Abraham Lincoln with his family. Saunders’s book, which takes place over the course of a single evening, is about Lincoln grieving the loss of Willie (standing beside his father), who died aged 11 | Library of Congress
The long wait for a novel from short story genius George Saunders is finally over. And as anyone who knows Saunders’s work would expect, his first novel is a strikingly original production, a divisively odd book bound either to dazzle or alienate readers.
Distinct from the poignant satires he has published in the New Yorker and elsewhere, Lincoln in the Bardo is an extended national ghost story, an erratically funny and piteous séance of grief. The Lincoln of the title is our 16th president; the Bardo is probably far less familiar. That Tibetan concept refers to an intermediate plane between our world and the next, a kind of Buddhist limbo experienced just after death.
The spirit of this story arises from a tragic footnote in American history: During the second year of the Civil War, in February 1862, the Lincolns’ 11-year-old son, Willie, died of typhoid fever. The horror of that loss was compounded by cruel circumstances: encouraged by their son’s doctor, Lincoln declined to cancel a party at the White House, which later gave rise to accusations that the president and his wife were celebrating not only as their country was bleeding, but even as their own child lay dying upstairs.
The Man Booker Prize 2017 winner is an experimental debut about life, death and that which lies in between
But Lincoln in the Bardo is no solemn work of historical fiction. This is a book that confounds our expectations of what a novel should look and sound like. It seems at first a clever clip-job, an extended series of brief quotations from letters, diaries, newspaper articles, personal testimonies and later scholars, each one meticulously attributed. We hear from people who worked for the president, his friends, colleagues and enemies, 19th century biographers and more recent ones such as Doris Kearns Goodwin. Saunders has said he came to see his role as a novelist expanding to include the role of “curator.”
So, is this actually a novel or a script? At first, the conscientious reader struggles to consider these passages as though they comprised a tall stack of individual epigraphs. But quickly, Lincoln in the Bardo teaches us how to read it. The quotations gathered from scores of different voices begin to cohere into a hypnotic conversation that moves with the mysterious undulations of a flock of birds.
This form, though, is not the novel’s only radical element. Stirred heavily into the mix of what Saunders calls “historical nuggets” are the voices of fictional characters, invented witnesses and commentators. And the majority of these are dead people.
Yes.
The lead characters in Lincoln in the Bardo are corpses in Georgetown’s Oak Hill Cemetery, where Willie is laid to rest. From the moment the little body arrives, the shades gather “round and strike up a boisterous conversation that lasts all night.” (The audiobook version released alongside the novel employs a glitzy constellation of 166 stars, including Lena Dunham, Susan Sarandon, David Sedaris and Ben Stiller — arguably the largest cast ever assembled for a single audiobook. A film deal is also reportedly in the works.)
Saunders has said he was inspired by Our Town, but his ghoulish gabfest is nothing like the stock-still pronouncements of Thornton Wilder’s sepia-toned play. Saunders’s ghosts are in full motion, in a fluid state of decay based on the moment of their deaths. In prose that rivals Hollywood special effects, we see, for instance, Roger Bevins III, a gay man who committed suicide and grows “so many extra eyes and noses and hands that his body all but vanished.” The roof over one burial vault is composed of tiny, shrivelled souls, like a coral reef of wraiths. A lieutenant’s corporeal form swells as he roars on about the sexual assaults he committed against his slaves: “Lieutenant Stone’s bodily mass would be swept upwards into an elongated vertical body-coiffe,” Saunders writes. “His body-volume remaining constant, this increase in height would render him quite thin, literally pencil-thin in places.”
As in Georgetown proper, the dearly departed of the Oak Hill Cemetery maintain a huffy propriety and class structure, despite their gory frames. “It is not about wealth,” the Reverend Everly Thomas explains with antique gentility. “It is about comportment. It is about, let us say, ‘being wealthy in spirit’.” But that is a quality in short supply among these graves. As the night wears on, Bevins, Thomas and their companion Hans Vollman — the novel’s leading trio — struggle to maintain order in their chaotic cemetery, arguing and pleading with alcoholics, murderers, victims and all manner of raging, despairing spirits.