![]() ![]() The Double hums with imaginative energy, and intrigues both by its central mystery and by its author’s playful habit of assisting the reader (“Tertuliano’s. Through the breathless hurtling lengthy paragraphs that are Saramago’s trademark, we watch the timid academic unravel as he contacts Claro (through a letter Tertuliano signs with the name of his sometime sweetheart Maria de Paz), meets the actor at the latter’s home (in a very amusing scene, during which the two physically identical men even examine each other naked), and-in a melodramatic climax reminiscent of “Santa Clara’s” movies-undergoes a climactic exchange of identities, which Saramago caps with a bold surprise ending. Obsessed by the coincidence, Afonso scans more and more films, identifies his “double” as journeyman actor Daniel Santa Clara, and learns the performer’s real name: Antonio Claro. An unidentified supporting actor in the film is the image of Tertuliano himself, five years earlier. ![]() Protagonist Tertuliano Maximo Afonso is a divorced high-school history teacher whose life is irretrievably altered when he watches a videotaped romantic comedy recommended to him by a colleague. ![]() The theme of shared identity, treated by such masters as Poe, Stevenson, and Dostoevsky, animates the 1998 Nobel winner’s latest. ![]()
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