Charles.
As I understand it... Wolfe often (maybe always) writes in the first person so that the reader only ever gets the protagonists understanding of reality. I'm going to get right to the nitty gritty. I'm not going to get into Anglo-Spanish relations in the late 17th century, the history of Cuba, the ethics of piracy, or the measure of love.
Ostensibly,
Pirate Freedom is about a Roman Catholic priest writing his memoir. Over the course of the story, I began to wonder if it was a memoir or a delusional fantasy. There is no doubt that Father Chris believes his memoir, but I don't. I think he imagined the entire thing to find a non-destructive outlet for his anger, his sense of adventure, his varied intellectual pursuits, and his sexuality. I think the adventure, the passion, and the struggle allowed him to feel alive, but the lust for gold justified his life as a priest. A penance. A terrible past that forced him into the clergy instead of a poor career choice by a scared young man.
I thought Wolfe's style of storytelling was great. Father Chris often used contemporary terms to tell a three hundred year old story in the first person. It constantly reminded me that I was in Chris' memory and not in Chris' present.
I don't know all the correct literature terms to properly label the people, places and objects in the story. Was the
Castillo Blanco hope? Did Jaime represent despair, sin, judgment? Was Burt a surrogate father or Chris' real father reimagined?
And then there's fact that I don't speak Spanish... What does Novia mean? Does it mean "new"? Nuevo. She certainly started a new chapter of Captain Chris' life. Does it mean "no way"? No via. The relationship would not survive. I don't speak French either.... Does Lesage mean "the wise one"? Lesage certainly seemed to be the one to survive and thrive. Was he wiser than Chris to not have a conscience?
I could argue about Chris' orthodoxy. Does he really know the Creator or is he just fooling himself? That is a question we should all face...
Despite the intensity of Chris' belief or his lack of faith... Wolfe had two pearls of wisdom. I'm going to paraphrase them (or get them slightly wrong)...
- If you want to feel better, make someone else feel better. That will do wonders for you.
- Real forgiveness requires real confession. Forgiveness without confession is just another form of permission.