Lovers of the short story are mourning the death today of Mavis Gallant, one of the finest perfectionists of that delicate art form. I post in her honor the following comments on her 1996 book, The Collected Stories of Mavis Gallant.
Mavis Gallant began her life-long association with The
New Yorker in 1950 rather insecurely.
As she tells the story, she procured the services of an agent in America
because she knew she was going to be traveling around in Europe and sent him
several stories, all of which he said he was unable to place. It was only when she was destitute in Madrid
in 1952 that she happened to see a copy of The New Yorker with one of
her stories in it. She contacted the magazine and found out that her agent did
sell the stories to The New Yorker and other magazines, giving out a
fictitious address for her in Europe, and kept the money. Gallant has said that
the feeling of dismay she experienced when she believed every story she sent
was a dead failure never really left her.
Editor William Maxwell signed Gallant to a “first refusal” contract, and
she subsequently published well over a hundred stories in The New Yorker,
about half of which were published in The Collected Stories of Mavis Gallant
in 1996.
In the Preface to her Collected Stories, Mavis Gallant insists, quite
rightly, that short stories are not chapters of novels and should not be read
one after another as if they were meant to follow along. Although a number of her stories focus on the
same characters as they develop over time and therefore could be read together
as if they were chapters in a novel, it would indeed be exhausting to read a
great many of Gallant's stories one after another; even though the plots and characters change,
they change only slightly, and the rhythm of the prose is fairly consistent
throughout this volume.
An example can be seen in two stories that focus on the same
characters, "Speck's Idea" and "Overhead in a
Balloon." The first focuses on
Sandor Speck, who runs an art gallery in Paris.
As are most art fanciers in Gallant's stories, Speck is more interested
in artistic reputations than in artist merit.
The plot concerns his ineffectual efforts to revive interest in a
forgotten artist so that he can profit by a renewed interest in his
gallery. However, in this comic satiric
story that reads much like minor Henry James, Speck, after much wrangling with
the artist's widow for a number of his canvases, fails to bring off his
artistic/commercial coup.
"Overhead in a Balloon," the title story of one of
Gallant's collections, centers on Speck's assistant Walter. Speck never appears in the story but is
unflatteringly referred to throughout by Walter as "trout face"; the
character Walter is so similar to Speck that with a name change they would be
relatively indistinguishable. Like his
boss, Walter is also made the ineffectual victim of an artist who, like Walter
and Speck, is more concerned with the practical matters of establishing
reputation than he is interested in the integrity of art.
Four interrelated stories focus on Henri Grippes, a Parisian
novelist, diarist, and critic, who, like Speck and Walter, lives on the fringes
of the artistic life, and who focuses his attention on making a name for
himself by capitalizing on the rising and falling stock of various literary and
artistic fashions. In "A Painful
Affair," Grippes is passed over to speak at the commemoration ceremony for
a wealthy patron of the arts by a man that Grippes feels is only a minor critic
and thinker.
"A Flying
Start" moves back in time to the story of how the lesser critic courted the favor of the benefactress and
thus edged Grippes out of his moment of fame.
The theme of changing fashions of what constitutes art and therefore
what establishes fame is emphasized throughout the story by a sort of running
gag about a planned dictionary of literary biography that over the years is
constantly altered because of changes in literary taste and thus is never
produced. In "Grippes and
Poche" Grippes fights a continual battle with a tax auditor who, because
he is an admirer, saves Grippes from financial harm; finally in "In Plain
Sight" Grippes, grown old and crotchety, ironically complains about the
increasing commercialization of the arty area of Paris where he has lived for
so many years. These stories reflect a
representative side of Gallant's work--her skill at creating comic satire about
the artistic life--which partially explains why she is often referred to as a
writer's writer.
A series of four interrelated stories follows the life of a
man, Edouard, B. who, having married an older Jewish-born actress during World
War II so she would not be captured by the Nazis, finds that, although he has
never lived with her, he remains somehow responsible for her. Like many other male characters in the
Gallant gallery, Edouard finds himself trapped by past romantic ideals. "A Recollection" recounts the story
of the marriage and the couple's journey to safety in the south of France where
they part company. The second story,
"The Colonel's Child," deals with Edouard's meeting his second wife,
Juliette; the third one, "Rue de Lillie," focuses on Juliette, who
sees through to Edouard's first marriage with the actress Magdalena, as if they
were characters in a fiction, albeit a fiction in which she too in
entangled. The final story,
"Lena," centers on a meeting
between Magdalena and Edouard when they are eighty and sixty-five
respectively, both still bound together by an idealistic gesture many years in
the past.
Another significant series of four interrelated stories
focus on the Carette family. The first,
"1933," introduces Mme. Carette and her two daughters, Berthe and Marie, shortly after the death of her husband
has plunged them into genteel poverty.
The strict social conventions of the Montreal middle-class Carette
family is most clearly reflected by the mother's insistence that the children
never refer to her as a seamstress, but must say instead, "My mother was
clever with her hands."
"The Chosen Husband" centers on the family in 1949
after Mme. Carette's receipt of a legacy of eighteen thousand dollars from a
brother-in-law makes it possible for the daughters, now in their early twenties
to marry. The plot of the story revolves
around Marie's courtship with Louis Driscoll, which provides an occasion for
social satire in the Henry James/Jane Austen fashion. For example, when Driscoll makes his first
call and gets choked on one of his own chocolates, Gallant describes it
delicately as, "He was in trouble with a caramel," and the Carettes
look away so that the young man can "strangle unobserved."
The last two stories of the Carette family, "From Cloud
to Cloud" and "Florida," jump many years ahead to focus on
Marie's son Raymond when he enlists in the American army during the Vietnam war
and then later when he settles in Florida and marries a rather common (by old
Montreal social standards) young divorcee.
The story ends with Raymond storming out after a minor quarrel, leaving
his mother and his pregnant wife once again without a man in the house, thus
bringing the saga full circle.
Although Gallant is not a popular writer widely enough read
to make any one of her stories well-known (She is seldom anthologized in the
ubiquitous literature anthologies that keeps short stories alive for
undergraduate and graduate students, nor are her stories chosen for the highly
visible Best American Short Stories
or O. Henry Award Stories
collections.), some of the strongest and most memorable works in The Collected Stories are the title
stories of some of her earlier anthologies, such as "The Pegnitz
Junction" and "Across the Bridge."
The first, the longest story in The Collected Stories,
focuses on a young woman who becomes involved with an older man (not an unusual
situation in a Gallant story) who is divorced and has custody of his young
son. The story follows the threesome on
a holiday trip that becomes a minor nightmare when, because of an airline
shutdown, they must return home on a train that winds its way slowly and
tortuously through the European landscape as the young woman tries to cope with
a spoiled child and a man who cannot evenly divide his time and attention
between his son and his lover. The title
of the story, of course, refers to an important junction in the relationship of
the three people.
"Across the Bridge" also has a metaphoric
title. The bridge is at first merely a
physical presence, for the story begins with the narrator Sylvie walking across
a bridge in Paris with her mother who has the invitations to her wedding in a
leather shopping bag. When Sylvie tells
her mother she has her heart set on another young man, saying she has thoughts
of throwing her self off the bridge if she is forced to marry the family choice
instead of the man she loves, her mother dumps the invitations off the bridge
into the water. The story develops in
typical drawing-room comedy fashion with Sylvie falling in love with her family's
original choice after all. It ends in
romantic poignancy as Sylvie takes the long way home after seeing her fiancee
board his train, for she thinks it unfair to arrive home before he does. She says she will never tell anyone about
this, that it will remain a small and insignificant secret that belongs to the
"true life" she is almost ready to enter. This is the
bridge crossing reflected by the title of the story; it is a significant
metaphor for many of Gallant's stories, for often small and seemingly
insignificant secrets are what give her fiction its life.
The stories of
Mavis Gallant may be an acquired taste--delicate constructions that seem to be
artless vignettes rather than carefully patterned stories. Gallant's characters do not seem significant
in the large scheme of things, but as Gallant says in one of her essays, no
life is more interesting than any other; what really matters is what is
revealed and how.
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