George Saunders is one of my favorite short-story writers—not
necessarily because I always like his stories, for satire is not my favorite
form, but because he is so damned smart about the nature of short stories,
which means, of course, that he agrees with me on such matters. I have written
several blog posts on Saunders' stories and his view of the short story form,
which you can find by searching his name in the "Search this blog"
slot just to the right.
I also like Saunders' ideas on kindness and sympathetic identification
with others. If you have not already read it, search for his 2013 graduation
speech at Syracuse University. The only reason to buy the book (64 pages for
$9.99 on Amazon) is to give it to a graduate as a gift. It is not that much
more than the price of a graduation card and a helluva lot better than Hallmark. However, if you have not read Saunders'
stories, you would be better to pay $9.99 for a copy of his collection Tenth of December.
Saunders' most recent story, "Mother's Day," just appeared in
the winter two-week issue of The New
Yorker. It's the first Saunders story I have read since he hit it big three
years ago with Tenth of December,
which won lots of awards and, lo and behold! had lots of folks in the media
actually talking about the short story, as if they the form had just been
invented.
In his interview on "Mother's Day" with Deborah Treisman for The New Yorker on Feb. 1, Saunders said
that his process of coming up with a story is never to think about taking on an
issue or an idea or writing about a certain thing, but rather to find a voice
that "is fun to do and in which I can feel some sort of power."
And voice is indeed the key to reading "Mother's Day." The
first voice you "hear" is that of an elderly woman named Alma, the
"mother" of the title. But you don't know that at first, so it takes
a few paragraphs to "hear" the voice of a grumpy old woman. Saunders'
decision to put the point of view in the third person adds to the initial
reader disorientation. As a result, the first few paragraphs are confusing. For
example, since you don't know right away it is the mother speaking you don't know
who Pammy and Paulie are. Furthermore, although it certainly seems it is Alma
speaking when we hear, "Just like Pammy to take her mother to lunch in a
sweatshirt with a crossed-out picture of a machine gun on it," it is not
clear it is Alma who provides the voice of herself in third person speaking to
Pammy, e.g. ""We're going home," she said. "You can drive
me out to the grave."
You can hear the voice more clearly if you click on the audio button on
the New Yorker web site and listen to
George Saunders read the story. He does
not try to mimic the voices of Alma, and later, the character Debi, but he
obviously knows the intonations he wants you to hear. I have listened to the reading twice and can
now hear both Alma and Debi clearly when I read the story.
Saunders has obviously worked on "Mother's Day" off and on for
some time, having sent an earlier version of it to The New Yorker a few years ago, a version which Treisman had
reservations about and sent back for editing. He talks at some length in the
interview about how "Mother's Day" has changed over the years from a
focus solely on the character Alma to a duet of Alma and the woman Debi—both of
whom once loved Alma's late husband Paul ,Sr.
Saunders says that Debi probably turned up in the story because when he
was touring and being interviewed about the graduation speech he gave on
kindness, he began to notice what he called a "certain ego-based New Age
stance" in which people, while not
realizing what they were doing, claimed a virtue while actually living out its
exact opposite. And when you read Alma's
justification of her neglect of her children and Debi's self-justifications and
defenses about her own sexual behavior, you can hear this "New Age
stance." However, Saunders said that Debi was a way to make the reader see
where all of Alma's bitterness came from.
Then Saunders says something quite academic and not completely clear--the
kind of statement that had he made it in front of a class, some kid in the back
row would have raised his/her hand and asked, "Say what?" Here is what Saunders says, without providing
any explanation to the kid in the back row, i.e. me:
"I've sometimes thought that what a
story seeks to do is destabilize itself--disallow a too-easy reading of its
internal moral dynamics."
Always an
academic myself, I like that statement, for it rings true to my own experience
with good short stories—stories that refuse to allow the reader to make an
"easy" judgment about what inner demons motivate a character, for
example, that Melville's Bartleby "prefers not to" because he is
lazy, or crazy, or represents Marx's downtrodden worker, etc.
In the Treisman interview, Saunders says that although he knows that his
stories are going to be "about" something, if he starts out with that sort of intention
the story never proves interesting. And by "interesting" I think he
means "interesting," as opposed to being simple, to him. Instead, he says, as he concentrates on the
technical aspects of a story, a certain set of meanings begins to come forward.
And by "technical aspects," I think he means all those decisions or
intuitions a writer has about "how" to structure the story, how to
give it a certain syntactical rhythm or voice, what language to use, etc.
Saunders says he tries to be only "dimly aware" of those
meanings, lest the story gets reduced to those meanings. By "dimly
aware," I think he means what all authors, at least all good short story
writers, know--that meaning emerges from those very technical
decisions/intuitions the author makes as he is in the "process" of
writing the story. It is only when the story is done, Saunders says, that he
finds he can really think about what themes it might embody, for then
"weirdly, the "thematic stuff seems to have taken care of itself. The story is about something…but hopefully
more than I planned or could see at the outset." I like the humility of the word
"weirdly" here, for it suggests that "ah ha" experience
authors have when they "read" their own work not as a writer but as a
reader and see how the language has worked a kind of magic of coming together
to "mean" something.
Robert Boswell talks about this "dimly aware" idea at some
length in his book on writing fiction, the
Half-Known World. Boswell says:
I have grown to
understand narrative as a form of contemplation, a complex and seemingly
incongruous way of thinking. I come to
know my stories by writing my way into them…. For as long as I can, I remain
purposefully blind to the machinery of the story and only partially cognizant
of the world the story creates. I work
from a kind of half-knowledge."
To do this, Boswell says, the writer must suggest a dimension to the
fictional reality that escapes comprehension." Flannery O'Connor talks a great
deal about this sense of "mystery" in the essays in her collection Mystery and Manners.
Saunders says he thinks stories "give pleasure more in the how
they say than…what they are saying."
But it is the "how" that "Mother's Day" says what it
says that has been causing some readers problems, for
example om the bog The Mookse and the Gripes. Trevor Berrett, who operates the
blog, says he is glad to see a new story by Saunders, but after reading only
the first third had to lay it down in frustration, for he says he "didn't
know what to make of" what he was reading. Another reader at Mookse and
Gripes thought the story was
"terrible," that he/she was not sure what to make of what Saunders
hoped to accomplish with those "ghoulish harridans" or what point he
was trying to make.
Another reader found the story "a bit simple and didactic"; however,
suggesting that the story was "about" parents who have kids that are
their "worldview-ic opposites" may reflect it is the reading that is
too simplistic, not the story. Someone named Joe says the story is full of lazy
observations, nonsensical digressions, POV shifts. "I mean this really was a total stinker
and a slog and an absolute unmitigated disaster on so many levels, concluding,
"Wowzers. I'm stunned." Someone else named JohnnyHenry agrees with
Joe, saying the story took too much of an effort to follow, for it has too much
unnecessary shifting within the narrative even on the sentence level.
However, the confusion is not really there if you listen to Saunders
read the story. The rhythm of the voices
is quite distinct and clear. These objections on Mookse and the Gripes are like
those my students used to make about James Joyce's Ulysses, when I tried to teach them to read the book. However, when
I got students to practice reading a page or two of the book aloud, they
understood Joyce's purposeful prose without any problem. Some stories you have
to make your lips move when you read them. And the fact that Saunders sets up
the inner voice of Alma and Debi in the third person is a technique that may be
quite necessary to discover the basic theme of the story.
The "how" of "Mother's Day" centers on Saunders'
first setting up that cranky old woman Alma, full of phlegm and fierceness, and
then juxtaposing against her the voice of Debi, that infuriating self-congratulator
who is somehow responsible for Alma's present state. Saunders believes the
basic theme of "Mother's Day" is that "in this life, we do get
hit with things that deform us, and we sometimes can't simply will ourselves
out of that state of deformity." But this is something he discovered as he
engaged in the process of writing the story, not something he set out to
"prove" from the beginning.
Much of the meaning of "Mother's Day" depends on the unlikability
of Alma. And coincidentally, unlikability of fictional characters was recently discussed
by Heidi Pitlor in the Foreword to Best
American Short Stories: 2015, about which I blogged last month. Pitlor
quotes Claire Messud's often repeated tirade response to a Publisher's Weekly interviewer who said she would not like to be
friends with the protagonist of Claire Messud's novel The Woman Upstairs, adding "would you?" To which Messud
replied with some vigor:
For heaven’s sake, what kind of question is that? Would you
want to be friends with Humbert Humbert? Would you want to be friends with
Mickey Sabbath? Saleem Sinai? Hamlet? Krapp? Oedipus? Oscar Wao? Antigone?
Raskolnikov? Any of the characters in The Corrections? Any of the characters in Infinite Jest? Any
of the characters in anything Pynchon has ever written? Or Martin Amis? Or
Orhan Pamuk? Or Alice Munro, for that matter? If you’re reading to find
friends, you’re in deep trouble. We read to find life, in all its
possibilities. The relevant question isn’t “is this a potential friend for me?”
but “is this character alive?”
However, Messud does not
deal with the related problem of unlikability: if a character is reprehensible, how can the reader identify
with that character sufficiently even to read the story? And if the reader cannot
identify with the character, how can he or she make a moral judgment on the
character's behavior? Donald Antrim, whom Pitlor also quotes (from a symposium
on the subject of character unlikability by The
New Yorker) may provide the beginnings of an answer to this question:
When we accept the suspension of disbelief, we agree to a
logic—the story’s premise and its extension as, and eventually into, a created
world; and we need empathy to make our experience in the reading. But empathy
is not appreciation, infatuation, or the feeling that an author and her
characters are decent people.
Empathy with fictional characters has been the subject of quite a bit of
critical discussion in recent years, as discourse researchers and theorists
study what has been called Theory of Mind, that, is, the human ability to
empathize with someone else, and how reading fiction can increase this ability.
I have written about this in previous blogs, which you can also search, if you
are of a mind. Most recently,
researchers are trying to determine if there is something about so-called
"literary" works that stimulate Theory of Mind more than popular
narrative texts. In short, researchers are trying to discover if Saunders is right
when he, like many other writers, suggests that stories may be more important
in "how" they say what they say than in "what" they say.
One of the best discussions I have ever read on this problem of sympathy
and judgment of unlikable characters is in a book on the dramatic monologue
entitled The Poetry of Experience, by
Robert Langbaum. Using Robert Browning's
"My Last Duchess" as an example, Langbaum says the poem "carries
to the limit an effect peculiarly the genius of the dramatic monologue—I mean
the effect created by the tension between sympathy and moral judgment…most
successful dramatic monologues deal with speakers who are in some way
reprehensible." Langbaum says the
dramatic monologue requires sympathy for the speaker as a condition of reading
it, concluding: "Sympathy adapts the dramatic monologue for making the
'impossible' case and for dealing with the forbidden region of the emotions, because
we must suspend moral judgment, we must sympathize in order to read the
poem."
Please forgive the following brief summary of the different sections of
the story, as I try to make sense of Saunder's technique of using a third
person/first person perspective and how
this shifting pov relates to the problem of sympathizing with an unlikable character.
Part I: Told from the third person perspective of an older woman named
Alma, whose daughter Pammy has taken her to lunch for Mother's Day. We learn
that Alma's son Paulie has flown in to visit, but has slept late. He doesn't appear in the story. The Alma
perspective recalls the childhood of Pammy and Paulie, who, she thinks, have
not turned out well; they have poor jobs and have never married, but she
insists it is not her fault.
Alma recalls having sex with her husband Paul, Sr. when they were young and having that sexuality
curtailed by the birth of the children, who cried and complained and pooped at
idiotic random times and would step on glass and wake from their naps. She
justifies her feelings by saying the craziness of her and Paul's sex life was
all part of their grand love. She recalls playing mean tricks on the children,
punishing them, and now thinks how stupid Pammy is for taking out on this walk.
Then she sees Debi Hather sweeping in front of her small house.
Part II: The story shifts to the pov of Debi, who sees Alma and wonders when
such a mean old woman will die. Debi recalls all the men she has had sex with,
but has no regrets; she thinks she has "really lived," for she feels
she has always accepted people the way they were. She also recalls her daughter Vicky, who had
been a bookworm, a subservient, insecure, uptight girl; Debi feels she had got
stuck with the wrong kid. She recalls Vicky running off in her senior year
with two boys, who left her in Phoenix for
being a bitch. Debi is proud of her daughter for being independent.
Debi watches Alma and asks why she was always so mean and why she
squandered her "precious life force," trying to control everyone. She
has a fantasy about she and Alma being in heaven and Alma finally seeing that
she has always lived in a state of self-imposed blindness. She recalls the
times that she had sex with Alma's husband Paul, and she recalls how she had
loved who she was at that time because she was authentic and spontaneous. She also feels it was unfair that although she
had loved Paul and he had loved her, she had never got to live with him. Ultimately,
Debi feels that she is happy now and that she was happy then with Paul; she only
regrets that he died and left her.
Part III: Back to Alma's pov again, but the focus now is primarily on a
hail storm that hits them, injuring Pammy and causing her collapse.
Part IV: Back to Debi, who offers Alma and Pammy an umbrella, which Alma
refuses.
Part V: Back to Alma, who has collapsed and feels a tightness in her
chest. She has hallucinations of little beings which condense into a boy and a
girl baby. The rest of the story becomes an hallucinatory confrontation with
the baby figures who Alma tries to hold on to, but her hands are burning. A
stump appears, and she sits on it, feeling that all this seems to mean she has
been wrong about who to blame for her anger, but thinking if she was wrong
about who was to blame, then "there was no right." She fakes
admitting she was wrong, and the stump rises, after which hyena-like creatures
scramble toward her across a wide plain. Fearing for the babies, she tries to
grab them, but her burning hands sear their arms. As long as she blames Paul for all her
unhappiness, her arms get hotter and hotter.
She thinks she does not want to be angry, that she wants to be her young
non-mad self, but realizes that would not do, because she would still be Alma
who would meet Paul, who would always be Paul.
Her arms and hands become cool only when she realizes it would all be
fixed only when she stopped being Alma.
This is when the baby girl whispers in her ear, "Who do you want to be?" But on the verge of
death, Alma cannot answer that. She only knows she must no longer be Alma. As
she cries, "this cannot possibly…" and dies, the story ends with an
abrupt shift to a paramedic who says, "Nobody even close to home in
there." The other medic thinks this is rude, but realizes it is fine, for
the daughter is out of earshot, "sobbing against a tree."
The end of the story is very much like the famous ending of Flannery
O'Connor's story, "A Good Man is Hard to Find," when the grandmother,
who is also unlikable because she wants everything her own way and has
inadvertently caused the death of her son, his wife, and their two children. After
the Misfit shoots the grandmother three times in the chest when she reaches out
for him, saying "You're one of my own children," he says, "She would
have been a good woman if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute
of her life." Indeed, Alma would have been a good woman if she could have
been another woman—something she realizes only on the verge of death.
So, what is the story about? What
meaning does Saunders arrive at in the process of creating this particular
story?
First of all, we need to think of the significance of "Mother's
Day," a particularly twentieth-century creation meant to honor
mothers. It is often said it is the day
of the year with the highest telephone traffic, as everyone calls their mother
on that day. It is synonymous with what
is good and nurturing and unquestionably wholesome and desirable, even though
history is full of "Mommie Dearest" type bad mothers.
In this story, we have two mothers—Alma and Debi—neither of whom are
good mothers. Both neglect their children primarily to focus on self-satisfying
sex, which children obviously just get in the way of. Most people have no
sympathy with abusive mothers, neglectful mothers, selfish mothers, bad
mothers. Consequently, the challenge of
Saunders' story is how to make the reader sympathize with the two mothers at
least to the extent that the reader can read the story before being able to
make a moral judgment on the mothers.
There are two reasons that some readers may have trouble with this
story: one is the sympathy/judgment issue about the two mothers who are bad
mothers, and the other is the mixed point of view in which we hear the voices
of the women at the same time that we hear the voice of a third person narrator—a
mixed pov necessary to provide the
tension between sympathy and judgment. So the problem the story raises is how
to empathize with two unlikable characters and how to maneuver ourselves
through a story in which both sympathy and judgment are continually juxtaposed.
6 comments:
Totally agree that this is the problem: "how to empathize with two unlikable characters and how to maneuver ourselves through a story in which both sympathy and judgment are continually juxtaposed."
Now it could be that for Saunders this is pleasant "destabilization," and perhaps others see it that way, but for me it caused a little unpleasant dissonance and aside from that, I got a lot out of this story.
It made me think of another story, "To Good to Be True," by Michelle Huneven (https://harpers.org/archive/2015/12/too-good-to-be-true/). This is a story that lacks the... "spark" of "Mother's Day," but it also, for me, lacks that problem. I talk about this in a post over here: http://www.davidweiss.net/blog/on-mothers-day-by-george-saunders/ Curious what you think!
Thoughtful and provocative essay, as always. Thanks!
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