(8/9/2001)
Tristan Luke
No one seems to be getting it. This book is marvelous. Possibly the best yet, though it needed Silence to build on. Harris took the character he's been developing since Red Dragon and deepened him, humanized him. His most meaningful qualities from the beginning were the human ones, so the character is the better for it. The most meaningful lines in these pieces, the essence of what the author has to teach us, comes from Lechter ("taste is not kind, and being smart spoils a lot of things"). Harris speaks to us, I believe, through Lechter more than any other. You may find that uncomfortable since so uninhibited by our ideas of right and wrong, but it simply is. The reviews posted herein seem to be disturbed at the changes in Starling and the subsequent coupling of she and her mentor Hannibal. People have lived with the world created in Silence for ten years, and, true to form, seem very uncomfortable with change. A review on this website described the "old" Clarice as "awesome!" and chided the new. Perhaps the author of that review would be more secure reading Wonder Woman. The original starling was a naive young woman. How Wonderful to see Harris acknowledge the invasiveness and corruption that is federal law enforcement in this country through her. If one really respects her in Silence then certainly it is clear that her fall from grace with the FBI was inevitable as she is a woman of integrity. Perhaps Harris's fall from your graces was also, and for the same reason. Hannibal has always been Harris's true hero in my opinion. He speaks to us the most through Lechter. The man who truly teaches us how to think and to live. No, I don't advocate killing people and eating them. I don't believe Harris does either. That's fantastic, an indulgence of the revenge fantasies we all entertain. Harris obviously has the sensitivity of an artist which makes him doubly offended at some detestable man who, say, butchers deer indiscriminately. How lovely to imagine sticking him with an arrow, and eating him! Lechter's homicidal eccentricies are an expression of a strong sense of justice in my opinion. The novel Hannibal has made that all the more clear His lack of inhibibition notwithstanding he is truly empathetic . It seems many wanted to continue to see him as some kind of almost supernatural figure. Fearful, and easier to dismiss. They were comfortable with that. It seems many are disillusioned with Lechter now, many claiming he's lost his edge. Wrong. Not so. By endowing him with a kind of mortality Harris has made the character far more thrilling and three dimensional. I thought the whole piece including the romantic climax at the end was an absolutely brilliant and bold gesture from the author. The perfect resolution.
Thank you for your time.