| A Review of: In the Place of Last Things by Eric MillerMichael Helm's In the Place of Last Things is a good novel. It not
only provokes thought, but it also sustains thought well beyond its
conclusion. I say this despite the fact that I have never thrown a
punch in all my adult life or picked a physical fight-violence is
as alien to me as it is familiar to Helm's protagonist, the 230-pound
Russ Littlebury. Helm gets the reader inside the mind of a man whose
strong intellect cannot suspend a reflex toward the exercise of
force, force at least temporarily conceived of as righteous.
Littlebury possesses brains, and has refined those brains in the
academic study of philosophy. Philosophy, sometimes very elliptical
philosophy, repeatedly glosses an elementary theme of Helm's book:
"Men being stupid together"-men drinking, men cheating,
men brawling, men inflicting diverse pain. Tara Harding, with whom
Littlebury has had an affair, puts the matter plainly: "I love
men, and I don't mean to be essentialist, but the numbers mean
something The testes make you want to hurt things, it's a trend
throughout the species Not to overstate it, you are all about
hitting and fucking. For part of every day I wish you'd all go to
hell." These bald words, from a letter Tara writes to Littlebury,
point up a weakness in Helm's book: it fluctuates between the
imponderable and the schematic, like the discipline of philosophy
itself. If the character, Littlebury, succumbs to bouts of violence,
then the book in which he appears is, as though afflicted by a
parallel debility, prone to short seizures of self-explication. The
particularized persuasiveness of the story overcomes these spots
of glibness, which only transiently short-change the novel's nuance
and stall its momentum.
As In the Place of Last Things begins, Russ Littlebury has entered
a private hell, a plausibly masculine hell: his beloved father Mike
has died. It is Mike's decline and death that have concluded Russ
Littlebury and Tara Harding's romance. Littlebury cannot integrate
the small Saskatchewan town from which he originates with Tara
Harding or her milieu-she moves in a Toronto world of educated,
optimistic and somewhat nave leftist activism. Littlebury admits
to himself, "He measured all others and himself against his
father, and he and they together fell short." Who was this
exemplary Mike Littlebury? A big man who "used to really raise
hell"-a man whose body a German bullet scarred in the Second
World War. Mike is also a man who sincerely converted in mid-life
to the Christian faith, earning admiration in the Christian community
of both the United States and Canada. Once the reader absorbs the
facts of Mike Littlebury's life, the character begins (without
forfeiting his overall plausibility) to seem a partial emblem of
his nation in his time: strong, reckless, a touch brutal, marked
by participation in the Second World War, reforming earnestly to
achievable virtue. He is the bruiser who aspires, belatedly but
successfully, to a populist version of Judaeo-Christian goodness.
His death may signify the end of a special phase of Canadian striving,
rough-edged but public-spirited.
No wonder Russ Littlebury feels that he cannot aspire so high.
Having in one episode induced an "oxygen debt" through
hyperventilation, perceiving that this state results in something
physiologically akin to religious exaltation, Littlebury admits
that although he "had no faith in God, he did have faith in
faith." This faith Russ has derived from observing his father.
Mike's son Russ may himself embody a definite Canadian demographic-the
offspring of those who tried to develop a practicable version of
the welfare state in the aftermath of the Second World War, a
generation that does not believe as wholeheartedly as its parents
in a supreme being; such a belief often encourages the pursuit of
political ideals against worldly opposition. Tara Harding offers
the necessary complement to Russ and Mike: she is described as
"mixed race," "the skin dusted a half-shade darker
than [Russ's] own, a slight kink in her short hair." Her
upbringing was considerably more privileged than Russ's. She is
trilingual and bisexual. She inhabits the Canada of official and
unofficial multiculturalism, as something of a secular crusader.
Her motive force is not religious conviction, but a measure of class
guilt.
In his 2002 essay collection When Words Deny the World, Stephen
Henighan decries with variable justice the capitulation of Canadian
writers to what he terms "Free Trade Fiction." Henighan
censures the willingness of certain practitioners, such as Anne
Michaels, to locate their novels in a realm where history dissolves
into metaphor and Canadian realities vanish before the presumed
ethical and aesthetic superiority of other places and other times.
In the Place of Last Things is a NAFTA novel with a difference, a
difference of which I imagine Henighan would approve.
After Mike's death, Russ undertakes to drive his Aunt Jean to
Arizona; his father Mike used to perform this seasonal service.
Russ's adoptive brother Skidder comes along for the ride. In Montana,
the mnage stops at the Bollins household-Christians inspired by
Mike's example. Grant Bollins's 17-year-old daughter Lea reveals
that she has had a clandestine affair with one Jack Marks. This
Jack Marks apparently feigned a faith healing in the hopes of
captivating just such a young woman as Lea-he is the kind of character
about whom Lynn Crosbie might write, a man who enters a girl's
imaginary world with the aim of penetrating her body, bruising her
heart and abandoning her. Michael Helm prevents the reader from
identifying Marks directly with the United States: "A lying
heartbreaker, prone to self-reinvention. Described one way, Jack
Marks was an American trope, but the unmythologized, actual person
was simply a candidate for a thundering comeuppance." The
parallel Canadian myth would discover in Russ Littlebury the diffident
but ultimately effective vindicator of Lea's virtue-a virtue about
which she seems little concerned. She wants Jack Marks back, and
enlists the giddy Skidder as her accomplice in an attempt to track
her ex-lover to Texas. The way the story plays out, Russ Littlebury's
intervention in the life and affairs of Jack Marks remains permanently
ambiguous.
In Skidder, Russ Littlebury's adoptive brother, Michael Helm perhaps
presents the reader with another personification of Canada-chronically
juvenile, a hoser, a hick, a loser, the sort of person who watches
cartoons in an ill-heated disaster-zone of a house while eating a
stack of pancakes saturated in maple syrup and wondering sincerely
whether the cartoon characters by which he is fixated are intended
to be human or animal. Skidding is easy to do in Canada, on winter
highways. Skidder even skids between realms: despite his silliness,
he shows a serious affinity for the realm of beasts. His puzzlement
over whether a cartoon character is human or animal gains greater
resonance when, in the miasma of an American tavern toilet, he
speaks up, somewhat surreally, for the vanishing wolf and the
expropriated Indian. His closeness to the aboriginal is purged of
sentimentality by those traits of his that render him an unmistakable
fool-no holy fool, either. Predictably, Skidder and Lea's quest for
Jack Marks fails. Littlebury alone follows Marks into Mexico.
Here, whether consciously or not, Michael Helm completes a triptych
of NAFTA. Mike and Russ and Tara and Skidder compositely body forth
an idea of Canada, a Canada variously noble, deluded, disappointed,
ludicrous; Jack Marks and the Bollins family-a con man and assorted
believers-comprise complementary elements of U.S. society. Jack
Marks has ventured into Mexico, and Russ Littlebury follows him,
ostensibly to deliver a letter from Lea. He observes the criminal
milieu into which Marks has led him: "With all its downscale
locales, its beater cars and frayed clothing, its mean adherence
to the misfit type, there was something not entirely real about the
world of these men. The dramatics were so cheap and badly stylized
they belonged now to rerun cop shows on television. You looked at
Marks and his friends and thought they were headed for a bad ending
by the top of the next hour." Russ Littlebury himself almost
comes to a bad ending in Juarez; with his strength-part of his
genetic patrimony-he hurts some Mexicans who assume his complicity
with Marks, and he realizes "the damage is not redressable."
Perplexed, moody, Littlebury, like many Canadians abroad, is half
criminalized by his incomprehension of the ways of a foreign world.
Michael Helm's novel concludes, it is arguable, with an equivocal
moral: all gains are ill gotten, yet they may notwithstanding retain
their status as gains.
It should be said that Helm often writes beautifully, as when,
succumbing to the effects of a spiked tequila, Russ Littlebury
experiences an efflux of memories:
"He saw his boyhood dog on a river island tugging at the
skeleton of an enormous sand crane until it reared up as if to lift
off. The heel of his uncle's hand punched the throttle on an old
truck in procession on the unimproved cemetery road with the stones
scattering against the undercarriage as he remembered hiding in the
machine shed with his hands over his ears as the hail spent its
full worth against the steel roof. Dimeless before bakery sweets
and inside the case the hand of a woman who let him look but only
teased she'd sneak him a taste At the front of an early schoolroom
the queen's photoportrait sitting high above the alphabet with
Canada in pink on a map of the world until the forty-ninth became
a sickle ooze of blood where the fallen drainpipe sliced the lifeline
in his palm."
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