| A Review of: Learning to Swim by John OughtonLarry Lynch is a New Brunswick writer with one novel out. In this,
his first collection of short stories, where the protagonists are
fairly ordinary men, he alternates between short, almost sketchy
tales and longer ones which have the density-and sometimes the
complexity-of aspiring novels. There's another tension in the stories
which keeps them interesting. First collections often reveal a
writer's literary influences, and Lynch seems to have one foot
solidly in the pool of realism, and the other in the somewhat airier
world of magic realism, where almost anything can happen. He writes
with an assured, economical style throughout, but the flavour of
the fiction changes from story to story.
The first story, one of the longer efforts, is "The Rope",
and it conveys more about the realities of pig farming than most
city readers will want to know. But, to its credit, it's also the
story of a family unhappy in its own way, with an enigmatic, alcoholic
father, a suicidal grandfather, a supportive mother, and sons who
leave as soon as they can and rarely return. While this is a fairly
grim read, the writer's sense of detail and incongruity keep it
from being unbearable: after the protagonist, known only as "the
boy" is discovered holding the rope with which Grandpa did the
deed, the mother "covered her mouth with a trembling hand. A
lemon square and some macaroons lay in the dirt where they had
fallen." The next story puts an amusing twist on the same theme
of the dubious father, but this time, instead of a bottle, he is
identified with a dummy, "Buddy", with whom he used to
perform a ventriloquist act. Buddy speaks the truths that his owner
can't.
The two longest, and most novella-like, stories are also the most
impressive. The title story weaves a narrative about a middle-aged
writer taking his son to swimming lessons (and starting an affair
with the teacher) together with a story he is working on-about a
writer. These passages includes notes about the process, which
sometimes amuse: "...Blow Job Blow Job - stereotypical male
fantasy? What would Margaret A. say about all this?" This kind
of postmodern writing-within-writing is by now a well-worn conceit,
but Lynch keeps it fresh with interesting twists and details, as
well as the occasional image that draws all the disparate threads
together. This is a skillful meditation on writing, parenting,
loving and ageing.
The second of these two extended successes, "Topography",
concerns a Toronto man living with a woman bodybuilder who volunteers
to help mudslide survivors in a Latin American country. This is the
landscape of magical realist fiction, and here the fantastic elements
are also a sexual fantasy, in which silent women straddle the
protagonist while they watch a movie together. Oddly, this story
seems a bit awkward while it is in more or less home territory, and
more assured in the exotic setting. But it has some compelling
moments, and a good balance of tragedy and pleasure, rather like
life itself.
The weaker stories in the collection suffer from showing their
influences too obviously. The more sustained of the two, "The
Weight of a Blind Dog", draws on sources that include Gabriel
Garcia Marquez (the setting is even called "Garcia") and
fables. A blind dog that never ages lives in a town that never
changes, and which hardly anyone ever leaves. Here the elements
of the fantastic don't add up to a gripping narrative, and it ends
up mired in reality, rather than levitating into surprise. The brief
fiction "Absolutes" will ring bells for anyone who has
worked in a factory, but its surprise ending carries a scent of
Kafka. Unlike that paranoid master's works, this one doesn't quite
know when it has said just enough.
On balance, there are enough strong stories and moments in this
collection to confirm that Gaspereau Press chose a writer worthy
of the exquisite production given this volume. In these days of
cost-cutting and endangered small presses, it's a pleasure to feel
the heft of a book whose design and construction recall the early
days of Coach House Press and Press Porcpic. With an unusually large
font, narrow columns, laid paper, and tasteful use of drop caps
and other typographical effects, Learning to Swim is a pleasure
to read for its tactile qualities, as well as its stories.
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