Saturday, December 23, 2017

The Flame Alphabet by Ben Marcus




Based on a generic synopsis, Ben Marcus’s The Flame Alphabet (2012) would seem to be another end-of-the-world novel with a unique gimmick. Instead of a comet posed to strike the surface of the earth or a zombie pandemic or a despairingly possible nuclear proliferation, the means of the world’s demise rests in language. In particular, speaking and writing makes all the adults progressively, cumulatively sick until they die. Children are immune until they turn eighteen years old, so they become the most dangerous practitioners of language, forcing parents and loved ones into desperate circumstances.

This is not a novel about Armageddon, despite the religious themes and plot points that crop up throughout. Instead, I think of it as apocalyptic, in the oldest meaning of that word, defined as revelatory. The story is told from the single viewpoint of a father and husband, Samuel, as he comes to terms with the realities of toxic language and the breakdown of his family as his daughter Esther becomes poisonous to him and his wife Claire. Sam’s account is a testament of what happened to him and his family, and while he gets caught up in science and intrigue through the course of the novel, the book is really about him and how the bonds of love and family decay and die gruesomely.

I’ve been aware of Ben Marcus ever since I read his edited collection The Anchor Book of New American Short Stories (2004). I’d like to write a retro-review of that book whenever I get around to re-reading it. He introduced me to some major American voices for the first time, including: Aimee Bender, Lydia Davis, Anne Carson, Anthony Doerr, Stephen Dixon, Brian Evenson, William Gay, Jhumpa Lahiri, Wells Tower, and Rick Bass. Just look at that cover!


I apologize for the digression, but it contextualizes my awareness of The Flame Alphabet when it debuted. It was a sensation and I quietly added it to my ‘to-read list.’ That list only grows, it never shrinks. With my luck, I found that the library within walking distance down the street from my apartment had a copy of Marcus’s novel.

Which brings me to Sam’s narrative. He is his own worst enemy. Sam is Jewish and he tells us he practices a secret form of Judaism, which description brilliantly combines elements of science fiction with superstition. The significance of this early revelation pays plot points later but also serves to put us in mind of the kind of person Sam is in the story. He’s secretive, methodical, quiet, suspicious, and patient. The nature of his particular brand of faith requires a lack of comprehension and a singularly personal perspective. No one within this sect is allowed to talk about his faith with anyone else, including and especially family members and spouses/children. Though Sam and Claire both tend their secret devotions together as husband and wife they never once speak of what they hear or experience spiritually with each other. For Sam this kind of faith and life is what’s expected and we learn he’s accepted it. The downside that he rarely acknowledges is the gaping distance that exists perpetually between him and his own family. He often excuses it away as the nature of marriage and of parenthood, and his talent for explaining away deeply problematic situations goes into overdrive when the language toxicity first strikes his home.

Language as the source of destruction, the weapon and means of annihilation, destroys the world, but Sam manages to persevere and even thrive in this new condition. He takes matters into his own hands early on to experiment on his daughter to determine the full extent of her destructive capabilities, while also testing remedies and defenses on himself and his wife. He believes these actions will save his family when what’s destroying them is the earlier lack of communication that has desiccated their bonds and prevented them coming together against this crisis.

The following passage struck me powerfully as I read, so I had to underline it in my library copy:


 
Suddenly all my readings of Derrida and deconstructionist theory came back from memory. Sam is writing about the secret sermons he hears broadcast over underground wires (it’s complicated, and never explained), but he’s also writing from the retrospective distance at the end of the book when the world is essentially doomed by language toxicity. The implication is staggering: language is not only self-defeating but it's destructive as well. But what chills me is he already believed this before words became literally deadly.

Later Sam links the cause of language’s destructive force to comprehension. It is the understanding of something being communicated which triggers the toxicity in the human body, making it sicker and sicker unto death. Only a language that communicates nothing, or that is incapable of being comprehended as communicating anything, would be safe. Thus it makes a kind of sense that children start out immune. They absorb, but they don’t process until later when their brains take shape and they develop true critical thinking skills. Sam tells us that even deaf people sicken at sign language or reading lips. This turns out to be great news for Sam because, already silent and secretive, he has always refused to face or understand the most basic needs and truths about his family or his relationship with them. He is unwilling to understand anything about his life or himself, and thereby he survives to the end of the book, outliving just about everyone else we meet along the way. Later acts damn him further, but it’s his failure as a father and husband that repulses me the most. His family was doomed from the beginning because he could not relate to them or understand their very basic needs and wants. They are ever mysterious to him as he is mysterious to himself, yet he cannot understand why they break apart as the world crumbles around them.

This resonates with me because of my own longstanding fear of being a father, in which I am unable to care for, understand, or communicate with my own child. Sam, at the end of the book, finally reflects on his role in Esther’s life and he comes to this line: “Fatherhood is perhaps another name for something done badly.” Despite the seeming confession here, Sam hardly takes responsibility for his poor parenting. In fact, opposite the next page he sees his reunion with his daughter after their long separation as the act that will redeem his fatherhood in her eyes, making his seemingly earlier self-awareness now ironic. This is poignantly underscored by the fact that the eighteen year old that Sam reunites with doesn’t resemble his daughter and he wonders briefly if she actually isn’t Esther at all, but just some random girl with the same color hair and somewhat similar shaped face. He ultimately rejects this suspicion, but the one way he could clarify beyond a doubt is denied him. He can’t ask her name without hurting her irrevocably. Marcus renders this brilliantly because I sympathize with Sam’s impossible dilemma while also despising him deeply.

I think about the family, friends, and loved ones in my life I’ve frightened, hurt, or alienated, and in all instances it comes back to the words I used. Sometimes I verbally lashed out due to anger or bitterness. Other times it was in my attempts to convince or cajole. The worst is always when I try to say what I think is the right thing but it instead only cuts sharper than if I had slapped them across the face. And of course there is what goes unsaid as well

But that’s where the book has been instructive. Language is dangerous, volatile. Possessing a Ph.D. in English, I should know better than most people the violence that language can wreck, not just politically and culturally, but on an individual level between people. I want to be heard and understood. I want to change what happens through my careful selection of words. Had I read The Flame Alphabet sooner, I would have learned what's really needed. More important than speaking is listening. More important than being understood is understanding. Words must invite, not assault. And knowing it now, comprehending it as it were, do I really grasp it or have I failed again by this attempt to articulate it?

Saturday, December 16, 2017

The Best American Short Stories 1991, edited by Alice Adams and Katrina Kenison


Short story anthologies are always a mixed bag, and anything claiming to be ‘best’ of anything makes the selection more dubious and worthy of skepticism. That being said, this post is concerned more with individual stories within the collection than the book as a whole for the purposes of ‘must read.’ However uneven an assembled grouping of stories (or poems, essays, or anything for that matter) may be there are always a few essential treasures to be found among the mediocre or the misfires.

I have read many editions of this anthology series before this installment. Below is the complete list in roughly chronological order of when I read each (not when each was published, obviously):

Best American Short Stories 2004 (BASS ’04 for short) ed. Lorrie Moore, Katrina Kenison*

BASS ’06 ed. Ann Patchett, Kenison

BASS ’07 ed. Stephen King, Heidi Pitlor

BASS ’01 ed. Barbara Kingsolver, Kenison

BASS ’10 ed. Richard Russo, Pitlor

BASS ’12 ed. Tom Perrotta, Pitlor

BASS ’14 ed. Jennifer Egan, Pitlor

BASS ’00 ed. E.L. Doctorow, Kenison

Which makes BASS ’91 the ninth edition I’ve read. I’ve got a big stack of others, new and old, to read yet, but big plans are on the horizon, so I won't get back into it until 2019. I’m not dedicated to reading as I used to be. I remember lazy summers where it seemed all I did was read, but those days are long gone. My life is full now with responsibility, people I work with and care about, and numerous distractions every bit as enticing as sitting down with a good book. At least with the Best American series I can tell myself that if I read one story a night then I can be done in 21 days, or three weeks (20 stories in each installment plus editors’ forwards/introductions). That’s not too bad since there are so many years to catch up on and a new edition comes out every year.

For the complete list of stories from ’91 I refer you to the Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_American_Short_Stories_1991

I’m interested in talking about only a handful that made me very glad to read the whole collection.

Kate Braverman’s “Tall Tales from the Mekong Delta” was the first story (aside from Rick Bass’s “The Legend of Pig-Eye,” but I’m partial to Bass) to really enthrall me from the start. The title is tricky, because I went in expecting one kind of story and getting a whole other kind completely. I had read Braverman once before though I can't recall her story now, but this one grabbed me and didn’t let me go. A woman in the wasteland of LA meets a character who I think is the prototype for the role Tom Cruise is played in American Made, and he sweeps her up in an improbable romance that is both sweet and dangerous. When I read this story I was almost two years out of a nearly 14 year relationship, so I was lonely and identified with the main character immediately. It’s one of those stories that caught me at the right moment, but it’s also paced brilliantly, there’s never a dull scene or line throughout, which is hard to do most of the time, I’ve found.

Robert Olen Butler’s “The Trip Back” is about a Vietnamese immigrant living in Louisiana with his family and he drives to Texas to pick up his wife’s uncle to come and live with them. Almost the entirety of the story is the main character in the car, first driving with the anticipation of meeting this important but long unseen relative, then driving back with him in the car, anticipating the incredibly significant reunion that will take place at home. Butler won the Pulitzer for the novel in stories that “The Trip Back” appears in, A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain. It’s easy to see why after reading this story. I’ve done more than my fair share of driving in my life, living so many years in the Southwest where you must drive everywhere, and the time spent in my head in the car I found to be rendered so marvelously in prose in this story. It’s a contemplative story, and it ends bittersweetly, so it was easy for me to love.

Charles D’Ambrosio’s “The Point” tells the story of a young teen who becomes the designated adult for his mother and her group of neighbors when they party and get too drunk to walk themselves home. The young main character has lost his father in Vietnam and so he is literally the man of the house now. It’s a coming of age story, but it’s told with an odd honesty. The details of feeling and fact throughout are all unusual and interesting, and the young teen has an opportunity for sexual experience that he doesn’t quite take advantage of, because the true denouement is tied to his grief over his lost father. It sounds like a bait and switch, and it kind of is, but D’Ambrosio is so confident in his characters and his story that it worked for me.

Millicent Dillon’s “Oil and Water” tells the story of a solitary young woman who goes to work at an oil refinery out in the middle of nowhere. She befriends men and women who work there in different roles, and ultimately she begins to open up a bit in her life, though she misses an opportunity for sex at the end of the story that points to something she lost in her past (and accounts for where we found her at the beginning of the story). The charm of the story is in the main character’s bravery to change her life into something she cannot possibly imagine, and then make the best of it. So many of these stories I loved best have been about lonely characters who either deal with their solitude or work to change it, and so they affected me more at this point in my life than they might have at another time. Maybe that’s another thing wrong with anthologies. They collect stories that would all be best at different points in your life, but simply can’t all connect if read at once straight through.

Alice Munro’s “Friend of My Youth” was the last great story I read. Munro, like Updike (who also appears in this edition) is a staple of the Best American series, and it’s rare to come across a year where one or the other is not present. The story is framed as a narrator remembering her mother’s young adulthood before marriage living with a family on a farm and befriending a middle aged spinster who we come to find has been done wrong throughout her life, first from her sister and then her sister’s husband. Of course the narrative is constructed, from memory, correspondence, and some useful invention, like most history has been, and the result is magnetic. The narrator shatters the narrative at the end talking of telling the story as a story in any number of ways, and the reflexivity adds another whole layer to what has happened and what we actually know, if anything. It’s one of the more technically adventurous and rewarding of Munro’s stories that I’ve read, and also satisfied a love I have of ‘historical fiction’ as it’s known in various guises across genres. I can't wait to read her collection for which this story provides the title.

A few notable stories I left out include the aforementioned Bass story, Leonard Michaels’ “Viva la Tropicana,” Siri Hustvedt’s “Houdini,” David Jauss’s “Glossolalia,” Lorrie Moore’s “Willing,” and Mikhail Iossel’s “Bologove.” I had read the Michaels and Moore stories before, so while excellent, they weren’t new experiences. Iossel’s story was another loner, this time behind the iron curtain, who is making the best of life before he gets out. “Glossolalia” is about a father having a breakdown and how it deeply affects his son, with a crying scene that resonated all too well with me. Hustvedt’s story was amazing, but so disheartening to read that I was profoundly depressed after reading it. It worked too well. You should probably read it anyway.

I am ashamed to say I also enjoyed Updike’s story. I am weak, and I'm sorry.

*A note on the editorial structure of this anthology series: There is a series editor responsible for reading an insane amount of short fiction for the year and then narrowing the list down to 100 top choices. The year’s guest editor then reads these 100 (with the series editor reading along a second time) and chooses 20 to include for the volume. It sounds both like a dream job to me and also one of the most exhausting tasks imaginable. Both Kenison and Pitlor are writers with families and lives on top of this Herculean effort every year and so I am humbled by their hard work every time I sit down to read one of these books. And I will continue to do so as long as I can. The very first edition I read has my favorite short story of all time, where I discovered it: Sherman Alexie’s “What You Pawn, I Will Redeem.” While I never love every story in a BASS, I do know that I will always find one or more that I’ll never forget, and that’s not something you can count on when you sit down with just any book.