I love a good
love story. I don’t mean those faux
romantic fictional fluffs that you often see at the movies or on
television. I mean a story that explores
the mysterious complexity of love.
When I started
this blog, almost five years ago, the profile program asked me what my favorite
book was. I wrote, without hesitation, The
Great Gatsby. I was reminded what a
classic love story it was when I saw the recent film version, which was just
frothy cinematic display, until Gatsby came face to face again with Daisy, and
from that point, it was all about that boyish look on his face and his effort,
Tom Sawyer-like, to impress Daisy. It didn’t matter that she was not worthy of
his adoration; that wasn’t the point. That’s never the point. For example, there
is only one moment in Wuthering Heights
when Cathy is worthy of the mad passion of Heathcliff—when she says “I am Heathcliff.” The love object is not the result of
evaluation but rather obsession.
When the profile
program asked me my favorite movie, without hesitation, I wrote The French Lieutenant’s Woman, which is,
to my mind, a brilliant exploration of the fiction/reality complexity of being
in love. The character Jeremy Irons plays is no match for the magically
mysterious fictional construct that Meryl Streep creates so brilliantly that
one never knows when the French Lieutenant’s woman is acting and when she
is….what? Well, when love is concerned what else is there but acting?
What’s all this
preamble about love stories about? I
want to talk a bit about four love stories of sorts in the 2013 Best American Short Story collection.
And since one of those stories is Junot Diaz’s “Miss Lora,” for which I have
expressed my distaste in an earlier blog this year, I thought it would give me
one more chance to try to explain why I thought it was an inferior
story—certainly not a story deserving of all the awards that Diaz has received
this past year for it and the collection in which it appears. So far in my
reading of the 2013 BASS, it is the only Elizabeth Strout selection that
disappoints me. And she doesn’t give me any clue in her introduction why she
chose it except to praise the vividness of the character Lora. However, since I
respect Strout’s work, the fact that she chose it as one of the “Best” has
forced me to go back and read the damned thing one more time—the sixth time.
The other three stories
I want to talk a bit about, are Charles Baxter’s “Bravery,” Michael Byers’
“Malaria,” and Joan Wickersham’s “The Tunnel, or The News from Spain.”
I think the
basic problem I have with “Miss Lora” is that the central character, a
sixteen-year-old Dominican Republic male, has no depth of feeling. He just wants to have sex. Nothing wrong with that, of course. But if it is the only motivating force of a
piece of fiction, we are apt to call it “pornography.” Nothing wrong with that
either--except when the work is parading as something better than that,
something meaningful or culturally relevant.
And Miss Lora
herself, although we do get a bit of a backstory about her past sad life, is
primarily just an older woman that Yunior can have sex with—what more about her
do we really know than that? So what really happens in this story? A
sixteen-year-old boy admires his older brother, who has recently died of
cancer, because he was such a successful sexual predator. The boy’s girlfriend
will not have sex with him, so he is delighted to hook up with an older woman
who will. What sixteen-year-old horny boy wouldn’t? They have sex for a time;
he graduates from high school, becomes involved with another woman and then
graduates from college. Miss Lora disappears. It means nothing.
I have been
accused of having a blind spot about this story, but so far, no one has told me
why they think it is such a great piece of fiction. I assure I am no prude and
am not put off by the explicitness of some of the sexual description. It’s just
that the story offers me nothing complexly human.
If Elizabeth Strout happens to read this, I hope
she will tell me why she thinks it is one of the “Best.” Yes, the “voice” is an
interesting mix of educated jargon and street patois. But the story is so hollow, so cynical, so
meaningless. Nuff said. Never for the
rest of my life will I say another word about “Miss Lora.” I hope Diaz is
laughing all the way to the bank.
Diaz’s Yunior
may be just the kind of guy that Susan, the central character of Charles
Baxter’s “Bravery,” secretly desires.
Although she goes out with the kind ones, the considerate ones, what her
roommate calls the “humane” ones, what she really seems to wants is a bit of a ”troublemaker.”
She meets and marries a kind and considerate man, Elijah. When they go to Prague on their honeymoon,
they encounter on the street a madwoman, who Susan imagines tells her that in
the future she will be terribly jealous of her good-hearted husband “because of
the woman in him.” And this announces the story’s theme.
When they have a
son they name him Raphael, the name of another angel. Soon after they bring him
home from the hospital, Susan comes into the nursery and finds Elijah holding a
bottle of her breast milk in his left hand with the boy cradled in his right
arm. Baxter says, “A small twig snapped inside her” and, finding it hard to
breathe, Susan tells her husband there is something about this she cannot
stand, insisting that she is the mother here, and that she does not want him to
feed the boy. “With one part of her mind, she saw this impulse as animal truth,
not unique to her, but true for all women.” She shouts at him that this is her
territory and that he must put the child down immediately.
Elijah angrily
leaves, and Susan falls asleep watching television, dreaming about her
experience in Prague. When she wakes up, Elijah is standing over her with blood
on the side of his mouth, but he is jubilant, telling her a story about seeing
two men attacking a young woman and him charging in to rescue her by beating
the men off, breaking the jaw of one of them. When she wipes the blood off his
face and knuckles, she cannot believe his story. She tells him she loves him
and then tucks him in bed as she would a child. The story ends with her looking
in the mirror as she brushes her teeth. She does not recognize her own face, but
she does recognize her milk-swollen breasts and her smile when she thinks of ”sweet
Elijah bravely fighting someone, somewhere.”
This is not a
highly complex story, for it seems a little too governed by its theme—the
puzzling conflict women perhaps experience about nice guys vs. somewhat
dangerous characters. Baxter explores several aspects of this conflict. Whether
it is an “animal truth” deriving from the primitive need a woman had for a
strong masculine male to protect her and her child or a socially instilled bit
of claptrap, I like the way Baxter carefully sets the situation up. If you read
it, please let me know if you think the story is true, or false, to a basic
human truth.
I have to admit
right up front that I was predisposed to like Michael Byer’s “Malaria” before I
read it because I loved his first collection of stories, The Coast of Good Intentions, published in 1998 when he was only 28
years old. I especially liked “Dirigibles,”
which is a wonderful love story about a couple much too old for Byers to
understand, except by the wondrous magic of authorial empathy. And indeed
authorial empathy is what the story is really about.
I can understand
why Elizabeth Strout was drawn to the first-person pov voice of this story, for
Byers creates convincingly the rhythm of mind of the central character, Orlando,
who is twenty and, as he says, unadventurous. The story focuses on his short
relationship with a girl named Nora and her older brother George. The title
comes from the fact that George tells Orlando that he caught malaria while in
Ecuador, although Orlando knows that George has never been to Ecuador. “Everything
changes" when George is arrested naked in the middle of the high school
athletic field. Nora says he is hearing voices and she begins to worry that she
is hearing voices also. Orlando admits that he does not know what to do about
all this, since he has little experience with women and believes that “frictionless
amiability” is his best way of handling things.
Orlando’s
grappling with his relationship with Nora and Nora’s relationship with George
makes him feel that for the first time he has an idea of ambition, that he
could “be something in particular, rather than just me in general.” But he does not know what to say to anyone
about George’s delusions and Nora’s fears that “wouldn’t sound hollow and
ridiculous.” He knows that his own life up to this point has been “featureless,”
“free of pain,” and thus he has no training in delivering sympathy. The primary
focus of the story ends with Nora trying to reassure Orlando that there was
nothing they could have done about George.
But the story does
not end until a final section some years later, after Orlando has married, and
he is at home alone with the flu; in his fevered condition, he feels he is in a
different world and senses a “hideous estrangement from the plain objects of
everyday life.” He says he feels not only alone, but as if he were the only
human left in the world. He knows his problem is that he does not know what he
was supposed to do about George, asking: “What is George Vardon to me?” He wonders if one is supposed to do anything; he
thinks maybe what he is telling is just a story of something that happened to
him or to George, concluding, “It’s really George’s story, that is, but
naturally he can’t tell it, and neither can I.”
I like this
story because it is such a conscientious and thoughtful exploration of our
relationship to the “other.” Maybe I am prejudiced in its favor because it
reaffirms much of the argument in my recent book about what Frank O’Connor saw
years ago as a basic thematic impulse in the short story. The answer to Orlando’s
question “What is George Vardon to me? is perhaps the answer that O’Connor says
Gogol poses in”The Overcoat”: “I am your brother.”
I have to
confess that I am not familiar with Joan Wickersham, although the Contributors’
Notes say that her work has appeared before in Best American Short Stories. Her most recent book, from which “The Tunnel
or the News from Spain” is taken, is entitled The News from Spain: Seven Variations on a Love Story. I liked this
story so much (and since I am such a sucker for a love story), I just ordered a
copy). Wickersham says that the book is a “suite of asymmetrical, thwarted love
stories” in which the title “the news from Spain” means something different in
each story, but “acquires more resonance” (hate that overused word) as the book
goes along. I will talk more about that
when I get the book and read it. As for “The
Tunnel,” there are multiple love stories involved here, although the primary
one is the love story between Rebecca, age 45, and her mother Harriet, who is
living, unhappily, in a nursing home.
The narrator of
the story sums up the relationship between Harriet and Rebecca as one in which Harriet
needs attention and Rebecca needs to feel like a hero. But more than this, they
have discovered that they like each other and are having a good time together. Now
that her mother is dying, “in some unexpected way she and Harreit had fallen in
love.” Almost on the periphery of this love affair is the ten-year relationship
Rebecca has with Peter and a short new relationship she has with Benjamin, who
comes into her bookstore and buys a set of Chekhov stories.
This story is
more “novelistic” that I usually like, lacking the language-based poetic focus
and economy that make for a great short story, but it is so intelligent and
sensitive about the various complex aspects of love that I find I can’t resist
it. It is not a story I will read over
and over, but I did enjoy the experience of reading it the two times I did.
I loved Miss Lora. Why should Yunior have any feelings? He was 16.
ReplyDeleteRe: your thoughts on "Miss Lora." You tell us your main problem with the story is "the central character, a sixteen-year-old Dominican Republic male, has no depth of feeling. He just wants to have sex." Perhaps try considering a few things. (1) Yunior is grieving the loss of his brother but simultaneously lacks the maturity to understand the toll the death is taking on him emotionally. He also lacks the wherewithal to articulate this about himself. (2) Yunior's affair with Miss Lora is an expression (in part) of this grief. (3) Yunior has been raised in a culture where sexual objectification of women is normal. (4) Yunior lacks positive role models that might teach him to deal with his grief/fears in healthy ways. (5) Yunior, as urban Dominican, lacks what Diaz might call "spaces of deliberation,” ie. literature, art, or narratives that might help guide him toward a healthier understanding of himself and his impulses. (6) Yunior most certainly does not idolize his brother and father. Look at pages 64-65 of BASS: “Shit, your father used to take you on his pussy runs, leave you in the car while he ran up into cribs to bone his girlfriends. Your brother was no better, boning girls in the bed next to yours. Sucios of the worst kind.” Does this sound like idolization to you? (7) Yunior’s affair with Miss Lora traumatizes him, leading to a long string of failed relationships and acts of infidelity. Remember that this story is part of serial work examining the character's failed relationships. (8) Miss Lora is a traumatized person herself; as the story tells us, her father’s emotional instabilities “messed her up good.” (9) This traumatized past perhaps motivates her own sexual manipulation of Yunior, as well as her manipulation of other young men (of whom she has framed pictures in her home). (10) Miss Lora probably doesn’t even realize she is manipulating Yunior. Or perhaps she is in denial; she isn’t allowing herself to realize how much this relationship will screw with Yunior’s future relationships and his sense of self. (11) Look at the final image of the story—the photograph he is showing when searching for Lora years later: “It is of the two of you, the one time you went to the beach. Both of you are smiling. Both of you blinked.” They're smiling and they have their eyes closed. When we consider this imagine alongside negative effects of the affair, we realize these characters are inflicting emotional damage they are on themselves and each other and they don't even know it. (12) Perhaps the story makes a powerful statement about our blindness to our own self-destructive behaviors. You have to look closely, because this is not the sort of story that spells its ideas out for you, but it’s all there.
ReplyDeleteI hope this helps.
Thank you, Charles May, for this blog. I've read 3 of the stories in BASS 2013, so far, and had a desire to read something about the stories.
ReplyDeleteYou have a good blog going here. I'm happy I found it.
I am,
Just a girl from New Orleans
You made some good points Jeff. The aura of aliens from the movies Yunior watched mixed with grief can also be linked to Yunior's loneliness. And the conclusion explained everything about Yunior and Lora not knowing what they were doing. Dr May read between the lines next time. This along with the Alacorn story was the best story in BASS 13.
ReplyDelete