
Title : The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Writer : Milan Kundera
Year : 1984
Language : Czech (translated into English)
I’ve been so interested in this novel since the first time my friend recommended it to me like months ago. After getting it in the form of e-book and reading it, I feel like I’m so amazed by the story and the philosophy put forward by the writer.
The writer puts himself as the third party of the storyline who is out of the text. He tells the readers about the characters inside who are connected to each other with love, ego, coincidence (the writer calls it fortuity), and complex personalities. The writer begins the story of those people with a bright philosophy which is the main idea of the whole text, the unbearable lightness of being.
Coincidence encounters Tomas and Tereza, who then live together and marry. They know that they love each other, but they never realize how strong or how much it is. They are too busy with their ego and their pasts which drive them to believe that what happens to them is just some kind of nonsense. Tomas ego brings him to Sabina, his long-term mistress who can understand his short-term need of sex, but it doesn’t take so long until Sabina meets Franz who falls in love with her. Franz thinks that he really loves Sabina that he divorces his wife. However, Sabina decides to leave him because he can’t fulfill her ego to remain in secret with him. In desperation, Franz meets a big-glassed girl, one of his students in the university. They have such kind of affairs which is quite enjoyable. Franz never knows that the girl is the only one who can make him happy and feel consolable until he goes to Cambodia in a vain search of Sabina’s shadow. Sadly, at the end of his life, the only one who is beside him is his ex-wife.
All the main characters here die at the end, Tomas, Tereza, Sabina, and Franz. But, what’s the point of the unbearable lightness of being? As far as I understand through my living brain, it’s actually about the positive side of human beings. Once we’re weighed down by something (or anything), we’ll be brought to the negative side of life in which everything seems so hard to do, so hard to say, so hard to think, etc. On the other side, when we’re in the lightness of ourselves, we’ll feel that life is so beautiful and easy without thinking about anything ensued in the world, without worrying even about the biggest thing in front of us.
The most interesting thing in this novel for me is the history the Czech Republic inserted by the writer. Since I’m so interested in East European history, it’s so nice for me to read a blended text of fiction and history in this book!
Rating: 3.5