| A Review of: The Opium Lady by Lyall BushThe best short story writers curve their art around suggestion. The
plume of smoke runs in two directions, too-back down the chimney
into the troubled house, and drifting up into the blue erasure of
the sky. Length can vex the balance: longer tales gravitate to the
moral density of the novel, whose scale demands more than than wispy
suggestion; shorter stories shrink into anecdote or haiku, only
rarely finding the controlled angina of a Beatles song. (I'm thinking
of "Eleanor Rigby".) The great writers of the short story,
from Poe to Chekhov to Joyce and Borges, thread character, scene,
scenario and desire onto a few social facts and fabricate work with
the lustre of a blueprint: imaginative fruition that still points
to a world elsewhere. Joyce's stories of decision and delusion in
Dublin imagine an Ireland with a dire, dying glow. Edgar Allen Poe's
tales of the uncanny and of furious detection show us how the Old
World's ghosts are re-purposed in the gloaming forests of the New.
Writers who don't account for this thistledown tend to tell stories
without much valence, as people in English departments used to say
in the '80s. Jonathan Bennet's and Joanne Soper-Cook's new collections
of stories, different as they are from one another, share this echo
problem. Both are able writers, but neither gathers together a
narrative with any of the ambition of, say, Chekhov's "The
Lady with the Dog", which begins as a story of self-absorbed
travellers having an affair and only gradually takes on nuance and
movement, to the point that the fear that Chekhov captures on the
last page is exquisite. A few scattered sentences about the sea,
about steam blowing out of a Moscow dining club, convey the wrenching
feeling of ice and despair inside a life-changing decision. These
moments, and a certain drifting movement, are the story's genius.
In Joanne Soper-Cook's new collection of stories we see a fair
number of virtuoso turns, the main one being her use of old snapshots
to set each story on its trajectory. In an author's note in the
back she thanks friends in Boston and family members in Canada for
sending snapshots her way. We know, then, if we doubted our eyes,
that the photos at the top of each story are found artifacts, some
the strange existential glimmer-images you come across in flea
markets or under the lids of piano benches in your own house-the
frozen gaze of dolls in the images, the natural effluvia of the
20th century's predilection for making objects of everything,
including experience. A few minutes' stop on the highway, an hour
on the beach shuttles over the years into pictures that seem marbled,
picked.
I like that each story evolves in some organic way from the photographs
that have been reproduced, jauntily askew, near the titles. Each
narrator in turn thinks through the pictures, imagining conflicts
and conversations just outside the frame. Then following one or two
slower, essay-like paragraphs about the faces and bodies we are
suddenly greeted with lives twitching, abloom, moving backwards in
time from the picture.
Much of the work feels both impressive and thin. The stories have
a parlor trick quality about them because of the pictures, which I
think generate a writerly problem: they say both much more, and
much less, than words do. Beyond that, they are solid souvenirs in
a way that words aren't, and indeed the two media push and pull on
each other far more than Soper-Cook's village-historian narrators
allow. Glance at the photographs as you read and you might wonder,
as I did, why the narrators chose to talk about characters when the
photographs so often also took in the crackling, random world: a
strange floating past of unmown grass, overcast sky, a queer slant
of sun. Halfway through the collection, when the narrative routine
was established and promised not to break, I found myself longing
for something less attached than these stories-less bounded to the
people who are, after all, despite being forgotten or discarded,
part of some historical record still. There are other
Wittgensteinian/ontological questions the narrators leave out, but
which form our ultimate fascination with old photographs: who are
these people, beyond the things that happened to them in their
lives? What happened to them in their random, stray thoughts? Where
are their thoughts now? Photographs are about the fact that is not
there and the fact that is, to steal a line from Wallace Stevens,
and the mystery is rarely solvable or narratable.
The stories that stand out-"The San", the end of
"Definitely Somewhere", "Bessie"-work because
they don't smother their characters in detail but instead let
weather, mood, the strange music of hot days set the tone. At the
end of "Bessie", which begins with the photo of a child
from the 1940s and follows her as she copes with her mother's polio
and some intrusive images of dirty water, decomposing leaves, septic
tanks, the narrator lingers on her own snapshot of the child, who
has been wishing for a clean world: Her mother is pinning laundry
on the line, a clean swath of white against the warm September sky.
Her father is in his weekend clothes, on his hands and knees on the
ground with a shovel, joking and laughing with Bessie's mother. A
small part of Bessie wonders what they have to smile about, but
this part of her is forced away by the rest, which insists upon
this scene of normalcy. And indeed, when her parents move to greet
her it really is the same as always. She has succeeded in mastering
an elusive magic. She knows how to elude the probing of her conscience.
She has learned how to fool herself.
The abject images of the story up to now crowd these sentences, but
the sheer skill of the concluding lines-holding this vision in,
keeping the dirty world out-can leave you smiling at the art.
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