Nim and Solarin

(NOTE: page numbers refer to the hardcover edition)

Nim and Solarin are two of my favorite characters in The Eight, for a number of reasons. They're intelligent and mysterious, and great chess players--I'm not good at chess, but I really admire people who are--and they both love Catherine (more of this later). Of course, the fact that they're brothers, and descendants of Mireille, is one of the best surprises in the book. In this article, I will discuss several things that interest me about Nim and Solarin.

What did I think of Nim and Solarin at first?

Nim was one of my favorite characters, from the very beginning. The description of his house is one of my favorite parts of The Eight. I especially like the enormous entrance hall and the kitchen, with the huge ovens and stone fireplace. Then there's the fact that he's such a great cook; it's interesting that Nim cooks for Catherine, while Catherine doesn't seem to have any interest in cooking.

I also like Nim's elusiveness; only a few people even know his phone number. One of my favorite scenes is the one where Catherine tries to call him, and the number turns out to be that of a convent (p. 118). Of course, this is also a little reminder of Mireille's story. Could it be a clue that Nim is a descendant of Mireille? That's possible. Nim changes his phone number all the time, too, and whenever Catherine tries to call him, she speaks to someone who has never even heard of him, or pretends not to have heard of him.

Also, Nim is a great chess player. After I read The Eight for the first time, I forgot about this; it's easy to remember Solarin as the great chess player in The Eight, with Nim, it's not emphasized quite so much. But Nim had played chess with Bobby Fischer and, although he lost, he still played well against Fischer (p. 117). In fact, the reason why Catherine tries to find him at the beginning is that he knows so much about chess: "He had committed to memory all of the world championship games in history. He was a walking biographical encyclopedia of the lives of the grand masters. He could regale you for hours with stories of the history of chess..." (p. 117). Later on in The Eight, you think of Nim more as Catherine's mentor, an expert on computers and coded messages, and a scientist, but, like his brother Solarin, he is also a chess master.

Although I liked Nim from the very beginning, I didn't know what to think of Solarin at first. In fact, I even thought he might be an enemy; Katherine Neville does a very good job of making the reader think this. Why did I think that Solarin might be an enemy? First of all, for a very stupid reason: because he's Russian. At the time this was taking place, and even at the time The Eight was written (1988), the Russians were always the villains in thrillers. Since I was only at the beginning of the book, I didn't quite realize how different The Eight was going to be from the typical thriller. And, as it turns out, the KGB man in The Eight is evil.

Also, Lily takes an instant dislike to Solarin at the chess tournament: "Bastard," Lily hissed. "He's trying to win Fiske's confidence, gain the upper hand before the game even begins." (p. 81). And, a little later, "I see what you mean when you said [Solarin was] icy." (p. 81). Interestingly, Solarin plays White at the chess tournament; this might have been an indication that he was on the White team in the Game.

Solarin was the last person to see his opponent, Fiske, alive, and so Catherine thinks that he murdered Fiske. Then, after the chess tournament, someone shoots at Lily's car; Catherine and Lily think that it was Solarin (p. 91), and so do we, at this point. It is not until later that we find out it was Hermanold, the chess tournament director.

In the scene at the UN, we find out that Solarin is the mysterious "man on a bicycle" that Catherine has been painting; for some reason, we are led to believe that the "man on a bicycle" is evil, when in fact he is not. Then, of course, comes the discovery of the chauffeur's body at the UN. Before Catherine finds the body, she sees Solarin, who comes to warn her of danger; she notices that he is carrying a gun. Later on, we find out that this was only for protection, but we, and Catherine, did not know this at the time. Also, Catherine assumes, correctly, that Solarin killed the chauffeur. What we don't know is that the chauffeur is evil, and Solarin killed him in self-defense. We think at first that the chauffeur is good, and that Solarin murdered him.

We do not really find out that Solarin is good until he and Catherine get to Algeria and take a walk along the beach; this is when he tells her what really happened with Fiske and the chauffeur (p. 236-239). After the scene on the beach, Solarin became one of my favorite characters. I especially like his adventurous spirit, and his intelligence; like Nim, he is a physicist and an expert at mathematical puzzles. And, of course, he is the greatest chess player in the world.


Does Nim love Catherine?

Yes, I think he does, but Catherine doesn't realize it. Catherine loves Solarin, obviously, but even before she met Solarin, I don't think Catherine loved Nim. She likes him and admires him very much, as her friend and former mentor, but she does not love him, at least not in the same way she loves Solarin. In the scene in Nim's house, you can see the attraction on Nim's part; he plays with her hair and calls her "my dear". But Catherine does not seem attracted to Nim, except as a friend.

At the end of the book, after Catherine and Solarin have fallen in love, Solarin tells Catherine, "My brother's in love with you." (p. 529). And now we know for certain that Catherine never even realized that Nim loved her: "Don't be ridiculous," she says to Solarin (p. 529). We think, at first, that the fact that they both love Catherine might cause tension between the two brothers, but it doesn't; Nim realizes that Catherine and Solarin love each other, and he accepts it.


Clues that Nim and Solarin are brothers, and descendants of Mireille

Katherine Neville gives us several clues along the way, but I didn't realize they were clues until I read The Eight for the second time and knew what was going to happen. When I first read The Eight, the fact that Nim and Solarin were brothers came as a complete surprise. I think I guessed that they were descendants of Mireille, though; I knew that someone in Catherine's story had to be a descendant of Mireille, and Nim and Solarin were good guesses, since Nim has Mireille's red hair and Solarin has her green eyes. But, of course, they could have been distant cousins instead of brothers; that was probably what I thought at first.

When I read The Eight for the second time, I looked for clues to all the surprises, not just the fact that Nim and Solarin were brothers; in my article on the confrontation between Mireille and Marat, I will discuss the clues Katherine Neville gives that tell you Mireille is going to kill Marat. One of the things I admire most about The Eight is the way Katherine Neville gives you clues that you don't realize are clues. Anyway, here are the clues that I found. If you can think of any others, please let me know, so I can add them to the list.

I have already mentioned one possible clue that Nim is a descendant of Mireille; his phone number is really that of a convent.

Then, as I've also mentioned, there is Nim's red hair and Solarin's green eyes. Yes, a lot of people have red hair, and a lot of people have green eyes, but I don't think Katherine Neville would have mentioned them so many times if she did not mean it to be a clue that Nim and Solarin are descendants of Mireille, who has both red hair and green eyes.

When Catherine first meets Solarin, she thinks, "There was something at once familiar and strange about him." (p. 77). Something familiar: this could mean that Catherine thought of Nim, without realizing it.

Shortly afterwards, Catherine thinks, "He'd reminded me of the fortune-teller." (p. 78). After reading the whole book, we know that the fortune-teller was really Mireille. If Solarin reminds Catherine of Mireille, this is, of course, a clue that he's a descendant of Mireille. But there is no way we would know this without reading the whole book; this is a very good example of what I mean by a "clue that we don't realize is a clue".

When Catherine first tells Nim that she knows Solarin, Nim's voice "sounded remote, as if he were lost in thought" (p. 129). Nim also seems to know a lot about Solarin; of course, this could be because they are both chess masters, but now we know it's more than that.

Catherine thinks that the handwriting on the newspaper she gets in the mail on her first day in Algiers is Nim's (p. 231), when it turns out to be Solarin's. Of course, two brothers can have very different handwriting, but I think it is a clue that there is some similarity between Nim and Solarin, and that we should be paying attention to this.

On the beach in Algiers, Solarin plays with Catherine's hair, and it reminds her of the way Nim played with her hair (p. 239). Also, since we know now that Nim and Solarin are descendants of Mireille and Talleyrand, this reminds us of the way Talleyrand plays with Mireille's hair.

Nim and Solarin are both physicists, and chess masters. This could be only a coincidence, but of course it isn't.

Although I guessed that Nim and Solarin were descendants of Mireille before this, the thing that really told me they were her descendants was the description of their mother (by this time, you know that they are brothers, but you are not yet certain that they are descendants of Mireille); she has "coppery hair" (p. 525); this sounds exactly like Mireille.


What do Nim and Solarin have in common with Mireille?

I made a list of the things that Nim and Solarin have in common with their ancestor, Mireille. If you can think of anything else, please let me know.

Nim:

  1. Intelligence
  2. Tenacity
  3. Red hair
  4. They're both tall.
  5. A similar personality (Mireille is not as outgoing as Valentine; Nim is not as outgoing as Solarin). Actually, I think Solarin's outgoing personality comes from Talleyrand.
  6. Reclusiveness (at least, the 200-year-old Mireille is reclusive).
  7. They're great at codes and mathematical puzzles. (Remember the poem that Mireille, as the fortune-teller, gives Catherine, with all the mathematical clues?)
  8. They both write very well; Nim writes books, and Mireille writes the diary with all those beautiful descriptions of the desert.
  9. They both have an aviary. (See p. 142-143 for Nim's aviary; p. 340 for the aviary in the 200-year-old Mireille's house).
  10. Their favorite bird is the falcon. (Nim's falcon is mentioned only once, p. 143.)
  11. Their taste in food and drink is similar. (They both like mushrooms, and they both like brandy, for example.)
  12. They both seem to be good at languages; for example, they learned to speak English very well, even though Mireille's original language was French and Nim's was Russian.

Solarin:
  1. Intelligence
  2. Tenacity
  3. Green eyes
  4. They're both tall.
  5. Solarin is also great at codes and mathematical puzzles.
  6. Agility (Mireille and Solarin are both very good at climbing things.)
  7. Solarin's taste in food and drink is also similar to Mireille's (the brandy, for example).
  8. They both have an interest in ancient history. Mireille writes down all the ancient legends that Shahin tells her; Solarin knows a lot about Pythagoras and the Egyptians (p. 493-494).
  9. Solarin also seems to be good at languages.

As you can see, Nim has a little more in common with Mireille than Solarin does. Also, many of the things they have in common with Mireille are also things they have in common with each other. But each has some things in common with Mireille that the other doesn't have.


What do neither of them have in common with Mireille?

Mireille is more emotional than either Nim or Solarin. Of course, Nim and Solarin can both be very emotional; we see this most of all when they are reunited, and we also see it in their feelings for Catherine. But they do not cry as much as Mireille does. Nim and Solarin are scientifically-minded, while Mireille is not. (Although Mireille gets to be more scientifically-minded later in the book; see my article on changes in Mireille's character for more about this.)

Mireille is very religious; although she does not want to become a nun, she keeps her faith in God throughout the book; she signs her letter to Catherine, "Yours in God" (p. 547). Nim and Solarin (and Catherine, too, I think) do not seem to be religious at all.

Nim and Solarin are both great chess players; Mireille does not play chess, as far as we know.

Nim is a great cook, and I think Solarin is, too. Who did the cooking when Catherine, Lily, and Solarin were on the boat? It doesn't really tell you, but I think it must have been Solarin; Catherine and Lily are not interested in cooking. Neither is Mireille, as far as we know.


What else would I like to know about Nim and Solarin?

After reading The Eight, I had many unanswered questions about Nim and Solarin. I wonder if any of these questions were answered in the 1200-page manuscript of The Eight, or if they will be answered in a future book.

Nim:

When he was a child, how did he manage to survive all alone in New York, after his father died?

Where did he go to college? Where did he get his degree in physics?

What kind of physics did he study? We know that Solarin's degree is in acoustics, but we don't know about Nim's degree.

How did he make enough money to afford that wonderful house? It must have been something to do with computers, but we don't know exactly what.

How did he get to be such a great chess player? I think Nim and Solarin both learned to play chess from their father, when they were children. This probably explains why they were so great at chess, while Mireille wasn't; it came from their father's side of the family; Mireille was their ancestor on their mother's side. After Nim and his father left for New York, Solarin went to a special school in Russia, where he became a chess master. But we don't know about Nim. He obviously continued to play chess as a child, after his father died. But with whom? And where?

Since Nim and Solarin were both chess masters who played at tournaments, why didn't they meet at a chess tournament, before their reunion at the end of the book?

When Mordecai first met Nim, at a chess club, did he know that Nim had such an important role in the Game?

Did Mordecai meet Nim first, and then Solarin, or was it the other way around? That's not very clear.

How did Nim learn to cook so well?

Where did he get the birds in the aviary (especially the falcon)?

Where did he get his car (the green Morgan)? He said it had been in his family for many years. Did it belong to another descendant of Mireille? Or did it belong to someone on his father's side of the family?

When he first met Catherine, three years before the book begins, did he know she was the next Black Queen?

Who are the other two people besides Catherine who know Nim's phone number? Catherine says, "I was one of only three people in the world who had the honor of knowing" Nim's phone number (p. 118). Is the 200-year-old Mireille one of them? Or Mordecai? Those are my two guesses, but I don't know. They could also be people who don't appear in the book.

What happens next? How do Nim and Solarin find the board of the Montglane Service? Does Nim ever get over his love for Catherine? Does he eventually get married, or does he go on living alone in his enormous house? Does he ever see the 200-year-old Mireille again?

Solarin:

How did the 200-year-old Mireille find the orphanage in which she put Solarin when he was a child?

When Mordecai first met Solarin at a chess tournament when Solarin was 16, did Mordecai know what an important role Solarin had in the Game?

Where did Solarin get his degree in acoustics? (At a university in Russia, of course, but which one?)

How did he and the 200-year-old Mireille stay in contact over the years?

How did he get to know so much about boats?

How did he learn to speak English (and probably French and Arabic) so well?

Had he been to Algiers before? He certainly knows where the 200-year-old Mireille lives.

Again, what happens next? Will Lily ever beat him at chess? (Somehow, I doubt it.) What kind of adventures will he and Nim have in Russia, looking for the board? I'm sure Solarin is in trouble with the KGB. When do Solarin and Catherine get married? Will they live in New York or somewhere else? Will they have children? If they do, will the children be great at chess, like Solarin, or terrible at chess, like Catherine? Will he ever see the 200-year old Mireille again? If there are children, will they ever see Mireille? Will he and Catherine tell the children who Mireille really is?

Back to the articles page

Back to the main page

Copyright 1997 Vicki Kondelik.

This page hosted by Get your own Free Homepage

© 1997 1