Sarah Hall, The Beautiful Indifference, Faber and
Faber
In an interview article (Metro.co.uk) last November,
Sarah Hall, author of four well-received novels, talked about her first
collection of short stories, Beautiful Indifference, the short story in
general, and the debate that year in England over the Booker Prize emphasizing
“readable” fiction: “When did this
country become afraid of excellence and of the avant-garde?” Hall asked. “There’s this anxiety about not wanting to
be too good, a worry about appearing classist.
There’s this assumption that people want a diet of hamburger
literature. But I think they want
brilliant literature.”
The short story genre is often at the center of this
argument over whether prize-worthy fiction should be accessible to a wide range
of readers or whether it should be stylistically and thematically demanding and
complex. In my last post on Fiona
Kidman’s shortlisted collection The Trouble with Fire, I tried to show
that her stories were indeed “readable”--examples of what O’Connor would have
called “novelistic” or “applied storytelling,” just not “artistic,” i.e.
emphasizing style, tone, and compact complexity, as O’Connor claimed the short
story should be. I heard an echo of
this emphasis on form over content today when, by sad serendipity, I was
reading the obituary of famed film critic Andrew Sarris, who introduced the
auteur theory to American film criticism.
Sarris said: “The art of the
cinema is the art of an attitude, the style of a gesture. It is not so much what as how.”
In her first collection of short stories—and she promises
not her last—Hall has compared working on these stories to working on poetry:
“There’s a formalism to it that’s quite similar, and a discipline to it, and
I’ve really enjoyed going back to that—so I can see myself not leaving it too
long before working on a another collection.”
When asked if she felt the novel was the form in which she was most
comfortable, she replied: “I would have said that until a year ago, but I’ve
been feeling that the quality of the stories has been really improving. Once you figure out what you’re doing with
the form, that’s really satisfying. Obviously, I’ve written four novels…so if
you look at it objectively from the outside, probably yes, I’m a novelist. But it’s not a flirtation with short
stories, that’s for sure.”
The British reviewers reacted very positively when Beautiful
Indifference came out last fall.
Here are some typical suggestive sound bites: dazzling sensuality,” “bewitching delicacy and skill,” “dark
atmospheric and moving tales,” “mesmeric and stimulating,” “full of sensuous
power,” “luscious short stories,” “beautifully poetic,” “erotic charge,”
“perceptive observations strike like slaps,” “raw,” “guttural and visceral,”
“bewitchingly vivid prose,” “heartbreaking,”
“disturbing, exquisitely crafted collection,” “reaches a standard that
makes award juries sit up and take notice.”
Well, obviously the jury of the Frank O’Connor Award this
year has sat up and taken notice. But
does this small book of seven poetic stories have the heft to dislodge the
other heavy weights on this list? Fiona
Kidman’s 370-page doorstop of a book could swallow this delicate little morsel
in one gulp, although Dame Kidman might find the dish a bit too spicy.
The real question about Sarah Hall’s Beautiful
Indifference is whether the readers and judges can transcend the sexual
subject matter of many of these stories and the glamorous promotional photo
inside the back cover and pay attention to the carefully wrought style of the
stories. The real focus of these stories is not sex, but sentences.
Hall has said in an interview that lots of people claim that
she does not write like a woman, but like a man because, as Hall opines, there
is a visceral quality to her work, as if women are not supposed to write about
blood and guts. And indeed, there is much blood and not a little guts in these
stories, beginning with the aptly titled,
“Butcher’s Perfume,” about a gypsy family of dog and horse breeders,
described by a young woman who has become friends with the tough talking and
tough brawling daughter, Manda Slessor, who, like her parents and her three
brothers, is “all gristle to the bone.” Butcher’s perfume” is the sickly sweet
smell of blood and raw flesh; I smelled it when my grandfather butchered a hog
every autumn. After a sharp blow to the forehead with a short handled sledge,
he quickly, with one clean movement, slashed the throat so the blood could be
caught in buckets held close by.
The story takes place in Cumbria where the young narrator
senses a brutal past--the primitive world of Heathcliff after the death of
Cathy: “This was where the raiders met, coming south or north. This was
burnt-farm and hacked throats, where roofs were oiled and fired and haylofts
were used to kipper children. And if
you rolled down the window you could just about hear it—the alarms and
crackling flames, women split open and screaming as their men folk choked on
sinew pushed down their gullets.”
Also adding to the story’s sense of the primitive is Hall’s
use of Cumbrian phrases and street slang, e.g. “The lad would chunter on about
watching the footie.” (Low inarticulate
talk about football). The father calls
his son a ”gudfernobbut twat.” In its combination of brutality and slang
language, the story echoes A Clockwork Orange.
The Slessors are even-weighted and indestructible, says the
narrator--paired by “feral instinct, like wolves among us.” The wife Vivian, a
tough superstitious woman, rules over “a household of managed tension.” Although the husband Geordie is coarse and
brutal, if he had hit his wife, “She would have taken those fists into her soft
flesh, and even worn his black temper on her face in public for a while. Then in the night she would slit him wide
open, balls to bellybutton.”
The story comes to a climax when the narrator, passes the
barn of a “rare bastard” and sees a horse in terrible shape: “Its ribcage
angled up through its flesh like the frame of a boat being dismantled…its
hooves had twisted into thick discoloured spirals, like the nails of a Chinese
emperor…. It was something from a middle-forest fairytale, where the dark
branches lift and in a clearing is Knife-Hand Nick, his children’s heads
bubbling in a pot above the fire.” If this is the world of gruesome fairy tale,
it is also the grotesque world of Robert Browning’s “Childe Roland to the Dark
Tower Came:”
As for the grass, it grew as scant as hair
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In leprosy; thin dry blades prick’d the mud
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Which underneath look’d kneaded up with blood.
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One stiff blind horse, his every bone a-stare,
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Stood stupefied, however he came there:
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Thrust out past service from the devil’s stud!
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Alive? he might be dead for aught I know,
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With that red, gaunt and collop’d neck
a-strain,
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And shut eyes underneath the rusty mane;
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Seldom went such grotesqueness with such woe;
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I never saw a brute I hated so;
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He must be wicked to deserve such pain.
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When the narrator shows the brutalized horse to one of the
Slessor brothers, he tells her to mind her own business, but she later finds
out from Manda that the brothers strung up the owner by his feet and “cut the
bastard with a riding crop right through to the putty in his spine.” He was not expected to walk again.
Although the story is told in graphic brutal detail by an
innocent young woman, about a vicious fairytale family, the language transcends
the beastly and becomes fabulistic e and legendary, creating a world where
there is justice, even if there is no civilized society. If you think this is all just brutal
behavior, then you are not listening to the rhythm of Hall’s prose.
The title story, “Beautiful Indifference” introduces a
typical Hall female character, an entrapped woman--in this case, a writer
waiting for her lover in a hotel room. However, she insists she dislikes books.
“Something in the act itself, the immersion, the seclusion, was
disturbing. Reading was an affirmation
of being alone, of been separate, trapped.
Books were like oubliettes.”
When her lover arrives, he tells her he wants her all the
time. “I want to break you. It’s a
sickness.” She laughs and calls him a
sadist. In this and other stories, Hall
suggests that the basic nature of sexuality is sado/masochistic, motivated by
the twin desires to destroy the other or be destroyed: ”Whenever he came inside
it her it stung. Towards the end of
their time together he would gauge how sore she was. He knew the difference between pleasure and discomfort, though
the two were so closely aligned.”
We get clues that the woman is ill, perhaps dying; she takes
pills and begins to bleed. When she buys three packets of painkillers from
three different pharmacies and drives out into the bracken, we suspect she has
decided on a way to escape her sense of hopeless entrapment. The story ends with a reference back to her
dislike of the entrapment of books: “The hills were around her. She took up her purse, opened the car door,
and stepped into them. It was like
opening a book.”
In “Bees,” another trapped woman has left the country and
moved to London, only to find dead bees littering her small garden: “Black-capped, like aristocrats at a
funeral, their antennae folded, with mortuary formality, across their eyes.” She is not yet free from a relationship with
a man she has left for his infidelity and harshness: “The tenderness at the back of your throat from choking on him,
being forced to. You bore it, until you
couldn’t bear it any more.” At the end
of the story, she sees “a rust-red, blaze-red fox” in her garden. “It’s as if the creature has been stoked up
from the surroundings, its fur like a furnace, eyes sparkling.” After crouching for a moment, it springs on
its back legs. The jaws open and snap
shut, and as it lands it shakes its red head furiously.” The fox is not the cause of the dead bees,
but is rather a Lawrentian emblem of dangerous, predatory sexuality.
“The Agency” is about a woman who feels “as if love had
become scentless, bloodless, it had somehow lost its vitality.” A friend recommends
she make an appointment with a group referred to only as “the agency.” On the drive her appointment, she pictures
herself caught by a strong gust and losing control of the car: “I imagined them finding me, hanging inside
a cage of crumpled metal, slacknecked and bleeding over the dark red
suit.” This is a typical image in
Hall’s stories. In “The Beautiful
Indifference,” as the woman drives to the heath to take an overdose of pills,
she imagines people finding her body in the lowlands.
Hall refuses to tell us anything about what kind of service
the agency performs for the woman, but we do get a few flirtatious clues. For example, among the terms she is asked to
choose on a questionnaire are: “film, restraints, doll, defecation.” When she
gets home and takes off her clothes, there is a run or ladder in one of her
stockings and a bruise spreading under her hipbone. She recalls: “He had
asked for a phrase, to stop everything, and I had given John’s mother’s name,
Alexandra, but it had not been used.”
These are all conventions of s/m.
And s/m, as all sex experts know, is a dramatic performance in which the
so-called sadist must follow the script of the so-called masochist. The woman
knows that the Agency had been conceived by a woman. The rooms, the tidy gatekeeper, the subtle game; it all belonged
to a woman.”
In “She Murdered Mortal He, a woman has a spate with her
lover and goes alone for a walk through the African jungle to get her
bearings. The story is an experiment in
narrative suspense, as she becomes prey to the primitive forces outside her:
“Her flesh felt exposed. She was all
meat, all scent.”
“The Nightlong River,” which focuses on a mink hunt, opens
with description of November berries that “hung and clotted in the bushes, ripe
and red, like blisters of blood.” The
ground that won’t halfway thaw until spring, is “like a clod of beef brought
from the pantry and moved from cold room to cold room.”
To keep these shortlisted stories in perspective with the
writer who gives his name to the Award, Frank O’Connor reminds us that the pure
storytelling of the short story is more artistic than the applied storytelling
of the novel, adding, “in storytelling I am not sure how much art is preferable
to nature.” In spite of all the blood and guts and sex and sensuality in the
stories of Sarah Hall, there is much more art than nature.
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