Jennifer Haigh, “Paramour”
Jennifer Haigh is a 2002 graduate of the Iowa Writer’s
Workshop. Since graduation, she has
published four novels, the first of which won the PEN/Hemingway award. She has
also published a few short stories in Granta, The Atlantic, and Ploughshares (“Paramour”), and has a short story
collection coming out, I guess, when she has enough stories to fill one.
The prose of “Paramour” reminds me of the kinds of words,
sentences, and observations that often put me off reading novels. I am currently reading two novels for review
and find both of them rambling ragbags of careless prose and clichéd
comments. I think many short story
writers will agree that you can get away with clichés and carelessness in a
novel, for the reader is usually so propelled by the sheer mass of character
and plot that he or she will ignore or forgive the easy word choice and the
sloppy sentence. Not so in a short story.
Also in a novel, the writer can create a narrative that does not seem to
be moving toward a meaningful end, but rather just jogging along because, well,
that’s often what people in “real life” do.
Too many easy words, comparisons, and sentences mar Jennifer
Haigh’s “Paramour” for me. A few
examples that put me off:
“Christine crossed
the street gingerly, on four-inch heels thin as pencils.”
“The wife’s name was lodged in her memory like a bullet that
could not be removed.”
“She’d been a mercurial student.”
“She carried the shame like a disfiguring scar.”
The story itself is a cliché of the lecherous teacher
exploiting a student, the twist here being that the professor’s wife allowed
the relationship with the proviso:
“Look, but don’t touch.” So what
Christine did for the professor while a student (She now has a PhD in French
lit, a Fulbright, and a tenure-track job in California.) is take her clothes
off and loll about on the bed while he watched—never touching her or
himself. The wife has invited Christine
to a Tribute for her bounder husband, inviting Christine as a “present” for
him. But clever PhD that she is, she
goes home with a man she meets at the Tribute, instead treating us to this
hokey epiphany in a taxi: “She kissed Martin passionately. Let the ghosts hover: his body was a
tangible thing, arms and hands and shoulders.
His mouth felt warm and alive. Yes
to everything, she thought. Do
everything to me.”
Oh My! Oh Dear!
Golly Gee! Hot stuff!
Good Lord!
Mike Meginnis, “Navigators”
This is a video game story.
Since I have not played video games since my kids were small—and then it
was pac-man and the like on an old Atari—that might make much of this story
alien to me. But, in spite of what some
of you might think, I try to give every story I read the benefit of the doubt
from the beginning—although in some stories I begin to fall away right away as
I read.
After one reading, I must admit I liked this story. Although I was unfamiliar with the
descriptions of specific details of action taking place on the video screen, I
do know enough about the basic premise and structure of such games that I could
follow the action fairly easily. I liked the story for two reasons: First, once
Mike Meginnis sets up the premise and the character configuration of a father
and son obsessed with a video game called Legend of Silence, he mainly
stays out of the way. Second, I liked
the metaphysically significant switch on the usual game premise. In this game, the goal is not to become
increasingly more powerful, as in Metroid (the actual game on which this
fictional game is based), but rather to lose everything so that one can enter
Nirvana.
I remember what so fascinated me about pac-man was that what
was merely a small circle on the screen took on, when it began to move, the
semblance of a living thing—a voracious creature with a mouth that could eat
everything in its path. The
computer-generated figure in Legend of Silence is, like Seamus Aran in Metroid,
a female—an avatar that takes on human characteristics with which the player
can identify and wish to assist and protect.
It’s a predictable device in this story that as the father
and son become more and more obsessed with the game (with the father trying to
create a map of the world the game represents), they move further and further
away from everyday reality—failing to pay the gas bill (but of course not the
electric bill), eating peanut butter and jelly, becoming crusted over with
cheese-puff dust and stained with cranberry juice cocktail.
Since the purpose of the game is to transcend reality to the
ultimate loss of self, the real challenge is how to end the story. And here, I was disappointed that the end
depends on words on the game screen that query the players with yes or no
questions, e.g. “Is your enemy in Nirvana?”
When they choose “No,” the game responds: “Your enemy is not in Nirvana,
and neither are you. There is no
you.” When the players say they do not
wish to pursue the enemy, the game responds: “The weight falls from your body. Your body falls from your soul. Your soul falls from your absence. The absence is not yours.” And so on and so on.
The game tells them they will forget fear and they will
forget love. When the game is over, the boy feels a need for that which is
about to happen—like when he squeezed his father’s hand waiting for his mother
to pluck glass from his foot with a pair of tweezers. The premise of trying to
lose everything is, of course, drawn from most religions, such as Christianity,
whose central proviso is that one must lose the self to find the self. I am just not sure that Meginnis’s ending is
equal to the power of this paradoxical demand.
Steven Millhauser, “Miracle Polish”
I
read Steven Millhauser’s “Miracle Polish” when it first appeared in The New
Yorker this year and posted a blog on it.
To keep you from having to look it up, I will reprint some of my
comments here. I am a huge fan of
Millhauser. To me he is the great
Romantic of twenty-first century fiction. And thus, one of the greatest short
story writers of his era.
“Miracle
Polish” is a “concept” story that draws on nineteenth-century German romantic
notions, which Millhauser has used before.
It begins in traditional folklore fashion: A stranger comes to the door with something for sale called
“Miracle Polish.” When the protagonist
buys a bottle of the polish and shines his mirror with it, he seems to see
himself differently: “There was a freshness to my body, a kind of mild glow
that I had never seen before… What I saw was a man who had something to look
forward to, man who expected things of life.”
This transformation becomes an obsession with him, and he polishes all
the mirrors in his house and buys many more mirrors to polish and hang so that
everywhere he turns he sees his transformed self. However, when he tries to involve the woman with whom he has a
relationship in his mirror obsession, she accuses him of preferring the woman
in the mirror to her actual physical self.
As in many other Millhauser
stories, “Miracle Polish” is a metaphorical exploration of the Platonic notion
that underlies all romanticism—the reality of artifice. The narrator’s sense of growing obsession is
typical of the romantic short story that gave birth to the form in the early
nineteenth century. Edgar Allan Poe has
always been accused of being indifferent to living, flesh and blood subjects. W. H. Auden has said there is no place in
any of his stories for "the human individual as he actually exists in
space and time," that is, as a natural creature and an historical person. Richard Wilbur in his famous Library of
Congress Lecture in 1959 concluded that Poe's aesthetic that "art should
repudiate everything human and earthly," was insane. However, the repudiation of
"reality" as being only everyday human experience is precisely what
myth and folklore--the primal forerunners of the short story--are based
on. Poe's aesthetic, and thus the
dominant aesthetic of the short story, has always been based on this same
assumption that the artistic objectification of desire is true reality.
And it is this Romantic premise
that Steven Millhauser continues to explore in his short fiction. “Miracle Polish” is not, in my opinion, as
good a story as many of the complex and magical stories that appeared in We
Others: New and Selected Stories,
which came out this past year. But, until the next Millhauser story comes
along, it will do very nicely. If you
truly love the short story, you really should give yourself the pleasure of
reading We Others.
Alice Munro, “Axis”
I read this Munro story when it came out earlier this year
in The New Yorker, and I discuss it in my new book, Critical
Insights: Alice Munro, which came
out this month. I am not allowed to use
the same material on my blog that I used in that essay, but will make a few
general comments here that I did not make there. By the way, some of my Canadian readers who already have a copy
of Munro’s new collection of stories Dear Life have informed me that
“Axis” is not included. I am not sure
why. I do not know if it appears in the
American edition, which I should receive early next week.
Frank O’Connor once
suggested that the short story does not deal as the novel does with problems of
the moment, but with what John Millington Synge calls “the profound and common
interests of life." The short story,
claimed O’Connor, is a “lyric cry in the face of human destiny.” I have
argued in other places that one of the reasons for the short story’s focus on
the “profound and common interests in life” is the form’s origins in myth and
folklore, which Mircea Eliade has argued, narrates, “primordial events” in
consequence of which human beings became what they are today. Myth, says
Eliade, teaches human beings the primordial stories that have “constituted them
existentially.”
I is my opinion that Munro’s story, in spite of its
realistic appearance is about a primordial, universal event that constitutes
human beings existentially. One of the
things the story is about is the primordial experience of “time,” of which
Munro has said:
“Time is something that interests me a whole lot—past and
present, and how the past appears as people change.” “Memory,” she says, “is the way we keep telling ourselves our
stories—and telling other people a somewhat different version of our stories.
We can hardly manage our lives without a powerful ongoing narrative. And underneath
all these edited, inspired, self-serving or entertaining stories there is, we
suppose, some big bulging awful mysterious entity called THE TRUTH, which our
fictional stories are supposed to be poking at and grabbing pieces of.”
“Axis,” is a good example of what Alice Munro calls a “short
story way” of perceiving reality; it is also a good example of Munro’s typical
short story concern with “the profound and common interests of life,” a
primordial event, as Eliade says about story that constitute human beings
existentially—a “lyric cry in the face of human destiny.” In “Axis,” the lyric
cry is about the nature of time—temporally moving and spatially captured.
Although you may shake your head at all this, saying, “Come on, May, this is a story about a couple of young women and what happens to them, not a story about motion and stasis, space and time, and all that abstract stuff.” I, of course, disagree. The short story as a form has never been simply concerned with the realistic lives of its characters in the everyday world, but rather, at its best, interested in exploring, as Munro says, “some big bulging awful mysterious entity called THE TRUTH.”
Lawrence Osborne, “Volcano”
Sometimes a story works when just the right combination of elements come together almost inevitably. Here it is a 46-year old woman who files for divorce after catching her husband cheating on her and goes to Hawaii to attend a lucid dreaming seminar. The idea of being able to control your dreams, rather than being helplessly caught by them seems an irresistible metaphor for a woman who is getting older and feeling lonely and abused and wishes to manage her own reality. It also creates a neither world between dream and reality that the short story has always been quick to exploit, a world in which one is not sure if what he or she is experiencing is actually happening or happening in a dream. Poe and Hawthorne were masters at creating this kind of uncertain reality. “Young Goodman Brown,” for example, ends with Brown waking up from what he was convinced was actually happening. Many Poe stories, such as “The Premature Burial,” place a character in a realm of reality that seems both real and dreamlike at once.
All of “Volcano” exists in this kind of neither world as a result of the central character’s distress and loneliness at the breakup of her marriage. When the woman skips the dream seminar and goes to a small town called “Volcano,” she meets an elderly gentleman in a hotel, which seems deserted because of a volcano warning two nights earlier. She drinks too much and allows herself to be seduced by the old man, even though she finds him ugly and repulsive. The story ends with her in bed with the man, who says he is going to penetrate her all night, even as she tries all the techniques she has learned at the seminar to change the dream.
The lucid dreaming trope, which Osborne manages without pushing it to extremes, seems to fit well with the volcano metaphor, as the woman struggles to come to terms with the break up of her life and her husband’s betrayal of her trust. But her feeling that she can change the dream she now seems to be in with the old man is an illusion, or else something from which she does not wish to awaken. It is, in my opinion, a well-controlled, delicately balanced, story leading me to sympathize with the woman and identify with her sense of loneliness.
2 comments:
Charles,
In reading "Volcano," am I reaching when I suspect that the main character may have been tricked into falling into a deep sleep and is being raped, either by the leader of the seminar or someone else?
Combining the strange drug with the final images seem to indicate this to me. Her arms are being moved around like a sleeping person and she flinches when something, maybe sweat, hits her face.
If anything, I think it's ambiguous.
It seems to me that if we read the woman's experience as being tricked into a deep sleep and actually being raped, we miss the complexity the story tries to create in that mysterious world that lies, at least in fiction, in between a dream state and phenomenal reality.
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