Saramago's narration feels modern and ancient at  once.
  The philosopher Bernard Williams once wrote a paper, "The  Makropulos Case," in which he argued that eternal life would be so tedious that  no one could bear it. According to Williams, the constancy that defines an  eternal self would entail an infinite desert of repetitive experiences, lest the  self be so altered as to be emptied of any definition. That is why, in the play  by Karel Capek from which Williams takes his title, the  three-hundred-and-forty-two-year-old Elina Makropulos, having imbibed the elixir  of eternal life since the age of forty-two, chooses to discontinue the regimen,  and dies. Life needs death to constitute its meaning; death is the black period  that orders the syntax of life.
 In "Death with Interruptions" (translated, from the Portuguese, by Margaret  Jull Costa; Harcourt; $24), José Saramago, a writer whose long, uninterrupted  sentences are relative strangers to the period, has produced a novel that  functions as a thought experiment in the Capek/Williams field. (His novel makes  no explicit allusion to either.) At midnight on one New Year's Eve, in a  nameless, landlocked country of about ten million inhabitants, Death declares a  truce with humanity, a self-interruption, so as to give people an idea of what  it would be like to live forever. At first, of course, people are  euphoric:
Having lived, until those days  of confusion, in what they had imagined to be the best of all possible and  probable worlds, they were discovering, with delight, that the best, the  absolute best, was happening right now, right there, at the door of their house,  a unique and marvelous life without the daily fear of parca's creaking scissors,  immortality in the land that gave us our being, safe from any metaphysical  awkwardnesses and free to everyone, with no sealed orders to open at the hour of  our death, announcing at that crossroads where dear companions in this vale of  tears known as earth were forced to part and set off for their different  destinations in the next world, you to paradise, you to purgatory, you down to  hell. 
 But "awkwardnesses"—metaphysical, political, pragmatic—soon reënter. The  Catholic Church is the first institution to sense a danger. The Cardinal phones  the Prime Minister to point out that "without death there is no resurrection,  and without resurrection there is no church." For the Cardinal, life without  death is tantamount to God's willing His own demise. Life without death  abolishes the soul. A panel of philosophers and clergymen is convened, and both  sides agree that religion needs death "as much as we need bread to eat." Life  without death is like life without God, one churchman says, because "if human  beings do not die then everything will be permissible." (This is a version of  the Dostoyevskian fear that without God everything is permitted.) One  philosopher, sounding like the slyly secular Saramago, suggests that since death  was "clearly the only agricultural implement god possessed with which to plough  the roads that would lead to his kingdom, the obvious, irrefutable conclusion is  that the entire holy story ends, inevitably, in a cul-de-sac."
 A country in which no one dies inevitably becomes a Malthusian zoo. Old  people who were on the brink of death on New Year's Eve simply remain on the  brink, frozen in their desuetude. Undertakers, those selling life-insurance  policies, and the directors of hospitals and old people's homes are variously  threatened with unemployment or overactivity. The state will soon be unable to  pay for the maintenance of its citizens. And although this sudden utopia may now  be the very best of all possible worlds, humans can always be relied upon to  wreck utopias. Families with aged, infirm members realize that they need death  to save them from an eternity of bedside care. Since death has not been  suspended in neighboring countries, the obvious solution is to transport ailing  Grandpa over the border, where death will do its business. A Mafia-like  organization takes over these death runs, an operation secretly connived in by  the government, since no state can afford infinite expansion. As the Prime  Minister warns the King, "If we don't start dying again, we have no future."  
 "Death with Interruptions" is a small-ish, toothy addition to a great  novelist's work. It efficiently mobilizes its hypothetical test case, and  quickly generates a set of sharp theological and metaphysical questions about  the desirability of utopia, the possibility of Heaven, and the true foundation  of religion. Recent work by Saramago has tended toward the sparely allegorical,  with nameless, universal actors in place of individual characters. These books  would be baldly essayistic were it not for Saramago's extraordinary sentences,  and the subtlety of their narration. In the absence of vivid fictional people,  Saramago's sentences, in which a narrator or group of narrators is always  strongly present, constitute a kind of community of their own: they are highly  peopled. 
 Some of the more significant writing of the past thirty years has taken  delight in the long, lawless sentence—think of Thomas Bernhard, Bohumil Hrabal,  W. G. Sebald, Roberto Bolaño—but no one sounds quite like Saramago. He has an  ability to seem wise and ignorant at the same time, as if he were not really  narrating the stories he narrates. Often, he uses what could be called  unidentified free indirect style—his fictions sound as if they were being told  not by an author but by, say, a group of wise and somewhat garrulous old men,  sitting down by the harbor in Lisbon, having a smoke, one of whom is the writer  himself. This community is fond of truisms, proverbs, clichés. "It is said that  one cannot have everything in life," the narrator of "Death with Interruptions"  tells us, and he adds, "That's how life is, what it gives with one hand one day,  it takes away with the other." The narrator of a previous novel announces,  "Fame, alas, is a breeze that both comes and goes, it is a weather vane that  turns both to the north and to the south." And elsewhere: "It has been said,  from classical times onwards, that fortune favours the bold." These platitudes  are neither quite validated nor disowned; they are ironized by the obvious gap  that exists between the knowing postmodern Nobel laureate writing his fictions  and the person or persons seemingly narrating those fictions. 
 The run-on style is an important part of that irony: the breathlessness lends  a sense of chatty unruliness, as if different people were breaking in to have  their say. A single long sentence often seems to have been written by different  voices, and the unpunctuated welter allows for sly twists and turns, as when a  cliché catches itself in the act of being a cliché, and atones: "Such a man,  apart from rare exceptions which have no place in this story, will never be more  than a poor devil, it's odd that we always say poor devil and never poor god."  In the sentence about the people's early euphoria when death is suspended,  notice that a poetic image for the Grim Reaper ("parca's creaking scissors")  gives way to a more ordinary image ("sealed orders to open at the hour of our  death") and then to a frank, weary cliché ("this vale of tears known as earth"),  and that this progression allows for the simultaneous presence of the writer,  who has his images, and the people he is writing about, who have theirs. And a  magical exchange occurs: by the time we reach the end of that sentence about  death, the fancy mythical image seems somehow much less powerful than the most  banal image. 
 Saramago's narration thus feels modern and ancient at once. The writer is  self-consciously at work, constantly drawing attention to the narration, yet the  narration seems to dip easily into a universal knapsack, to flourish its bony,  wise truths. It is this cunningly modest approach that allows Saramago to write  his speculative and fantastical fictions as if they were the most likely events,  and to give them a solid literalism—an unnamed country gripped by an epidemic of  blindness, the Iberian Peninsula broken off from the European continent and  turned into a huge floating island, a man walking the streets of Lisbon who is  both undeniably real and a literary ghost. His work is in some ways closer to  that of an ancient satirist like Lucian, whose sketches imagine people  travelling to the moon or to Hades, or the gods squabbling among themselves,  than to that of any contemporary novelist. When, in Saramago's new novel, Death  finally decides to end her "interruption" and let mortality have its way again,  the Church, which had been praying for such a restoration, is pleased: "The  prayers had taken nearly eight months to reach heaven, but when you think that  it takes six months to reach the planet mars, then heaven, as you can imagine,  must be much farther off, three thousand million light-years from earth, in  round numbers." That prodding voice, with its anti-theological bias, is  reminiscent not only of Lucian but of the Lucianic Leon Battista Alberti, whose  fifteenth-century satire "Momus" imagines the chaos that might ensue in Heaven  if everyone asked God to answer a prayer at the same time.
 Saramago's brief novel provokes similar questions. If eternal life could not  possibly work on earth, why is heavenly eternity so ardently to be desired?  Perhaps it is because we desperately hope that Heaven will be the same as earth  but also very different, given that man ruins Edens. For Saramago, as for  Bernard Williams, the problem is not just that humans are natural-born  utopia-killers; it is that eternity itself —life forever uninterrupted—seems  unbearable. And Saramago does more than tease Dostoyevsky in this novel. For if  the disappearance of God means that "everything is permitted," and the  disappearance of death means that everything is permitted, then, by the  novelist's tacit catechism, God must be death, and death must be God. No wonder  religion needs death: death is the one God we can believe in. 
 Saramago is drawn to these Gnostic inversions. In perhaps his  greatest book, "The Gospel According to Jesus Christ" (1991), the novelist,  characteristically, tells the story of Jesus' life and death without changing  any of the famous facts, while at the same time turning the theology of the  Gospels upside down. One day, Jesus' father, Joseph, overhears some soldiers  talking about Herod's orders to kill all children under the age of three. He  races home to hide his wife and newborn son, but neglects to warn the rest of  the village. For this sin, an angel later tells Mary, Joseph will suffer. And  what about my son? she asks the angel. "The angel said, A father's guilt falls  on the heads of his children, and the shadow of Joseph's guilt already darkens  his son's brow," Saramago writes. In time, Joseph is captured by Roman soldiers  putting down a rebellion and is crucified along with thirty-nine other Jews.  Jesus, in turn, becomes obsessed with a sense of inherited guilt, and with the  idea, as he puts it, that "Father murdered the children of Bethlehem." On the  strength of a lightning strike from the storyteller's blasphemous finger,  Saramago turns a familiar theological conundrum—the "good" God who brings Jesus  into the world is also the "bad" God who permits the massacre of innocent  babies—into a deep crux. Suddenly, Jesus is cursed by a form of original sin,  and his sacrifice on the Cross becomes not an expiation of man's sin but an  inheriting of it: he is following in his father's footsteps, cursed by his  patrilineage. "God does not forgive the sins He makes us commit" is how the  narrator puts it. On the Cross, hearing his heavenly Father declaim from the  clouds, "This is My beloved son, in whom I am well pleased," Jesus bursts out,  "Men, forgive Him, for He knows not what He has done." It is the novel's final,  and most wicked, inversion.
 "The Gospel According to Jesus Christ" was enormously controversial in  Catholic Portugal (Jesus sleeps, and lives, with Mary Magdalene), but it is the  most pious of blasphemous books. Behind its savage ironies, Saramago seems to do  no more than take the Incarnation as seriously as possible: if Jesus was born a  man, he seems to say, then he inherits everything man is prey to, including sin,  which comes from God anyway. The stakes are very high, but the authorial  temperament is mild, quizzical, seasoned. And what if God were the Devil? the  author seems to ask, gently peering at us through his dark-rimmed,  television-size spectacles. He is in some ways the least fantastical of  novelists, because he so relentlessly persists with his fictional hypotheses,  following them through to large, humane conclusions. His new novel gradually  becomes less and less conceptual, and increasingly affecting, without ever  becoming in any conventional sense realistic, or even plausible.
 He pictures Death for us as an embodied female absence, a skeleton in a sheet  who lives in a frigid, subterranean room, accompanied only by her much used  scythe. (He also denies her a capital "D.") After her seven months of  self-interruption, this gloomy goddess sends a letter to a TV station,  announcing that she is ending her experiment, because humans have acted so  "deplorably." People will die again at the old rate, which is about three  hundred a day. Under the new rules, those citizens whose time is up will be  given one week's notice: each will receive a violet-colored letter, a notice of  termination from Death herself. This apparently humane concession—the nominee  now has time to take his leave, get his estate in order, and so on—is of course  unbearably cruel, since most people would rather be surprised by death than  condemned to it.
 One such nominee, a fifty-year-old cellist, bewilders the goddess. Death has  selected him for termination, but the violet-colored letter is returned to  sender, again and again; the cellist seems to refuse his orders. In a series of  unexpectedly beautiful scenes, Death, much perplexed, insinuates herself into  the cellist's apartment, and sits quietly watching him while he sleeps; she sees  how he gets up in the night to get a glass of water and let the dog out, sees a  Bach suite (No. 6) on his chair, and so on. It is the cellist's time to die—"the  time prescribed for them at birth has expired"—but Death seems to have no power  over this "perfectly ordinary man, neither ugly nor handsome." In an earlier  novel to which the new one is an obvious companion, "All the Names," a modest  clerk similarly becomes obsessed with a perfectly ordinary citizen, a woman  whose name on a birth certificate catches him by surprise one evening at his  workplace, the Central Registry of Births, Marriages, and Deaths. As in the new  novel, the clerk selects one citizen from the ranks of the ever-dying and  living, and gradually, without ever naming her (the cellist likewise goes  unnamed), endows her with metaphysical particularity.
 This is what the novelist does, too: he takes a name, a character, a person,  and saves her from wordless oblivion through the irradiation of words. But he  can also kill her whenever he pleases: every novel is "interrupted" simply  because it ends. We speak of omniscient authorial power because writers have the  power of life and death over their "names." The clerk in "All the Names," who is  known only as Senhor José, shares his first name with the novelist. In his new  novel, Saramago again asks us to reflect on the storyteller's godlike powers.  When Death's letter is published in the newspapers, a grammarian is consulted,  and notes its "chaotic syntax, the absence of full stops, the complete lack of  very necessary parentheses, the obsessive elimination of paragraphs, the random  use of commas. . . ." Death writes like José Saramago. As Death watches the  cellist drink, Saramago writes that she looked at the water "and made an effort  to imagine what it must be like to feel thirsty, but failed." The reader  wonders: if Death cannot imagine thirst, can she possibly imagine death? And can  the novelist? One answer that Saramago offers—it is the wide, universal, antique  truth toward which his complex fiction has been travelling—is that if we neither  recoil from death nor religiously long to vanquish it, but, rather, accept the  old actuality that in the midst of life we are in death, then death surrounds us  like life, and to imagine death is really to imagine life. ♦