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The Many by Wyl Menmuir

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11 thoughts on “The Many – Wyl Menmuir

  1. 1
    “…waiting to feel the boat grounding through the soles of his boots.”
    Down to the boots, down to the boats…
    As the boats come in, I am taken out by this text, my own boat upon its evocative tenor of tide, I sense, as I am introduced to Ethan, this fisherman, with dreams or nightmares of diminishing but not fully depleted fish stocks, dreams, too, about Perran, a sadly-told loss of his wheelman with that name, whose house now seems to have been taken over by a suspected ‘emmet‘ called Timothy … and, beyond that, the days’ hauling and gutting, the pattern of container ships against the pattern of diminished fishing boats…
    Yes I am pulled in already by these entrancing seeds of a story but somehow ‘seaed’, too, with some truth of occupation and environment. I shall try eke out my reading reactions to this text, without being a spoiler of its rhythms or substance of plot.
  2. 2
    “Maybe this will become an obsession he can cultivate, a story that others will tell about him.”
    We now see the area through the eyes of Timothy the emmet, with our being now in sympathetic liaison with him – which is a striking change of perspective from seeing him in the previous chapter through the hostile eyes of the outlying village and its inhabitant Ethan. Apparently, Timothy has bought this rundown house through a diffident Estate Agent in London, a house in this area where years before he once holidayed with his then new girl friend Lauren, now presumably his wife… I genuinely felt the inimical tides of that earlier holiday and the cold freezing swim he takes today.
    I no longer intend to itemise the plot in this real-time review but in future just give my reactions to more sizeable amounts of this engaging text, as I read it.
  3. 3 & 4
    “Where there are jellyfish, there are fish behind.”
    It seems appropriate to be reviewing this book with the Dreamcatcher or a Hawler. Fish mauled, hauled, half-dead. A “mutated haul”. And an obsessive glimpse of Ethan’s entropic, assumed fish-god world, self-stinging, self-harming almost. And his obsessive scrutiny of Timothy, as if the latter is at one moment some sort of curse and arguably the next moment some hook of reluctant beneficence. Distantly watching Timothy’s own form of gutting, removing Perran’s downtrodden belongings (from the house he has bought) into a a heap of used objective-correlatives, as it were. I try to catch, too, passing signals, as the book puts it. And the forces, for me, of now fishing’s assumed brexited downturn and lateral pollution by others. An enormously powerful text so far. Getting down to the book.
  4. 5 & 6
    “Above the beds, a small, gaudy painting of the Virgin Mary, all blues and golds, stares down at them with sad eyes from beneath her oversized crown.”
    Timothy in the present, as the locale’s outsider Guinea pig or emmet, around and with whom the locals circle or begin to fraternise, but even in his backstory, he himself is also somewhat dislocated, I feel, (not knowing whether it was for minutes or hours Lauren and he once stared at each other), dysfunctional, especially with his ship dream (that will stick in YOUR dream tonight, no doubt.)
    I think Ethan and Timothy will deserve each other, when or if in tentative interface! Even Timothy’s memories, let alone his dreaming, are dubious, like that much earlier holiday in this alienated locale with Lauren, with that uncertain rock they hugged on, and that Fawlty Towers type hotel…
    I am genuinely captivated. No, captured.
    (Death and the seaside?)
    “…and sees someone has slid an envelope beneath the back door and it stands out white…”
  5. A telling image that I have seen issued in connection with this exponentially, if still quietly, disturbing novel… You can taste its salt, and its greycoat woman as a Slythe type character – or a Lieutenant’s Woman of the brexited class?
    image
    7 – 9
    “…Timothy stands on the foredeck trying to find his legs.”
    A tugging at the reader with atmospheric fishing scenes of the Ethan-Timothy interface accreting from scratch. Zones of containing as well as container ships, blurred fishing regulations, seabirds, fishcatch buyers on the shore in packs, and the fishcatch itself of weird but presumably buyable ilk…a dreamcatch?
    And Ethan’s cloying backstory to rival that of Timothy, including a sepia photograph of a priest and a censer, one that approximates a male version of the lighthouse greycoat woman…?
    Later, a fish offering to be buried, almost a religious rite?
    Text teeming with such plotcatch, tractable to sieve and sort – and then try to lay out like a story’s audit trail, a laying out that would be a spoiler to lay out here, even if there is an as yet distinctive one to lay out at all.
  6. 10 – 13
    “…a net of sorts and, somehow, that he is starting to become caught up in its folds.”
    I think my review’s bait earlier netted something premonitory when I said this above about Timothy: ‘…at one moment some sort of curse and arguably the next moment some hook of reluctant beneficence.’ Though, ‘hook’ now sounds wrong. It sort of would have scarred the “lucky catch”, as Clem’s two word expression puts it.
    We now reach Timothy’s baiting the mood-changing Ethan into adumbrating Perran’s backstory, Perran who ended up more a Hawler of boats, as I hope to be a Hawler of books, helping haul the boats ashore. And we follow Ethan almost literally into the scene of this man’s backstory, now Timothy’s house to where his Lauren is soon to arrive, a house emptied of that earlier self and replaced with Timothy’s own self’s accoutrements?
    A feeling of the village’s scrawny whelks, Timothy’s own precariousness, “pulling up nothing from the water”…making “heavy weather”, but should we expect a storm instead? No spoiling by me of the eventual catch, I promise, subject to the generic precariousness of real-time reviews themselves.
    I am continuously captivated AND captured, no longer either-or. And I haven’t even told you half the story of this consuming text.
  7. 14 & 15
    Timothy’s mystic vision or delirious dream, and its aftermath … a landmark of sea fiction?
    Reminds me of the tenor of some scenes in the great John Cowper Powys fiction canon without that author’s ostentation of prose. Without his Tench.
  8. 16 & 17
    “He lies still and listens to the sounds in the house and wonders what more he will find changed in the morning, what more will be unfamiliar to him.”
    And I find that with this book.
    You need to be an obsessive reader, asking questions like a dog worrying at a bone. Not relenting as you really want to know the answer. I must take a boat hook at you, to safeguard a book hook, I guess. The book, you see, has got to the stage where you will spoil it if you ask the wrong questions about it and then have them answered, although I am not worried about divulging about the two sheep in the underground tunnel or the young woman come to inspect Perran’s house for decoration purposes, or whether she is a grown up version of the small girl throwing leaves over her parents in Timothy’s backstory with Lauren. You sort of find yourself actually becoming Timothy in this way, under scrutiny. By me. By that grey woman et al. But don’t take my word for it. It is a book very difficult not to spoil. Until you read it, as I am reading it, and you find that you need not have worried because it is impossible to spoil … as long as you are patient and don’t keep asking me questions about it till it ends and then you will see, as in Perran’s house, what unfamiliar things or changes had yet to emerge.
  9. “One especial thing that struck his pragmatic and literal mind was the extraordinary difference between this murderous-looking flood-water and all other bodies of water he had ever seen or known. The brownish-grey expanse before him was not like the sea; nor was it like a lake. It was a thing different from every other natural phenomenon. A breath of abominable and shivering chilliness rose up from this moving plain of waters, a chilliness that was more than material, a chilliness that carried with it a wafture of mental horror. It was as if some ultimate cosmogonic catastrophe implying the final extinction of all planetary life had commenced.” – John Cowper Powys
    —————
    18 – 20
    “Ethan feels if he picked one of the lines up, he could pull the sea and sky towards him.”
    I shall leave it to you to decide what is dream and what is not dream here, what indeed might be dream within dream, or a different dreamer dreaming your dreams. My view is that there are few dreams here, only truths. Whatever the case, the ensuing unfamiliarities and changes, and watchers watching whom, are manifold. There is no way to convey this reading experience other than by your reading it. If it is not hawled out from among the many, then it should be thrown back into the sea of literature whence it came, and whence it will emerge again, sooner or later, even greater. (But I have more pages to read, with, predictably, more unpredictable tides of text yet to unfold.)
    ——————
    “There’s something in us that’s the same, that belongs to us all; and I’ll tell you what it is. It’s the Future being born in us — It’s the Future tearing us, breaking us, bruising us so that it may be born.”
    – John Cowper Powys (possibly his prediction of some form of brexiting, a political and social phenomenon that occurred after ‘The Many’ was written and published.)
    (The two JCP quotes, as word-musical counterpoint, are from ‘The Glastonbury Romance’.)
  10. 21 – 24
    “…he can feel beneath his fingertips the scars left by the sand the wind carries with it from miles and miles away, from another country or another continent.”
    Having finished reading this book, I have no reason to withdraw anything I have written above about it. And I now issue a patchwork of further thoughts without breaking the book’s confidence. A series of asides. Carwreck or shipwreck? Great Hope, the Grey Mary as the Many, “a faded plaster Virgin Mary”, the Great Hope vessel as Powys’ holy grail, or baby’s cradle, a sacrificial offering, the recurrent question “Who is Perran?”, to which we receive one possible devastating reply, and then there is a funeral director to die for, and the cracks breaking or brexiting from the sea, flowers given away, those flowers of the sea or its desiccated living fruit? “the dull roar of the motorway like surf on the sand”… TImothy and Ethan and you the reader: but who is looking out of whose eyes? Whose streets straiten, whose house morphs or screams?
    This is not a dislocated or dysfunctional book, but it is one that skilfully conveys such facets of existence through the means of its own existence as such, so it is worthy of listing as a prized inhabitant of my Dysfunctional Room of literature here.
    end
        


A Twist in the Eye – Charles Wilkinson

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A Twist in the Eye – Charles Wilkinson

charles

My previous reviews of Charles Wilkinson‘s work are linked from HERE.

Egaeus Press MMXVI
My previous reviews of books from this publisher are shown HERE.

When I real-time review this collection, my comments will appear in the thought stream below…

16 thoughts on “A Twist in the Eye – Charles Wilkinson

  1. Something I found myself saying on Facebook today regarding the receipt of this book: “Yes, I have long thought CW’s work to be highly important in our field. I met him a few years ago, and was delighted to learn that he went to the same university as me, and we may even have overlapped there, without knowing!”
    I first met Mark Samuels around 1987, the man who wrote the introduction to this book.
    Those are my caveats.
    ———————-
    RETURNING
    Not known for hyperbole, I can say with some certainty and expectation of being believed, that this story is probably the saddest, but equally most uplifting, story I have ever read. Well, that is true today.
    But that may be due to the circumstances of my own life, having once driven back some great distance because my wife suddenly told me that she believed she had left the iron on. The recurrent routines of this couple in the story, their holiday each year beautifully described, their lifestyle and habits, their honest, if entropic, love for each other. And when he glimpses on holiday…
    You know, I can’t say anything else about the story without spoiling it.
    It is absolutely perfect, as it is, without any further need to recognise within it anything else that is recognisable.
  2. THE HUMAN COSMOS
    “…with the wide blue light of the Norfolk coast shining in his eyes for a week afterwards.”
    Transcending with a very British sadness or a minor sect’s faith the poignancy of age and retirement in this and the previous story – a younger person’s Norfolk break, with the sun there, being better than the sun here? But is it the same sun? Also this is another story of glimpses and re-glimpses of a figure that either IS you or will affect you with its off-kilter accoutrements.
    This is a story that contains pub talk about Swedenborg! And a retiring jeweller, seeing the exterior of his working place as if for the first time in detail, ready to mould gold into a man-shaped universe that becomes him, a time of life with the losing of things like deeds, and keys, a bit similar to mistakenly leaving the iron on or forgetting whether you left it on. Uncomfortable with more than a handful of minor typos in this story, mostly obvious omitted words – omitted or forgotten? Or a twist in the reading eye?
  3. I have read and reviewed the next story here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2015/10/17/years-best-weird-fiction-volume-two/#comment-5676 and this is a copy and paste of what I said about it:
    ————————————-
    HIDDEN IN THE ALPHABET
    “Their dancing steps in the brilliant white water foaming about their feet.”
    Since first encountering his fiction in Theaker’s Quarterly Fiction a few years ago, Wilkinson has joined the ranks of my favourite living authors. And this intriguing and stylistic work has confirmed such a feeling in me. It has the methodically deadpan, but poetic, triangulations of detailed viewpoints and Pinteresque allusions (akin to similar effects in what I consider to be an overlooked fiction masterpiece from 1968 entitled ‘Report on Probability A‘ by Brian Aldiss). It tells of an ‘auteur’ and the gradually evolving past when his son and niece were still young and there are insinuations of the film he took of them together. Today, in later time, negotiating his inscrutable accident outside a hotel, his broken spectacles, visits (by himself and his niece separately) to an optician, and his projected reunion or reconciliation with his son. Nothing of it fully crystallises but it would have been an anti-climax if it had done so. The optician’s eye-test cards with alphabets of letters evoke writerly considerations of wordplay such as anagrams and assonances. Things that my reviews seem to thrive on! A shriving at the altar (auteur) of the past? Also resonances with the concept of cousin-with-cousin births needing changelings or foundlings amid the waterside or sea-foam love, sex and death that seeps in from the rest of this book. Seabirds like flowers behind a window.
    “What the film will never remember was how fine the sand was, silkily running through her toes.”
  4. LINE OF FIRE
    “: in every case, the left eye was damaged: one had an iris that was faint–”
    As I have mentioned before, I have suffered with a similar form of iritis in my left eye, recurrently for most of my life. As did James Joyce. Whiteness turning into a line of fire. So this story of a highly absurdist Aickmania meant a lot to me in that respect. Another twist in the eye.
    Coming, as a result of his Aunt’s bequest, from the east coast to a place he has never visited before but it is a town he is expected by the strange locals to remember everything about, where a river seems to divide some area of sense from that of nonsense, with the state of death similarly divided then blurred, and legality and custom also blurred…a summer house locked, house plaques missing, boys full of hatred and reproach… Well, let me let you read it and then let me know what you think. Only sufficient time will be able to let me judge whether it is as memorable as this book’s first story turned out to be. An acquired taste.
  5. IN HIS GRANDMOTHER’S COAT
    “Wyll went into his grandmother’s room and took off all of his clothes.”
    This is a genuinely disturbing story, with a twisted timbered house, a husband who spends all his time chopping wood, an older child or young adult so-called Wyll (I am coincidentally also real-time reviewing at this time a novel by an author with the forename Wyl, the first time I had encountered this name), subtle eroticisms, a special tutor named Miles or Myles Brampton, a poem etched under a carpet, and minks that (aptly?) are sent skinny dipping… And much more, many objective-correlatives and disarming strangenesses in this text that gradually merge into a nightmarish plot’s foundling or changeling or lostling gestalt.
    “Noli me tangere.”
  6. COLD PLATE
    A sharp and scythed philosophical fantasy of bodily “agony and joy” in “dreadful rhythm”, comprising or compromising Platonic Forms and a relationship where the woman needs the furnished new and unsullied, the man the antique and decorative, with feet sharpened.
    Taken to its bottom bone this is a ready-made wordspread of viands, that if I described it further would spoil the splendid ending. Can be read on various levels. My level perhaps only exists in my own head. Chasing the noumenon or the optimum eschairtology.
  7. I have read and reviewed the next story here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2014/01/09/theakers-quarterly-fiction-46/#comment-1624 and below is a copy and paste of what I said about it then:
    —————-
    Petrol-Saved
    I first encountered the sartorially stylish prose-work of this author in a TQF edition and it has become a firm favourite reading of mine ever since. This story is more idiosyncratic than how I remember his previous stories being, a cross between the Welsh scenario of a Rhys Hughes (“After a month, the westerlies were packed away for a week, stored safely out at sea where the worst gales blew.”) and a strange township from a Robert Aickman and ‘The League of Gentlemen’ and an old-fashioned Ionesco or BS Johnson form of absurdism plus a no doubt pure Wilkinsonny element, here concerning accretive cyborgism. It all seems to blend well and the ending is strikingly good. It tells of a Mr Tipley (who becomes Tipton for some reason on two occasions) and there is also a decided connection with this book’s black ribbon and cryology engineering ethos.
    “…he could touch the truth of the weather, feel the words emerging from blindness clearer than anything he could ever see.”
  8. A WORLD WITHOUT WATERCRESS
    “In the hospitality trade, one is threatened every day. My motive for shutting the Hotel for a season is to have time to form an accurate picture of the nature and extent of my property.”
    This is a classic story, one which gives me the feeling that I have discovered a lost story by historically a favourite writer of mine, a story that no one knew existed and that now excels all that author’s others, which would be saying something!
    The main character is the exponential hotel and its environs of river and ferryman’s cottage, with a strong trick-of-the-light and morphing genius-loci and, just as one example, a seasoned back bar to die for.
    The owner is oppressively paranoiac on behalf of himself and his hotel, with one loyal worker in a silver suit, but others (one in particular called Mallison whose name evokes horror for me, now, as has always the name Millar), characters who seem to be besieging the hotel owner psychologically and, sometimes, in at least inferred bodily person. An aura of encroaching illness, too, that old wive’s tales might cure, and to call anything inanimate as feminine is anathema to him. Later, I wonder if the hotel itself is feminine, flauntingly flirtatious…?
    This is genuinely a disturbing story, but without losing this author’s absurdist mien, an absurdism that sometime works with, sometimes works against, such disturbing qualities, depending what is intended by each story, I guess.
    “Arseholes or watercress?”
  9. GOLD IN ASH
    “: the dogs he walked in the morning were not those he walked at night.”
    Worth reading this story just for that line. And a cloud of white butterflies as big as bats. And the later sound of one footstep. I am half-Welsh, by the way.
    A quirky theme and variations on a Welsh myth, involving a death in a modern day Royle Family and the gold ring left on the corpse’s finger, inheritance machinations and events involving a couple’s suicide pact after one of them had already died.
  10. AN INVITATION TO WORSHIP
    “At dusk Emily heard an unnecessary key in the lock.”
    A few stories in this book (including this one) have been, for me, unnecessary when compared to the other necessary masterpieces of weird fiction in this book, and, because and in spite of this, I have ordered the author’s previous collection “The Paintree” from Amazon UK so that I can real-time review that, too, in due course. To half-worship at the altar of Wilkinson.
    This story is of a lady in London working for a public relations firm owned by a sort of ‘inbred’ Welsh family. As a result of sexual or absorption harassment from one of them at the firm, another at the firm allows her to escape to a refuge in outlying Radnorshire where one of the strange locals can’t be stopped from delivering fresh eggs to her, a man with a green tie and a reputation for chainsaws. Arcane hermaphroditism ensues. There are some amusing as well as worrying things in this text, and overall I felt harassed by it.
  11. I read and reviewed this before here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2015/04/07/strange-tales-v/#comment-4241, and below is a copy and paste of what I wrote about it then:-
    ———————
    THE INVESTIGATION OF INNOCENCE
    “…but the longing for connectivity was still there, a terrible ache.”
    A terrible ache, indeed. To gain innocence, is to lose my body’s frailties, I guess. It seems, via tattling (twittering on some grid that in our real world leads to all manner of GUILT?) that, here, in a world of INNOCENCE, of cyborg-honey and slick sex change, this story’s grid is one that brings us the positive poetics of familial terrorism’s nepotism and the politics of the bee-lovely hive mind. Beautifully written, immaculate, even the nastiness is just one side of perfection? Even the Unacceptables are accepted. I am still working at it, though.
  12. I read and reviewed this before here https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com/14592-2/#comment-8421, and below is a copy and paste of what I said about it then:
    ————————
    Choice
    “No friendship there, just the half-joy of collusion.”
    It’s getting boring – me keep saying: another gem. But this is another gem. Aickman-like, almost Lewis Carrollian, but what I sense to become eventually Wilkinsonian*, this story of a man who seems to be suffering iritis (I personally have suffered iritis intermittently since 1973: a very mysterious, rare, potentially serious eye illness) and who moves to a bungalow in the flatlands away from the bright coast, but a bungalow with a slope to echo the ‘architectonics’ of the rest of this book… Beset by characters that want to play games with him (noisy like the rumbling in the Harman), games such as a model railway (very telling in this book’s context) or conkers… very weird, but with a truth that will hang around, I’m sure. Schoolboyish, nightmarish… It has, for me, the light-sensitivity of reality’s layering level crossings…
    *this is another name to watch. I had the pleasure of hearing this author and other authors read from their stories at the recent launch of the book. I have earlier reviewed a story by Charles Wilkinson (‘Notes on the Bone’) HERE and he has one entitled ‘Night in the Pink House’ in my own edited anthology: ‘Horror Without Victims’.
  13. I read and reviewed this before here https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com/2013/09/02/theakers-quarterly-fiction-44/#comment-8842, and below is a copy and paste of what I said about it then:
    ———————
    A Lesson from the Undergrowth
    “…a set course Kant under his jacket;”
    Another elegant story of haunting and horror from a favourite writer of mine whom I have discovered only relatively recently but one who musters, I sense, a substantial hinterland.
    This is a haunting tale of the return of Neil to the large house – skirted by dual carriageways – where he grew up as the son of its caretaker. With the telling background of social divisions, we follow the battle between free-will and determinism as it blossoms from a series of the past’s memory-lists into a brush with thoughts of a sort of badger-culling, but not in the sense we accidentally know about in the news today, followed by facing one’s own mental car-crash of an AJ Ayer-esque Drogulus…
    [As an aside, I wrestled with calling ‘confectionary’ a typo for ‘confectionery’, but decided that strictly it wasn’t.]
  14. WATCHERS IN THE WOOD
    “He was quite young when he saw a ghost looking out from the grain of the sideboard in the sitting-room.”
    This is an intriguing, but, for me, confusingly staccato, if stylishly written, account of a Welsh township of mysterious strangers, one with dissimilar eyes, – general gossip in the fish and chip shop and elsewhere – leading to an expression of pareidolia or apophenia where you progress from merely imagining faces in sideboards to believing that there are souls in the inner ring-whorled ‘carpets’ of trees, even your own soul, I ask myself? All connected somehow to the onset of wind farms in the area and, maybe, eroticism with animals…
  15. HANDS
    “…enthralled in lucid East Anglian light, an enormous blue-vault sky arching high above.”
    …echoing some of the significant poignancy of this book’s first story, but this more a coda, a story of Peter, widowered and under health investigation, moving to this seaside place, but when we find him, the place is foggy, an ambiance very well felt and described and I was particularly intrigued by “…where everyone had been far above sea breath for a week.” An obliquity full of meaning, one that should have been in a poem. The house where he now lives has a hidden washroom and rumours of the couple who lived there, and the ensuing ghostly plot is both metaphorically and literally touching.
    This book crackles with Wilkinson and, I have just realised, some of the mystic absurdism of one of my favourite writers: John Cowper Powys. Some true classics of weird aickmania and some engaging gewgaws. A definite characteristic pungency of literary flavour.
    end


    You’ll Know When You Get There – Lynda E. Rucker

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    10 thoughts on “You’ll Know When You Get There – Lynda E. Rucker

    1. THE RECEIVER OF TALES
      “Ruben’s fingers had looked like that as well, she recalls; only paint — instead of ink-stained.”
      I had a double take when I first read that, Rubens or Ruben, indeed, it is Ruben, her deep Platonic lover, this third person narrative in the name of Aisha (the Ayesha of the ‘She’ she fears she may become), so utterly third person singular, but she imprints herself as a first person singular round and round and upon the reader’s skin with neat homilies and wise saws of emotional modernity that become a rhapsody of weird fiction (Walters, Moraine, and many others?), weird fiction of the distaff that so perfectly populates the pain and pleasure of the weird-turning world today, this the ‘she’ with a ritual-sinuous tale of herself and Ruben, the painter, and his own ultimate self-harming that exceeded her own, and she takes and gives from all quarters of spear, distaff and vampire; we are all receivers of her tales, but only if you are the receiver tuned into the right channel do you travel it right…
      I feel with my real-time reviews, that I have managed to fine-tune my receiver to the optimum. And this work stays with me wherever I move that fine-tuning needle next upon my written-upon skin. You see, it is the only story featuring a chance hitchhiker given the immediate chance to actually drive the car (wherever that hitchhiker wants), and thus the only story giving a chance reader the chance to write it.
      You’ll know when you get there.
      “The modern world ensures your identity clings to you as surely as your fingerprints.”
    2. WIDDERSHINS
      “It was just an ordinary gate, and the other side was ordinary too.”
      Bearing in mind the American protagonist’s everpresent and explicit “trauma” at once losing, through emotional entropy, his beloved ready-made family, and now staying in a cottage in the wilds of Ireland, this is also the ordinary story it seems to be, and the rest of it is just his trauma-fed imagination?
      Whatever the case, I feel relieved that to transcend any curse of widdershins all you need to do is walk with the sun, the path the earth ever follows with or without your own contribution, thus cancelling out any path you shouldn’t have taken, any gate you shouldn’t have passed through. Even if it means stretching you against the grain between tree and tree to do it.
      “In the end, we all find ourselves in the same place.”
    3. THE HOUSE ON COBB STREET
      “…and one word distinguishable above the rest — her, her, her— and she never knew that three letters, a single-breathed syllable, could be weighted with so much hatred.”
      At first I feared this might be another stock documentary haunted house investigation. In many ways it is one, but not stock. It is probably the most genuinely frightening such story I have read. The documentary extracts, some disagreeing with the others, are interspersed with the narrative of a woman, a literature student teacher – and her husband who commits suicide quite out of predictable character. The nature of the horrors in the hatefully prehensile house cannot be given justice to here, and references such as Fuseli and the Ouroboros symbol merely distractions from something genuinely and irresistibly horrific that somehow lies beyond the text even if it is conjured up by that very text. The finale where she escapes into the presumably welcoming normal outside city is a masterstroke. Can you tell I like this story?
    4. WHERE THE SUMMER DWELLS
      “…and somehow regal despite it all.”
      An idyllic hot endless Summer memory, of ghostly train tracks, campfire horror stories shared, curses expected, lostling or even changeling inferred, these young people in- or post-backstory, in or out of confused or jealous love — and it did not seem to matter that I myself became confused by this work’s darkly entrancing theme and variations upon the Sourhern Gothic (please see my recent review of the complete stories of Flannery O’Connor), confused because I must be too old to follow such goings-on.
    5. WHO IS THIS WHO IS COMING?
      “What a funny place the world was, that this could be the most mundane of journeys for them and one of the most exciting of her entire life.”
      A darkly charming story. Fern, with a learned stoicism, travels from her native America to England, not only with a learned nostalgia for the stories of M.R. James but also one for the BBC productions of those stories in the 1970s, whose latter production sites she intends to visit, as she now travels with excitement, via Liverpool Street, and where I live along that rail line, towards the Norfolk coast. We learn a lot about her character, her dreary life back home, and now in the ‘signal box’ room at the inn, and the kindly-intended gentleman called Mr Ames who befriends her with his own Jamesian enthusiasm, but inadvertently deprives her of her aloneness of discovery. A very subtle character study of Fern by Fern, and how she summons the ghost of her ability to stay and not return. A ghost more frightening than she intends? You’ll know when you get there? (Possible spoiler here).
    6. I have read and reviewed the next story before here https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2013/11/02/the-burning-circus/#comment-1259 and I copy and paste below what I wrote about it then…
      ———————-
      A new day. And a new gestalt for the second half of this book?
      The Queen in the Yellow Wallpaper– Lynda E. Rucker
      “Each generation that came into possession of it made additions and architectural embellishments and what stands today is a sort of hideous discordant symphony of a house.”
      I love discordant symphonies! And I love this story (about a married couple gone to a house called Carcosa to care for the husband’s ‘sick’ sister), imbued as it is with many ‘comforting’ horror tropes (including Robert W Chambers’ ‘King in Yellow’ and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s ‘Yellow Wallpaper’ (the latter story often being used in academic feminist circles as a recommended text for study – a fact that resonates with some of this story’s themes)). Here it does not seem to matter that we are steeped in those potentially stereotypical horror tropes – the pleasure comes in this story from embracing them and their embracing you. Meanwhile, I sense this author is suspicious of the ‘avant garde’ in Art and Literature (something I have noted before, I think), yet whether by design or, more likely, by accidental synchronicity, the author makes her female narrator seem to become subsumed within the sick sister’s avant garde play being written around her, making her, the narrator, into the eponymous Queen herself? A sort of embrace, despite disgust, of the experimental (paradoxically within a seemingly formulaic horror story!) and the outré. This story really makes you think on several levels (as does the Gilman story in its own right).
      (Later) I apologise – the writer I was thinking about regarding suspicion of the ‘avant garde’ was Helen Grant, not Lynda E. Rucker. See my review of Grant’s ‘The Calvary at Banská Bystrica’ HERE.
    7. THE WIFE’S LAMENT
      Or mine? I don’t think this otherwise well-written story was written for the likes of me. It seemed contrived, with modern day romantic machinations, a heroine haunted by a wood down the end of the road and by pre-Roman Britain. Like the previous M.R. James inspired story (for me, far more enjoyable), it is an innocent abroad, an American woman in England, unsettled here not by Mr Ames but a strange woman in the wood. And by a wayward English husband and the woman next door. Not sure what else to say about it.
    8. THIS TIME OF DAY, THIS TIME OF YEAR
      “…back in the gentle chaos of the crowded family.”
      Rucker is often full of rhapsodies. Rhapsodies sometimes upon the edge of hard-consonantal near-rationalisation, also upon the soft edge of never coming back, of becoming attenuated, distaff-diaphanous…
      This is one such story, where I floated between the once durable sororal loving relationship, grown edgier since the older sister came back early from service in hard-consonantal Iraq and the younger sister almost disappointed that she can no longer ‘recognise’ the sister she once loved accompanying, despite the age gap. And the lakeside cabin their Uncle once built, where I guess the two of then now see a version of Rucker painting the rationalisation she sees below the lake’s surface, some small-town version of Suffolk’s Dunwich, from beneath whence unsalubrious church bells sound…?
      Who sinks to find the other? Ruck and rack or Josie and Ellen.
      Rhapsodic or near-rationalised with an old war’s attrition? A story that tugs you further beneath its own surface.
    9. THE HAUNTING HOUSE
      : remember that there was nothing that she had to get up for, and sink deeper Into the bed, deeper into sleep.”
      What I was, in hindsight, hinting at the end of the previous story review seems here to be apotheosised. One house sublet in another woman’s name, and a lifelong recurring dream of a house haunting her from the few days days before Christmas, a house, with landing and grandfather clock, straight out of an Elizabeth Bowen Christmas (my favourite writer ever – my house for her here) and I wonder if Rucker is in Bowen’s soul, or vice versa, like the synergy of these two houses or two realities? Bowen also had a version of a fractured modernity in her fiction alongside the haunting and the aloneness to be disrupted by an Ames or a woman in the wood, like the Oregon reality here, a bus journey on a whim, leading from the hard edge of dream unreal to the soft edge of dream real, or vice versa. The tantalisation of never knowing. Sublet by time’s clock on the landing or blocked by modern contraptions, only thinking back through all these stories might give some clue of the whence and the whither of a deeper rhapsody. You’ll know when you get there.

    10. I will now read for the first time the introduction by Lisa Tuttle and the book’s story notes. I trust they will give me more food for thought but, meanwhile, I leave you.
      end

       


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      A Natural History of Hell: Stories by Jeffrey Ford

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      15 thoughts on “A Natural History of Hell: Stories by Jeffrey Ford”

      1. THE BLAMELESS
        “Tom spotted a guy holding a beer, and went in search of.”
        The unspoken elision is perfect not only in the context but also for a book published by Small Beer, especially when Tom is told later by his wife, as mine often does, to go slow on it.
        Having felt a tinge of Updike, I suggest, from my berth reading this in the UK, that this is a fine satire upon American suburban people who, here, have rites-of-passage exorcism social occasions for their older children as they are shriven of what older children are often cursed with as far as behaviour is concerned, whether it is the devil’s doing or just plain nature. But is it a satire at all or a glimpse of some intrinsic truth demonstrated by its absurdism and stage religiosity and gibberese? I wish I had thought of exorcism parties for my own children all those years back. It may have absolved a lot of trouble.
        The story itself has an often dangerously near the bone hilarity of an exorcism party in this very enjoyable romp involving devilish extrusions from the daughter’s bodily parts, and a word-musically ‘dying fall’ ending to die for.
      2. WORD DOLL
        “‘My mind is scattered by age,’ she said and smiled.”
        A truly haunting, mythic-crafted discovery-by-fiction of an intrinsic truth that we all should already have known: the word doll. We see this discovery through the eyes of a natural born story-writer who drives his vehicle past various routine places of his route and then we suddenly see the sign through him, a sign for the ‘word doll museum’. We find out from the old woman he meets in connection with that sign that nobody has been interested in it for years; he is the first for ages, and thus so do we become interested by being co-readers of his writing, I guess. The word doll is in fact significantly connected, I feel, with the child exorcism rites of the previous story, a sort of lesson to keep the old children, or children old by being older in or from our past time, working in the fields, the word doll being a sort of counterintuitive distraction doll, a friend that helps them concentrate on the field work, if not sharing the work, even doing it themselves. Well, if I tell you more, it will spoil this story, especially if I tell you more of the old woman and what happens to her. It is a story that I feel I ought to have read before. It will become, perhaps, my own word doll, my fiction friend not field friend, one that may distract me from my own writing block that has lasted into the scattered ageing today of my second-childhood. If so, thanks to Jeff Ford (the explicit name of the story-writing character in the story). A wonderful work.
      3. THE ANGEL SEEMS
        “In the village square there were two enormous black cauldrons, simmering mucine and glifero, spices from the Far Islands.”
        This seems to be – and, to my naive eye, actually is – a Biblical apocryphal fable of an Angel, and his two Mastiff sled-helpers, who supplies an inimical protectionist policy towards a village and its inhabitants, creating sometimes impregnated staylings or changelings – and other mischief – for those whom he takes agreed ownership each year that his sway persists. The outcome of blood pits, more blameless extrusions and near mayhem is a fascinating and stirring scattershot of strangely divine influences – and I wondered if the surviving mastiff was the one who ate the mutton hand? Or was that me before writing this review? And can you tell this is another story I have thoroughly enjoyed?
        (Although distinctively discrete, this work, to my naive eye, SEEMS, too, to be in the wonderful weird literary tradition of the Ex Occidente Press canon, very nearly one hundred of whose books I have previously reviewed. And a seeming tinge of Rhys Hughes or vice versa?)
      4. MOUNT CHARY GALORE
        I read and reviewed this story before here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2014/06/24/fearful-symmetries/#comment-3172
        and my real-time reviews are intended to be first reactions after a first reading of a work, whether it requires a second reading or not to appreciate it fully.
        But I will say I have read it again and enjoyed it more in the context’s flavour so far of this collection. A growing upon me of mastiffs and magic hogs plus my own word doll’s sense of humorror gifted by Ford. When my children were small, their minor hurts always seemed to diminish when I pulled an invisible jar of magic ointment from under the couch for them to use.
      5. A NATURAL HISTORY OF AUTUMN
        “‘I intend to be in your book,’ he said and prevented himself from smiling.”
        This is a slippery story, with lies, then corrections of lies throughout (e.g. the pony that is corrected more than once into what it is in this fiction’s truth) – a story that is actually perfect in its own way, quite distinct and discrete, but also sharing to my mind a few constructive features of Capote and Evenson…
        It takes place on a Japanese peninsula, evocatively described, the characters evocatively characterised, too, with the professional ‘escort’ lady who also writes books and lies that she never went to university, and the business man, both in hindsight with their own ingenious jigsaw of lies and motives, but who completes the jigsaw first? The outlying place they visit to share their enticing concept of an Autumn’s completion (cf my view of Ford’s Autumn here), and their own adult sex (lie or truth?) as well as attempted forced animal abnormalities… A very disturbing and satisfying work of fiction that I am glad I have had the chance to read and hopelessly now can never forget.
      6. BLOOD DRIVE
        “By the time the first snow came in late November, the guns became mostly just part of our wardrobes, and kids turned their attention back to their cell phones and iPods.”
        This, like the earlier Exorcism coming-of-age parties, is another modern Swiftain Modest Proposal extrapolation. It is now easier to imagine, from where I am in brexited Britain, the gun laws that seem to apply in real-time America, but this is a shocking fable of children and teachers each openly with their guns, and school children in young labour, giving birth to a dystopia that involves even mildly spoken people having their own foully expletive signatures every time they point their gun at someone, whether in play or in deadly intent.
        I feel this powerful story is pointed at us in BOTH play and deadly intent. Bloodflow in a two-way filter. Literature’s modern Plato’s Cave syndrome.
      7. I read and reviewed this story before here https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2014/11/18/years-best-weird-fiction-volume-one/#comment-3546, and below is a copy and paste of what I then wrote about it:
        ———————————–
        A Terror
        “…Me / Undoing knots…”
        I think this may become one of my all time favourite stories. As an extended Brothers Grimm type fable, its words gestate… It is a Faustian bargain that the female poet makes with Death, Death who appears firstly like the White Rabbit in Alice and then takes her on a trip as if with Dorothy in Oz, and there are many disturbing moments, including the effective description of the undead boy for whom she is contracted to poeticise a counterspell to the spell his mother had cast on the boy to keep him living… It just needed three words in one of her poems that she writes inside her own tomb… It is ironic, I guess, that it is also the same spell for her to transcend her own death…
        The most unlikely source for care and love: Death itself.
        By each undoing of each ligottus…?
        Safe in their Alabaster Chambers –
        Untouched by Morning –
        and untouched by noon –
        (Emily Dickinson)
      8. ROCKET SHIP TO HELL
        “‘He’s got the prostate. You know what I mean?’ She turned and looked at me.
        ‘Not yet but I’m sure someday I will.'”
        …the rocket ship to Hell, indeed. But that’s not what this engagingly page-turning hilarity of a story is really about. Having a break at a recent SF World Convention, the narrator finds a bar in a grimy area of the city, where he and the bartender (a woman who also happens to be a budding SF writer) meet an old-timer SF writer who tells an apparently true story about his 1950s space trip (sponsored by four rich old men) along with a painter (a ‘naive’ female artist) and a composer (a theremin specialist who ended up playing the rather attractive avant garde universal note sonata!) – the three of them having been employed to tap the experience of space travel to embellish their various arts. I can’t do justice to all of it here, and, indeed, a lot of it is secret, but, meanwhile, part of me wanted, when I got halfway, to dive to the end and start reading upside down from the back to the middle. This work fitted my current mood as I am currently reviewing the 1950s material in the double-columned BIG BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION…
      9. THE FAIRY ENTERPRISE
        “‘Mr. Benett, even a brilliant gentleman such as yourself can never know the way of the fairies. They seem to us crazy as a mad woman’s poo.’
        The industrialist jotted down ‘mad woman’s poo’.
        …as I did, too, from this story’s text, a text that is only a text at all simply for its own sake, one that seethes and crackles with what I have learned already to call forking Fordisms, a text that I sense if I burn its pages it’s printed on upon a book bonfire a brain-igniting spark of its soul (spark of the book or of libban life itself?) would float towards some heavenly hell. TIma Loorie, Binsel, Thrashner, Benett, letters seem loose, too, like poo as an elision for poor? Mr Norrel, notwithstanding.
        It tells of an industrialist’s plans to exploit the population with fairies by some arcane fairy factory recipe of recreating such creatures from the black snowstorms of lore or yore. And the tiny mobile repercussions of his machinations are manifold amidst a crepitating style to die for or, at least, to express one’s own waste products to self-desiccate for.
      10. THE LAST TRIANGLE
        “…and I want you to walk all around the town, everywhere you can think of, and look to see if that symbol appears on any other walls.”
        I confirm that when I posted that photo above, I had no idea that this would be a story about another such symbol….
        This is a strangely relentless, almost naively obsessive, almost felt-to-be-incantatory, plot about a triangulation of symbols (comparable, for me, with my long-term attempted explicit dreamcatching triangulations in gestalt real-time reviewing), a triangulation with occult importance, following the befriending of a criminalised down-and-out by a woman, and involving him in such a deadly triangle as sanctuary-and-prison, along with her ex named Lionel Brund…
        Having now read it all, a third of me is impressively haunted by this text, another third constructively bemused, the final third mindlessly shrugging. The proportions may change.
      11. SPIRITS OF SALT: A TALE OF THE CORAL HEART
        “‘You don’t look like a crone,’ he told her.
        ‘To each her crone,’ she said.”
        I remember entities earlier in this book being smashed into salt smithereens, and this is a rumbustious tale of Ismet Toler, a foundling found at the edge of a cliff whence his mother, I guess, must have leapt like one of many lemmings, and he is then adopted by a hermit, a female hermit, to boot, she, indeed, a hermit assassin called “- I -” who trains her ward Ismet by pitting herself in warrior disguise against him.
        With much more that feeds like a two-way filter into and from BleakWarrior. Black coral versus red coral.
        Sturgeon featured Mars in that story I mentioned above, transmigrated here as an island of red coral. As RM Ballantyne might have said: every man is that island; every man’s would-be mother, a lethal symbiosis; every man’s would-be enemy, a crock of coralised salt?
      12. THE THYME FIEND
        “There was almost too much to tell. Every time he picked a launching point, he thought of some other thread that needed tending…”
        And so with time’s deep breath…
        A substantive work that flows delightfully through the mind with all its forking Fordisms and desiccated salt-visions. Except the threads are not hemp but smoky swirls of inhaled thyme and cups of thyme tea to help assuage the demons. The work is about a 14 year old boy who needs such hits of thyme, and a bike, to broaden his horizons and defend his own sapling defences, and eventually a girl to hold his hand, as he and then both of them are faced with visitations from the retributory toothless dead between its sporadic farming farms in Hell. Spurned by the villagefolk (some guiltier than others, we suspect) for his seeming obsessive peculiarities, the boy persists along justice’s long journey, when he eventually sees, we hope, the light at the end of his erstwhile life’s dark tunnel. But whither or whence, such light? We all have that question to answer, triangulated, as we ever shall be, by Hell, Heaven and Hiraeth. Or so, sometimes with vivid frights, this major threaded yarn portends.
      13. THE PRELATE’S COMMISSION
        “I’m not in the habit of showing my true self to the Lord’s clay dolls, but I will for a price.”
        …as if this coda of the whole book is proof positive of the existence of a talejuice’s word dolls, here in a Christian religious sense, after Codilan, this coda’s master artist, creates an image of angry God in the Cathedral’s dome with Hell beneath, a God who is later doll-masked – by the very Devil – with the face of the prelate who commissioned from Talejui (Codilan’s under artist) a portrait of that Devil himself so as the masses would recognise the Devil when he came to them – or possessed their children? A tortuous vision that somehow works on various levels, especially when also taken into account with the concept of the crucially triangulated murder at the centre of this book’s earlier story. I am still working on this final story in my mind, its “motes of marble dust floating in the sunlight”, the “nettlemare” smoked in a long pipe, “time for his creation being scattered like dust”, the chandeliers turned to “crude salt”. And of the Hermetic and “frosty blue”, and more. It is, at one level, of the Ex Occidente canon and, at other levels, of something specially Fordian, levels still being fathomed. Always ask the next question.
        The whole book still needs to be worked at, too. So pleased I picked it up.
        end
              

      Short Stories and Excerpts from Larger Works – Leena Krohn

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      Short Stories and Excerpts from Larger Works – Leena Krohn

      krohn

      Part Seven of my real-time review of
      THE COLLECTED FICTION OF LEENA KROHN
      CHEEKY FRAWG 2015

      Foreword by Jeff VanderMeer

      Part Six (THE PELICAN’S NEW CLOTHES) of my review of this book HERE.

      Links to all parts here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/tag/leena-krohn/
      .
      When I review The Short Stories and Excerpts, my comments will be found in the thought stream below or by clicking on this post’s title above

      17 thoughts on “Short Stories and Excerpts from Larger Works – Leena Krohn

      1. A selection from UMBRA 1990

        .
        Translated by Herbert Lomas
        THE PARADOX ARCHIVE
        UMBRA reminds me of Håkan’s doctor from PEREAT Mundus. He collects paradoxes and addresses a ur-paradox, infinity, in interface, serendipitously brought to him, with an AI man and his fear. But how can an AI have fear with all his other infinititudes of not having body and soul? Because he also has a harmonium and a harmonium (as well as a piano) features in Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle that wasn’t petite nor was it solennelle!
        Mind-stretching stuff. Zeno’s paradox ever halfway in towards the end of this text.
      2. Three from ‘Mathematical Creatures, Or Shared Dreams’ 1992

        GORGONOIDS (translated by Hildi Hawkins)
        “The gorgonoid is merely and exclusively what it looks like — as far as we know.”
        This mathematical, arguably leather-like encased, digital creature, with and without free will, or thinking it has free will, is, for me, what some have called a drogulus (like the Prott), and arguably half-related to the assumed quasi-motivational nature of Grandpa Raft in a story I reviewed earlier today HERE. This becomes specially interesting when the narrator in the Krohn compares her own life with that of the gorgonoid.
      3. THE LORD OF MY DEATH (translated by Vivii Hyvönen)
        “He was the prey of my gaze.”
        This is an astonishing Horror Story. I don’t think I have ever read such revulsion about glimpsing someone intrinsically inimical to one’s paranoiac-eschatological eyes, this woman narrator glimpsing such a man among the crowds at a railway station. Her subsequent internal speculations about and extrapolations from sight of this stranger are all-consuming. Should be anthologised.
      4. LUCILIA ILLUSTRIS (translated by Vivii Hyvönen)
        “It was the sound of decomposition, which is the sound of life in death.”
        Decomposition (like Sibelius’s Silence?) rather than composition, intriguing…
        This is another powerful story, a narrative by a forensic expert (and seems to be a forerunner of those now popular cold and taciturn Scandinavian detective films that populate these days our Saturday night screens in UK)…
        “On the wall of the ladies’ room someone had written in a swift, sketchy hand: ‘Time is nature’s way of preventing everything from happening at once.'”
        From Baudelaire to the working of insects upon bodies (which shows Tainaron in a new seeping light) and all manner of considerations of the process of decay and murder and the soul / spirit and death and body.
        “Nothing as lifeless as that can ever have been alive.”
        Significantly and coincidentally, I just read and reviewed about an hour ago this where it says “the soul is in the bones.”
        “The spirit is like the queen of an anthill.”
      5. A selection from DREAMDEATH (2004)

        Translated by Hildi Hawkins
        TO SLEEP, TO DIE
        “Before the ‘event’, one could also spend time in Dreamdeath’s well-equipped mediatheque, or, if one was still sufficiently hungry, glance at the admirably long menu of a Bykovian, Kungho, Tainaronian or even Lastrupian restaurant.”
        An enticing euthanasiac menu of bespoke deaths.
      6. FEAR OF THE DARK
        A theme and varIations on the eponymous subject as well as on Lucia’s darkness-inducer occupation of helping others with anaesthetic remedy as well as easy eschatological escape, even cryology’s shaky promise.
      7. FIT AND UNFIT FOR DEATH
        “Lucia called Schopenhauerian those who said, ‘Ever since I was a child, I have known that non-existence is better than existence.'”
        Ligottian Lucia as Aunty-Natalism, as we follow her at Dreamdeath, almost a whistleblower or undercover agent, despite or because of her care for her customers’ wishes, or what she interpreted as their wishes about dreamdying. And why the depressed or demented excluded?
        But the use of the word dream as a prefix remains mysterious. Euthanasia and suicide as gifts of a dream, from which we can wake up? Perhaps Lucia is dreaming, too?
        The right to die or the right to dream? Life itself goes on, meanwhile, full of fiction and truth, a book like this one for the head to house, or a book like this one to house the head?
      8. A selection from THE BEE PAVILION 2006

        Translated by Anselm Hollo
        REALLY EXISTING?
        “I may well be the only one who referred to the building as The Bee Pavilion. Why?”
        I think this labyrinth of gestalt real-time reviews of hyper-imaginative literature is a sort of Bee Pavilion in its own way. And I should join one of its constituent hives: The Fluctuating Reality Club judging by its propensities. The other clubs and societies that use this building, replacing the mentally ill patients of yore, are also fascinating to hear about. The structure and genius loci of the building itself and its history are very evocatively conveyed here, too.
      9. SO SORRY
        “At the Fluctuating Reality Club, I could have told a story about my trip to London,…”
        The narrator lives on the coast of the Gulf of Finland, and from there tells us of this London man who reminds me of not so much Henderson the Pelican man but of the phenomenon of such men, a sort of strobing of vision between non-human and human.
      10. THE THREE BUDDHAS
        “Under this town lies another town.
        Inside this earth is another sun.”
        For perhaps unobvious reasons, that couplet means a lot to me,
        And probably the most striking description of a Japanese tremor you will meet in literature.
        A tale of travels and telling souvenirs the narrator gives The Fluctuating Reality Club.
        And I do not give my brief reaction each day since I started this book for its own sake or to add or subtract anything to or from the book, but simply to record my rite of passage through it. To say I was there.
      11. Four from FALSE WINDOW 2009

        Translated by Leena Likitalo
        THE DIVIDER
        “I combine mathematics, horror, and beauty in my science-art in a unique way.”
        Metamaatti. A determinist, too. Murders by dint of mathematics? Or of triangulative dreamcatchers like this review? This amazing stuff. Needs rereading, I guess.
        Real-time reviews versus Metamaatti.
      12. PICTURE BOOK
        ” — I beg your pardon? A thousand pages! How vast is the whole book! I asked, confused.
        — Thirty-two trillion pages, he replied as if he really were serious.”
        I thought at first this might be the BIG BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer … But, no, and this is indeed possibly the oddest discrete story you are ever likely to read. The narrator who stays in a tank of brine has a salesman visit selling a book containing photographs of children, some hinted at as naked, some weirdly disfigured, all of whom turning out to be the narrator’s own children that he COULD have had with his wife, and one of them in fact is his real daughter. I could go on, with the fascinating extrapolations from this scenario. It is probably the most remarkable few pages I have ever read. Should anyone get this far into Leena Krohn’s turquoise tome (of rival size to the one being sold), they will discover that for themselves.
      13. FILEMON OR THE WOODEN MAN
        “…and I started to doubt my own disbelief.”
        As we all do when reading this remarkable section of a man poignantly seeking advice from the tank’s narrator, when joining him in the tank. You see, the man seeking advice is slowly turning into a tree. Or is he? Is he mocking the narrator in the tank? I sense turning into a tree is a thing to envy, but maybe it isn’t as good as it sounds. The description of this transformation needs to be read to be believed.
      14. THE QUEEN OF THE NIGHT AND OTHER STRANGERS
        ” — My spouse was a businessman, who tried to sell dated technology: personal weather stations and self-illuminating cellphone covers.”
        The woman comes to the narrator in the tank with marital problems instigated by emails from her husband’s supposed lover. Very strange, not forgetting the reference to the Magic Flute. Perhaps the narrator in the tank is the erstwhile pelican?
      15. A selection from HOTEL SAPIENS 2012

        Translated by Hildi Hawkins
        ME AND MY SHADOW
        “I’m inclined to think that sooner or later I will fade and become less distinct so that when my time is over, I will no longer be distinguishable from my surroundings.”
        A perfect analogy here as an interlocutory exchange of self as body and shadow, as I already experience this stage of life’s attenuation. A fitting penultimate prose coda to this book, the onset of the Silence of Sibelius. Or the pelicanised person about to enter its flight. Leaving the massed insects that densely make up one’s shadow left behind, if one can but see it once you as the shadow’s caster have gone.
      16. Translated by Eva Buchwald


      17. “He had hoped to articulate the silence.”

      18. A writer’s engagement to talk to his audience and sign his books for them, one that turns out to be a nightmare where people who once knew him turn up… A writer called E.
        A journey just for the car’s petrol to be paid and no other remuneration , if he can wait long enough for them to pay it to them. E flies off, a petrel, not a pelican, I guess.
        Poignant and eventually wordless…
        This book has been one of those not brought-up-short but brought-up-long-by-reading-landmarks that you sometimes gradually meet and appreciate in passing life, neutrally passionate with its SF wings, large and small.
        My gestalt real-time reviews are always and only upon the fiction in any book. I shall now read the non-fiction foreword and appendix for the first time, sure that it will give me more food for thought. I do notice, however, that at the end of the book there is also a Krohn poem, translated by Bethany Fox. ‘Would I believe my eyes’ it is called, and like most poems worthy of attention, something to read and then put aside to read again later, except for one quote to make today:
        “Particles oscillate in strings.”
        A sentence for this whole book.
        —————
        “‘You don’t look like a crone,’ he told her.
        ‘To each her crone,’ she said.”
        (A quote from another book I happened to read and review yesterday HERE.)
        end


        COLOR PLATES by Adam Golaski

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        71 thoughts on “COLOR PLATES by Adam Golaski

        1. Any “Color Plates” below in this whole review are my assessed choices as to the Golaski text’s referred images of paintings….for you to decide whether such images to be seen now are spoilers for each vignette-sized plate of prose.
          The black and white text, I guess, represents EITHER more examples of this author’s supreme weird literature (some of which I reviewed here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2016/06/03/worse-than-myself-by-adam-golaski/) OR equally supreme inferred colourful prose-music constituents of a ‘Pictures at an Exhibition’-type tour in which my job is to find the gestalt from such leitmotifs. It is probably both these things and more.
          ———————–
          prologue
          The first plate named ‘prologue’, a plate that is unnumbered, leaving the second plate to be numbered one, it will be seen, it seems.
          Portrait of the Artist 1878
          “Paintings are brushstroke upon brushstroke.”
          A Proustian palimpsest of text and inferred paint, a self-portrait by Mary with richly textured memories of people in her life and of this ‘body’ she left behind.
          Thoughts of Galaxies and ‘God’ too.
          You live a day a day to put life in, and I intend to adumbrate each forthcoming plate no more than diurnally, perhaps less than.

        2. book one
          ÉDOUARD MANET

          .[ PLATE 1 ]
          Boy with Cherries 1858
          “The small man who looked like Dad pointed down to a spot on the bed, where I
          could see he had a collection of marbles.”
          The brother and sister in this story (from whose point of view this painting is obliquely looked at) remind me of my own son and daughter. When they were children, I used to conduct them, individually at different ages, through books of famous paintings and we discussed each one in some detail. The idea of this book has brought those occasions back to me with a rush.
          I myself used to be obsessed with marbles as a child (see here: https://t.wordpress.com/2011/10/30/marble-racing/ and this painting reminds me of me then. Never seen it before.)
        3. [ Plate 2 ]
          Luncheon on the Grass 1863
          “: cherries march towards a baguette like ants.”
          A particular narrative rationale and modern aftermath for this painting that transcend both serendipity and ‘the synchronised shards of random truth and fiction’ (my seasoned phrase that you can google.)
          For ‘shards’, now read ‘pearls’.
        4. [ Plates 3 & 4 ]
          Olympia 1863
          “Let me describe for you a scene.”
          You can then see it from link above. A woman wearing the pearl earrings from the previous Color Plate, pearls like pearl-pale cherries that I discern, although the description itself withholds this feature. It is more obsessed with her black ribbon holding the gestalt together, as well as her head.
          Another striking passage of weirdness as a fiction-painting palimpsest.
          My personal (non-Manet) ‘color plate’ as further extrapolation:
          image
        5. [ Plate 5 ]
          Portrait of Emile Zola 1868
          “Of course, when glass is broken it cannot not repair itself…”
          A telling double negative there, as if deliberately or inadvertently echoing my earlier reference to ‘synchronised shards’…
          A description of Zola in his office and his meditation effectively on the nature of death by a bullet and the particle physics of skin and sand, and with the previous Color Plate actually on the wall of the office in this Color Plate!
          Whenever I see the name Zola I think of the violent castration scene in his ‘Germinal’.
        6. [ Plate 6 ]
          The Railway 1873
          “A blue bow as big as a girl.”
          Woman and girl by the railings. The older with another black band or ribbon round the neck. The younger has one around her hair. Grapes, too, bottom right, grapes instead of cherries or marbles or pearls.
          This fascinating textual extrapolation of a famous painting into a weird scene with an additional character, a young man, involved, and a retriangulation of coordinates into a new adventurous modernity, reminds me of the discussions about paintings and resultant story-telling that I conducted with my own children during the 1970s and 1980s. Makes this book even more of a delight, with my being the child this time round.
        7. [ Plate 7 ]
          Mlle. Victorine in the Costume of an Espada 1863
          “Goya lurks.”
          He still does.
          A bull fight film in a cinema where someone in the auditorium, every screening, masquerades as a bull-fighter in front of some of the scenes.
          A painting canvas as well as a cinema screen can be susceptible to the pricking of a picador. And sitting behind it is found some feeble back-projecting Wizard of Oz – or Goya himself?
          I wonder what the Picasso-like group right at the back of the Manet canvas is gossiping about?
          They still do.
        8. [ Plate 8 ]
          The Balcony 1869
          “That we see a skull of smoke above their heads is a wonder of paint chemistry and fear.” [ See skull of smoke here yesterday. ]
          A fascinating and detailed weirdness of an extrapolation from the characters in Manet’s THE BALCONY and an approaching visitor across arguably unnatural hills. The first Last Balcony?
          Paintings (Manet modelled) from the ultimate ‘Last Balcony’ posted a few years ago HERE:-
          balcony
          OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
          manet2
        9. [ Plate 9 ]
          A Bar at the Folies-Bergere 1881
          “Behind the bar the mirror holds the memory of the night before.”
          …which is a striking conceit for this famous Folies-Bergère bar painting, a conceit that is memorably extrapolated here, with references to sand (as constituent of the mirror behind the bar, I ask?) and a music-like ‘dying fall’ ending to die for. And of course the colour plate of oranges.
        10. [ Plate 10 ]
          On the Beach 1873
          “I heard my boyfriend get up and pee.”
          A woman and man on the beach, she with hat and veil that look to me like a skull, and this book’s black ribbon…
          Seen by another couple not seen by the painting.
          An evocative description of one of those skylines, now stretched out in time, and its witnesses … Photo sea-skyline images that often pepper my social media.
        11. [ Plates 14 & 15 ]
          Luncheon in the Studio 1868
          I have just noticed I have accidentally leapt over three intervening color plates; there may be some hidden meaning to that accident, when seen in later hindsight. I will rectify the omissions in coming days. The author seems to omit plates, himself, as not all his numbering relates to named painting plates.
          “The woman grunted.”
          This one represents an amusing discussion of a writer submitting to a publisher, as well as the painting itself being full of still life, but full also of things alive, including people and the objects themselves! A lemon with peel hanging, peel and pearl of light? And more plates within a plate.
        12. [ Plates 11 & 12 ]
          Claude Monet in His ‘Studio’ 1874
          “He dips the tip of his brush into her skin,…”
          Monet in his studio boat painted by Manet. Only one letter different, and only one letter different, too, between boat and boar as in boar bristles of the brush that produces such real light from the water.
          This type of exquisition from paint will lead you to look at not only paintings differently but also literature as weird fiction.
          (Perhaps there are two Plate numbers above, because there is a painting within the painting?)
        13. [ Plate 13 ]
          Blonde with Nude Bust 1875
          “I opened the box. ‘I don’t know. It looks like a big yellow slipper.'”
          It was a hat, I mistook not my wife for a hat, but a hat for a slipper. A fulsome portrait, with a happy ending of future fruit within her belly – to join the cherries, lemons etc.?
          “I wanted to occupy the whole room.”
        14. [ Plate 16 ]
          The Fifer 1866
          “Here, flat tones rather than careful grading. Here, shadows cast on nothing.”
          Aunt’s memorial, Aunt’s attic, the man who was once the boy, with childhood nostalgia staying with his aunt, the boy who could have dressed like this painting with its uniform jacket, but now his fiancée is small enough to dress in it in likeness to the painting instead. Her bust must surely be smaller than the painting’s bust in this review’s previous color plate, if not the previous painting in this book.
          The Fifer Boy is even flatter than the text about it, but both equally striking. The Drummer Boy on stage next?
        15. [ Plate 17 ]
          The Execution of Emperor Maximilian 1867
          “Cut this execution to pieces.”
          Almost a cut-up or ready-made or found art by Manet, a boy’s memory of a black and white TV Pre-Blair Witch Project, pre-Internet, now post-TV, post-modern, and I can empathise fully with this boy in what turns out to be a very strong well-aimed example of Weird literature. Unmissable.
          (Look like cameramen looking over the wall?)
        16. [ Plate 18 ]
          Boating at Argenteuil 1874
          “An ocean of boys, bobbling like plastic bath toys, rocking gently against each other, soundless, stiff.”
          You will need to go far to find another vision like this one as simply evoked by a man and woman in a boat. I am reminded of my father Gordon who often told me that he, as a boy in the 1920s and 30s, with two other boys, often jumped off the dock together into the water at Llanelli. One of those other boys was Desmond his brother who was later lost presumed dead in the Indian Ocean when a Japanese submarine sunk his ship during the 2nd World War.
        17. [ Plate 21 ]
          Spartan Girls and Boys Exercising 1860
          “HER:        ”
          The painting of the Spartan girls and boys, the former taunting the latter, I guess, transposed to two play-written dramas, the first that ends with the second one as contextual continuation of it with narrative between, and a salacious swimming party of those acting in the plays themselves…
          Young love or lust. A rough cut Spartan painting of Spartans, rough cut like their thoughts…
        18. [ Plate 22 ]
          The Dancing Class 1876
          A painting with depth enchantingly transliterated by logographics via a young girl’s yellow wallpaper moments when she creates a shadowbox with material supplied by of her father. There is a reference, too, to the previous Spartan painting. And there is a disturbing twist in this tale’s tail…or a ballerina’s twisted ankle?
        19. [ Plate 23 ]
          The Dancing Class 1880
          “Where the ballerinas and the mothers are not is yellow. […] I, too, am entangled, with Degas, his paint.”
          Nobody goes into these paintings, I guess, but I think those already in it can come out. Here the mothers come out of it to attend to a father who has lost his once dancing daughter? The second consecutive plate in this book where, at the end, a girl falls off a roof. ( cf ‘Fates of the Animals’ by Padrika Tarrant: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2016/05/05/fates-of-the-animals-padrika-tarrant/)
          The gestalt builds from this book of plates so far, but whither or whence does it build? Not even Wimsatt’s Intentional Fallacy as a literary theory can be my fig-leaf.
          image
        20. [ Plate 24 ]
          The Cotton Market, New Orleans 1873
          “Slavery, you might not know, is terrible.”
          A painting of several figures in an office, frozen in time. And there follows this book’s most fascinating plate-talk so far, with a palimpsest of time now and then, a treatment of the concept of time itself, as the viewer sees his grandfather in the image and much else. Then news was slow-motion, now real-time. I found a brown human arm in my bed this morning.
          “two texts on tissue paper.”
        21. [ Plate 25 ]
          At the Race Course 1869-72
          “A turkey-vulture flew past at eye-level.”
          Off-the-track, finding carousel horses and my foolhardy friend teasing one of the ‘jockeys’ with the lit end of his cigarette. He’s a big-headed person who leads me to the Tower to witness better from the top his foul scorched-earth policy behind us.
        22. [ Plate 27 ]
          The Tub 1886
          “‘There,’ she points, ‘that yellow stain is like a painting hung on the wall.'”
          I rcall as a child in the 1950s, I had to use a tin bath to squat in. Here a moon, as a woman is in palimpsest upon the woman in the painting, as watched by her boy friend. Poetic allusions as part of an entrancing description, with some accoutrements such as a TV. Almost a ghost story.
        23. [ Plate 28 ]
          The Bellilli Family 1860-62
          “Who can possibly be happy in the final moments of annihilation?”
          Who can? This is ostensibly a description of the above painting where I had never noticed before that one of the daughters has a leg missing and the dog no head.
          But the description parses off into a haunting premonition by Degas, and probably in 2010 by Golaski, too, of the coming moments of our Trumpish times now, and of bombs, and terrorists…
        24. [ Plate 29 ]
          Dancers at the Bar 1876-7
          “Degas drew two girls, one more lightly, an echo of the other.”
          A male palimpsest of two sisters amid the modern drug-taking student scene. Yellow wallpaper, too. A telling off-kilter portrait of our times factored into and from a Degas painting…
          Unusual thinking, though, is not always a sign of sophistication.
        25. [ Plate 30 ]
          Breakfast after the Bath 1883
          “The giant blade of grass is a wall between sleep and awake…”
          The cabin fever, as a mother helps with her daughter’s bath, the daughter’s baby near by. Encroachment of the daughter’s inimical husband towards this safe house? Or the encroachment of nature’s Gaia itself? Tellingly, a bit of both, I suggest. A bit of bath.
        26. [ Plate 31 ]
          A Ballet Seen from an Opera Box 1885
          “Absolute realism is always deeply strange.”
          …as is the fact that this interwoven text of a brother and sister and a chance book, a transformation into a whale, a view of the ballet on the stage and his sketching g a door to the secret of that stage seems miraculously to blend two other works I am reading today and still reviewing, Leena Krohn’s The Pelican’s New Clothes and Jason A Wyckoff’s In the Library.
        27. [ Plate 33 ]
          The Mante Family 1889
          “: mother makes the ribbons from very tiny ribbons.”
          A sense of gestalt dreamcatching? Aka hawling?
          A beautiful collage of the girls in the painting and others seen and unseen.
          Fiction has many characters to whom we are not introduced within it.
          “Politics are dumb and art is a belovèd wash of watercolor paint…”
        28. book three
          HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC

          .
          image
          noeud[ Plate 34 ]
          Young Routy 1882
          I don’t dare tell him she thinks the hat he wears stupid. His tie, meanwhile, made from black ribbon, I reckon – another garter snake?
          I think this whole book is threaded through with black ribbon, whether it is or not. The colours often hide it.
          .
          .
          .
          .
          .
        29. [ Plate 36 ]
          The Laundress 1889 1886?
          “I see the precedent of Degas, who towers, quite literally, over Toulouse-Lautrec.”
          This is an absorbingly meticulous or obsessive scrutiny of a girl’s thoughts, worry about someone seeing her ‘panties’, as she watches the Laundress. At once sensual and naive. Like many of these accompaniments to the Color Plates, it is a slice of Robbe-Grillet or Michel Butor.
        30. [ Plate 40 ]
          At the Moulin de la Galette 1890
          “David Bowie?”
          That name always needs a ?
          PIty She Was A Whore.
          A nifty modern dance scenario with DJ and sexual politics.
          Not sure I have got the right Lautrec painting above. It does have a woman with green face. If the author ever sees this review, perhaps he will correct it by putting a link to the right painting in a sub-comment below.
        31. [ Plate 43 ]
          At the Moulin Rouge 1892
          “Look at her face, says Toulouse-Lautrec; at her face, said Degas.”
          The difference between says and said. This is a devastating narration of a Halloween event, if only the narrator knew when he started it. Woman with green face (again) and his face of bone.
          I have just noticed I inadvertently skidded in the ice and missed Plate 42, life the universe everything. Sorry. I shall make amends when I take up this review again – tomorrow?
        32. [ Plate 44 ]
          La Visite: Rue des Moulins 1894
          A striking painting of two prostitutes on medical parade, quite new to me. This tells me they are identical women if I turn my back on them and they disappear. Nothingness as a mass of identical things by dint of their invisibility? The seedy scene in the text behind this painting is someone else’s unpadlocked pad. As I am frozen forever in the action of removing my (black?) tie for one such woman. Her uncrossed legs and a bruise. And other haunting mentions.
        33. [ Plate 46 ]
          The Grand Loge 1897
          “Her eyes are blanks: they are pearls.”
          At a symphony concert (Ernest Chausson’s?) at this theatre, a boy with his family speculates about ‘mountain-climbing’ to the various balconies and swinging on a chandelier. His sister draws his dream, without his telling her about it. And I draw threads aand leitmotifs from this book, too, without Golaski telling me overtly about them.
        34. [ Plate 47 ]
          The Toilette 1896
          “The soul is in the bones.”
          Looks like my childhood tin bath from the 1950s. Degas and light, imported by T-L. Light and a skeleton. A black stocking, too. A memorable vision of the boyfriend daydreaming and watching this lady’s lavatorial.
          If every reader of this book as well as its author triangulates all the other triangulations with his or her own real-time review, then we shall likely reach its nub beyond any intention.
        35. [ Plate 48 ]
          Madame Berthe Bady 1897
          “…such rot is a sure sign of his genius.”
          I felt berthed within her stomach, by dint of the accompanying Golaski text.
          These interfaces of text and painting in this book so far are genuinely producing for me a new reality previously unmet.
          Note Berthe’s quiff of hair on the forehead, too.
        36. image
          [ Plate 50 ]
          The Modiste 1900
          “Pity was now all he could muster.”
          The lady in the painting seems to have a black bow in her hair? The lady in the text now in her sixties, her marriage in ennui, buys a box of boxes, while her husband fails to buy the toy he fancies having seen it in the same shop. The account of the boxes is one of the masterstrokes of literary weirdness, I suggest, and the boxes within boxes of paintings make this book worth its entrance price for this text alone, as well as many other texts being each worth the price alone.
        37. book four
          MARY CASSATT

          .
          [ Plate 51 ]
          Head of a Young Girl 1876
          “–she plunges into a leaf-self.”
          Another massive weird extrapolation from the original image, one that I can live with.
          Voyeurism, ‘hot’ self-voyeurism through the imagined viewpoint of others. Collar, hem, “flick of my long hair”, “hairs at my nape.”
          Major stuff, this.
          Each plate in this book is a leaf on a single tree?
          —–
          Cassata consists of round sponge cake moistened with fruit juices or liqueur and layered with ricotta cheese, candied peel, and a chocolate or vanilla filling similar to cannoli cream. – from Wikipedia
        38. [ Plate 52 ]
          Reading ‘Le Figaro’
          “There was a string of time during which I woke only in the small hours.”
          A chain (?) hanging from her black glasses, black hair shining, newsprint and black grass. This is a densely textured treatment of the loss of one’s mother, and her bodily nature; why does death and dreamless sleep throw a retrospective time’s waste upon a lifetime habit of, say, reading the news? Now, using the Internet?
          There are some striking images in this text that are worth reading, though.
        39. [ Plate 53 ]
          Baby Reaching for an Apple 1893
          “…as you and I know, what matters is what’s true, not what other people think is true.”
          Possibly the most striking painting image so far, and a text to match. One can actually FEEL it. And I do not give my brief reaction each day since I started this book for its own sake or to add or subtract anything to or from the book, but simply to record my rite of passage through it. To say I was there.
          There is a wise weird truth to this book, ever accreting. And sparrows flying back and forth between us. But what about them apples?
        40. [ Plate 54 ]
          Little Girl in a Blue Armchair 1878
          “…dust and ice planets.”
          A man visits the girl’s mother for romantic purposes but ends up talking to the girl more, playing at astronauts, and having grown-up conversations about planets, and whether Pluto is one. There is a dog, too, in a blue chair, Edward, not Pluto.
          Not a social or family comedy, but a social or family weird fiction. A new genre that peppers this book.
          The Color-Plate syndrome. End to end like a colour Pluto cartoon…
        41. [ Plates 56, 57 & 58 ]
          At the Opera 1878
          “She long ago lost the thread of the opera’s narrative, her mind lost in the woven fabric of a black cloth sack.”
          I have linked above to ‘In The Loge’ which I feel is at least one of the plates intended. A worryingly graphic description of what she sees, as she later sews. Torture, non-words, a hairy rope and other weirdities. This text seems crucial.
        42. [ Plate 59 ]
          Lady at the Tea Table 1883
          “Drawn with black ink was a simple line surrounded by landmarks,…”
          A woman narrator and her daughter visit the aunt, and much touching detail of interaction, Proustian memories and objects, some more buried than others. The girl a statue from Degas come to life with a curtsy?
          Those who can can. Those who can’t can’t.
        43. [ Plate 60 ]
          Five O’Clock Tea 1880
          “Wherever there is pressure from a pencil, the soft ground adheres and exposes, and so when immersed, lines are bitten in.”
          A substantive and delightful immersement in a girl’s birthday party, the hierarchy of girls, including the concept of a “least friend”, and a model plane that seems eventually transcendent. And plates to eat off instead of to hold,paintings.
        44. [ Plate 61 ]
          Lydia Leaning on Her Arms, Seated in a Loge 1879
          These paintings by Mary Cassatt continue to be a revelation for me. This one has an accompanying text, as if she is watched and touched by her young son, a tingling of being watched, then I watched, meeting her beau Gray, announcing she is pregnant, another of those threads of being assessed by children, or assessing how they assess you, you them. Here the threads are the actual texture of her dress, if you look closely enough. Becoming her own son’s umpteenth wet nurse?
        45. [ Plate 62 ]
          The Cup of Tea 1880
          “‘It’s a loop,’ he said…”
          Possibly, the most storified story in this book, as two boys grapple the boat across the bay, to find a woman drinking a cup of tea… A Proustian vision, then a Golaskan vision of a grand meulnes and….
          The initial Cassatt in this book, at this book’s very beginning, self-portrait of the artist with her own loop of black ribbon tied not to a boat but a bow?
          Now the ribbons are around the arm of an armchair.
        46. I feel like a spinning through the last few plates, just like those Variety Show acts I saw on TV as a child, plates spinning on vertical willowy sticks, and the spinner keeping them spinning, twirling each in turn, ever-twirling…
          [ Plate 64 ]
          Girl Arranging Her Hair 1886
          “Someone needs to get up on the bike, make it steady.”
          A story with unadmitted sexual-voyeurism guilt, balancing the bike and spotting the girl with red hair and flushed face doing her pigtail, plait or ponytail, as far as I can judge by studying the painting. I feel If I have steadied a book, not a bike.
        47. [ Plate 65 ]
          The Boating Party 1894
          “…but don’t forget that most stories start before you know they have.”
          …like the gestalt story of the whole book’s leitmotifs.
          The latest leitmotifs are that of light and colour, and a boat (one with string rowlocks), a baby born fancifully from a rainbow fish flung into the boat, and a man rowing … and using his scarf as a cummerbund. Above all, child and mother told between them of the Painting and the Past. A plate that is late?
        48. [ Plate 66 ]
          Children Playing on the Beach 1884
          “Not a memory, but a picture that lives like a memory now.”
          This reminds me again of going through paintings one by one with my own children, one by one, at their respective impressionable ages, two children also called Brother and Sister.
          At one moment he or she is in the painting, the next moment on the couch with me, book of paintings in hand.
          “Would it get some wind for the sailboat…” – Philip Glass (Einstein on the Beach)
          “Not a memory, but a picture that lives like a memory now.”
          This reminds me again of going through paintings one by one with my own children, one by one, at their respective impressionable ages, two children also called Brother and Sister.
          At one moment he or she is in the painting, the next moment on the couch with me, book of paintings in hand.
          “Would it get some wind for the sailboat…” – Philip Glass (Einstein on the Beach)
        49. epilogue

          Portrait of the Artist 1878
          “The book is a story, but hidden inside that story are other stories,…”
          Topped and tailed by Mary, the same Color Plate recurring, a dégàs vu, a HEM of light (Henri, Edouard/Edgar, Mary), a divertimento of images.
          Mary as assonance with Manet, and then Lautrec like some foreign word for Light, to lose no colour. Her husband, Joseph…. A golden tree with a golden bough or bow.
          A cassation of loose ends made whole.
          end
                

        Shadow Moths by Cate Gardner

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        Shadow Moths by Cate Gardner

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        Kindle Edition

        FRIGHTFUL HORRORS QUICK READS 2016

        Cover Art by Joshua Rainbird

        With introduction by Simon Bestwick

        My previous reviews of work by Cate Gardner HERE.

        When I review the fiction in this publication, my comments will appear in the thought stream below….


        2 thoughts on “Shadow Moths by Cate Gardner”


        1. WE MAKE OUR OWN MONSTERS HERE
          “All the same, Check picked up his bag, which was no weight at all. It only contained socks and hope.”
          Some writers have the knack to turn the throwaway line (or deadpan caprice or straight-faced fantasy amid otherwise humdrum or seedy life) into haunting nightmares as well as dry conceits. Cate Gardner, in my experience, is one of those, and here she takes her knack into confidently understated overdrive.
          Check checks into the hotel, and follows and is followed by shadows, and by a helpmate chambermaid – from, for me, some off-kilter alternative Wonderland – a helpmate in garnering him a puppeteer’s job at the end of the bus route.
          The work’s deadpan throwaway straight-faced loop of a musical ‘dying fall’ ending is just that. As if Wonderland becomes – or always was – reflected in or by or from a desiccated leminscate Glass Darkly “…raining as ashes.”

        2. BLOOD MOTH KISS
          “The moths he referred to were the girls who flirted with the guys in uniform.”
          This story affected me deeply. It reminded me of my own mother’s true stories of her young womanhood when she, too, frequented such bars described in this story; this was during the Second World War; she often walked home in the darkness of the blackout sometimes beset by a Blitz raid; she eventually met my soldier father in one such foray; she passed away a few months ago.
          This story, although with its own deadpan futuristic quality, with blood moths of Blitz or desiccated confetti messages of balm, turned to raining ashes, I imagine, in its deadpan darkness. This, otherwise, is also a beautifully oblique dystopia of war, of ghosts made and moths as quick-read, quick-red ‘objective correlatives’ for a nightmarish, but human-touching, vision. We shall all apply this vision separately for our own purging purposes, I guess. It also has that gestalt pattern of a leminscate loop already adumbrated by the first quick-read of puppet shadows above.
          It is always 8.15 a.m. – the time I happened to ring my mother’s landline every morning in recent years. I was her only child.
          end


          ORTHOGONAL Vol. 2: Code

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          ORTHOGONAL Vol. 2: Code


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          Kindle Edition
          John Bowker, Editor
          Stories by KS O’Neill, Eliot Fintushel, Amy Power Jansen, Jason Kimble, Teo Yi Han.
          My review of Orthogonal Vol. 1 here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2016/01/23/orthogonal-the-war-at-home-vol-1/
          When I review Vol. 2, my comments will appear in the thought stream below….

          7 thoughts on “ORTHOGONAL Vol. 2: Code

          1. A Tub Of Squid And A Faded Chair On A Sunny Day And The Human-Centered Nature Of Narrative As It Relates To Communicating With Aliens, Listening To Other People’s Dreams, Or Watching Porn In Which You Are Not Interested
            By KS O’Neill
            “Have you ever told someone the story of a pornographic video?”
            A leminscate with a Zeno’s Paradox glitch known as a squid story that is a not a story till it is a story, as influenced by squid who can see through the artificiality of our human narrative processes. Seems to fit exactly with my gestalt real-time reviewing, garnering a gestalt from leitmotifs (like car racing and my girl’s voice). Now I just need to avoid the squid glitch of blocked hindsight. My actual review of this mind-blinking story is not what I say about it but I what I don’t say about it.
            “The squid find us interesting because not only can we never tell the truth, we can’t even hear the truth.”
          2. Paradise Unified
            By Eliot Fintushel
            “She warned us how somebody from outside would be coming and how we had to pull in our nail and turn around our eyeball, so as not to, so as not to, so as not to, so as not to—offend.”
            I loved this reading experience but I can’t tell you exactly why. It is as if narrative lessons have already been taken from the Squid in the first story. It is a Joycean stream of conscious that actually makes more sense than Joyce ever did in Finnegans Wake, although I also love that book, too, and once did a detailed on-line real-time review of it. Don’t let that put you off. Here we have ostensibly a feisty oldster giving a young shaver a bit of his sharp tongue and a summary of what has happened or not happened in all their lives, in a world where the word ‘word’ has ‘or’ embedded but otherwise ‘or’ does not exist as a word, a finger and a leg and a turned-round eyeball, notwithstanding. It involves retrocausality being obliterated by retrocausality itself, so a self-defeating retrocausality, and a spaceship that thus did not arrive, and you can read all manner of scenarios here, I guess, upon re-reading it, but my gestalt real-time book reviews are always upon a first reading of each work, in case a second reading expunges the first. I have so far only read this story once. It is already enticing me to read it again. But this needs to be read aloud as a first reading, but I only realised that by the time I had finished my first reading. I suggest you read aloud this work as a first reading of it while using an American accent with as much swagger you can summon from a sedentary position of old age. And wear a blue suit. Or nothing.
          3. Nowrk of Urtwirth, Unconfessed
            By Amy Power Jansen
            “As hunger cannot imagine food, as thirst cannot imagine water, emptiness cannot imagine full.”
            …and as gender cannot imagine male or female, we now have the pronouns necessary to allow us the removal of that ‘or’ in respect of the previous story between the feisty oldster masquerading as Aunt Bea, or vice versa?
            The subtitle of this book is CODE and you certainly need to crack it in order to understand this story. The squid’s narration here has actually gained much territory in the spaces between the words and the paragraphing. Whilst we had retrocausal time in the previous story, now we have retrocausal space with a palimpsest of emptiness and fullness, not emptiness OR fullness. I sense the Nowrk, now, or , nor, OK?, works towards hir real name. I sense this name will become clearer later, assuming that, as most of my real-time reviews often discover, the authors in an anthology often work towards a gestalt, not an intentional or planned or confessed collaboration as such, but a preternatural gathering of forces beyond their control. A Jungian code?
          4. Whatever Remains
            By Teo Yi Han
            “True/False?”
            That Either/Or theme in this book. A perfect short/short that is a portrait of the dichotomies and gang gestalt that we have seen uniquely played out in these fictions. This one is the gang’s coda. Telling of a loving relationship (from its inside and outside), a relationship where, I infer, genders and intentions strobe. The first time I have ever seen my obsession with Wimsatt’s Intentional Fallacy (in which I have been interested since 1967, adumbrated by me on-line in the last fifteen years) now played out in naked Jungian code. Above and beneath textured-stylish and/or staccato prose. The tutelary squid, notwithstanding.
            end


          SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends

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          SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends


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          Edited by Peter Coleborn & Pauline E. Dungate

          ALCHEMY PRESS 2016

          Work by Allen Ashley, Simon Avery, Stephen Bacon, Simon Bestwick, James Brogden, Ramsey Campbell, Mike Chinn, Gary Couzens, Sarah Doyle, Jan Edwards, Paul Edwards, Liam Garriock, John Grant, Terry Grimwood, Andrew Hook, John Howard, Ian Hunter, Tom Johnstone, Mat Joiner, Tim Lebbon, Alison Littlewood, Simon MacCulloch, Gary McMahon, David Mathew, Adam Millard, Chris Morgan, Pauline Morgan, Thana Niveau, Marion Pitman, John Llewellyn Probert, Rosanne Rabinowitz, Nicholas Royle, Lynda E. Rucker, Steve Savile, David A. Sutton, Steve Rasnic Tem, Mark Valentine, Joe X. Young.

          My long-term on-going page for Joel HERE.

          Hopefully as amends for not being involved, for whatever reason, in this book, I intend to carry out a real-time review of it in the comment stream below…

          4 thoughts on “SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends

              • “If some of the stories are not rigorously perfect, it doesn’t matter. Each of them has been written as a tribute to a man they regarded as a friend; a friend whose presence is deeply missed.”
                I intend this slow-motion review to be my own such tribute to Joel, along with my Joel page linked above.
                I have just read Pauline E. Dungate’s introduction where the above sentence appears. It is a fascinating and admirable account of the reclamation of Joel and his literary accoutrements from his abode.
                There are example photocopies of Joel’s handwriting in this book but as far as I can see there is no systematic attempt to link fragments with the various authors’ adaptions or continuations. I will report back on this as I go through the book fiction item by fiction item.
                Admirable, too, that proceeds of this book are due to go to Diabetes UK.
          1. JOEL by Chris Morgan
            “Not death, then, but immortality.”
            I refer to this finely touching (and half-harshly realistic!) tribute, not because it is among the book’s various introductions, but because it is set out typographically as a poem or free verse. I loved and reviewed Joel’s poetry and free verse.
                   CONTINUED: HERE

          THE DREAMCATCHER ‘DYSFUNCTION’ ROOM (up to 6 September 2016)

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          THE DREAMCATCHER ‘DYSFUNCTION’ ROOM
          Exploring what fiction can actually achieve physically in the brain as well as mentally or spiritually. It’s meant as a positive for a book to be listed on this page, as a work reaching beyond even the hyper-imaginative.
          Links are to the real-time reviews.
          The Function Room: The Kollection by Matt Leyshon
          Islington Crocodiles – Paul Meloy
          The English Soil Society – by Tim Nickels
          THE DARK TOWER SERIES by Stephen King
          Rameau’s Nephew by Denis Diderot
          The Inmates – John Cowper Powys
          THE MERCURY ANNUAL / PILGRIMS AT THE WHITE HORIZON by Michael Wyndham Thomas
          MEMBER by Michael Cisco
          Finnegans Wake by James Joyce
          Letters of Oblivion by Andrew Condous
          The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath by HP Lovecraft
          Ana Kai Tangata – Scott Nicolay
          AREA X – Jeff VanderMeer
          TRISTRAM SHANDY by Laurence Sterne
          The King In Yellow – by Robert W. Chambers
          THE FAMILIAR – Mark Z. Danielewski
          The Infusorium – Jon Padgett
          The Sacred Fount by Henry James
          DREAMCATCHER by Stephen King
          The King in Yellow Tales, Vol. 1 by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.
          EXTINCTION by Thomas Bernhard
          A Choir of Ill Children by Tom Piccirilli
          Any future additions to this room will be shown in comments below.

          18 thoughts on “*

                  

          The Big Book of Science Fiction (2)

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          The Big Book of Science Fiction

          Part Two of my real-time review continued from HERE.

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          Edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer

          Vintage Books 2016

          When I real-time review this 1210 page anthology, my comments will appear in the thought stream below.

          36 responses to “The Big Book of Science Fiction

          1. Part Two of my real-time review continued from HERE.

            imageTHE STAR (1955) by Arthur C. Clarke
            “The Rubens engraving of Loyola seems to mock me as it hangs there above the spectrophotometer tracings.”
            Seems significant where the engraving is placed bearing in mind the nature of spectrophotometry’s lack of time-resolution. And why the engraving and not the full colour version of the painting?
            This is a famous story, so no need to re-rehearse its plot. Somehow movingly spiritual as well as potentially empty of anything but entropy. How does that miracle work? Endlessly slow-motional and transferable like an Olympic torch, but also with its flame of eternity abruptly doused like a candle.
            “To have prevented one single sin is reward enough for the labours and efforts of a whole lifetime.” – Saint Ignatius of Loyola
            I wonder if, in the original language, there was also a typo?
          2. GRANDPA (1955) by James H. Schmitz
            “It was like dreaming a dream in which you yelled and yelled at people and couldn’t make them hear you!”
            The 15 year old human-like but not wholly human boy Cord (I have already noted the next story is by Cordwainer Smith) who works on this “soup of life” planet of Grandpa Gaia’s cone- and swashvine-buckling reaction to colonisation by humans, with Regulations and female authority over Cord in abundance, Grandpa being an amazing ‘raft’, a burn-steered craft that supposedly morphs and adapts with worms oozed out cones, and vines and bug-eaters and bug-fliers and “kinky sprouts” …. and human-entendrilling in its orifices, well, I can’t do justice to it here, it is a quite a ride for the reader, too, as this raft craft skirts this planets’ equivalent to the ocean, with Cord hanging on to his job as he improvises help towards the female humans and others locked, almost as he was or would have been, aboard this riotous raft. Locked instead of simply free-ranging on board it as he was.
            Yelled and yelled my quote from this text says. Well, that may be a clue of assonance as to the importance of the yellowhead creatures whose intelligence Cord once wondered why such things should need intelligence at all! We ride the craft, so do they…
          3. I have read quite a lot of modern SF (for example, the fiction in INTERZONE over the last few years, my real-time reviews being linked here: https://conezero.wordpress.com/interzone/) and I suggest that SF has not changed radically in quality, style and subject-matter since around 1900 when E.M. Forster first featured the Internet in ‘The Machine Stops’. This is a positive and unsurprising thing to say, I feel, bearing in mind the nature of SF. Modernism is ever with us in every age, and modernism can hardly change, especially speculative modernism, didactic trends of cultural or scientific campaigns notwithstanding.
          4. THE GAME OF RAT AND DRAGON (1955) by Cordwainer Smith
            “What seemed to be Dragons to the human mind appeared in the form of gigantic Rats in the minds of the Partners.”
            I remember reading a lot of fiction by this author in the 1970s and this brought back that pleasure with a rush. Cord’s antics in this book’s previous story, too.
            Cosmic telepathy in the planoform of cerebral Space Opera where humans are pinlighting cats as Partners to fight the Dragons whom the cats see as Rats. I wondered if it was significant that the word Rats (Star backwards) is embedded in the word Partners? Shakespeare or Colegrove? Who’s Colegrove? The ‘hot, clear goodness of the sun’, there is also something seedy about some of these types of interbred-composite or miscegenate-hybridrelationships, especially the implication of a ‘leering’ one with a girl at one point, but equally a brainwash-swashbuckling of souls that are genuinely and positively mind-unsettling and space-operatic, features that paradoxically keep you away from the “insane asylum”, something “underneath space itself”, including a soul, when come apart from its owner, being described as something that “looked wet and sort of sticky as if it were bleeding…”
          5. THE LAST QUESTION (1956) by Isaac Asimov
            “I admit it has its seamy side, this immortality.”
            Dear Mum, I beg you tell me it isn’t possible to know.
            This cottony mouth, wet grove tree, powdered stars of an intellect-seasoning episodic story — enduring over more time and human existence than it takes to transcend the Zeno’s Paradox of a composite of infinity, eternity and immortality in face of entropy’s dying universe — has at its spine an evolving computer system that passes through exponential stages of our concept of the early Internet to some later Cloud computing and then a state of cybernetic existence beyond any human brain’s encompassing. Is that spine equivalent to that earlier Olympic torch metaphor I used about Clarke’s THE STAR, where the religious end of the Asimov story is, in turn, equivalent to the end of the Clarke one? My mind is not big enough to know.
          6. STRANGER STATION (1956) by Damon Knight
            “He glanced up at the painting over the console — heavy crustacean limbs that swayed gracefully in the sea . . .”
            A painting of Rubens’ Loyola having turned into an alien? Word textures gives us glimpses of a true alien that you can only imagine as imagination’s imagination, glimpsed by the man Wesson stationed stranger to meet strangest, to milk the exudate of immortality; these glimpses are a moment of sheer alien art and conjuring of forces (almost sexual?) that meet each other both to synergise with each other and to battle each other, too, the hybrid way, the only way to produce the optimum for both, like a cosmic chess game of Russian-doll Pyrrhic victories, and we wonder if this rite of passage and its frightening outcome for Wesson (jiggered into being by his childhood traumas) were the same as it was for his serial forerunners in this task, a role-play Theatre of the Absurd, accompanied as all these forerunners were by a conniving (?) Aunt Nettie (whom Wesson calls Jane) as a mobile relative of Asimov’s exponential cybernetic Cloud?
            Those floating pages.
          7. SECTOR GENERAL (1957) by James White
            I – III
            “It wasn’t that they were insane to begin with, but their job forced a form of insanity onto them.”
            This is the first third of a novelette, depicting a multi-environmental hospital, dealing with all manner of alien or ET illnesses. Conway is the one we follow through the various wards, all with hyper-imaginative effects on the modern reading mind, I sense, with empathy and gestalt treatments. The main treatment of the day for our hero is a gestalt group where injury to one is injury to all, with many repercussions following. Conway is a beginner in operating such a treatment where he can actually become part of the alien gestalt himself with various tweaks to that concept that the text gives you. The character of Conway is a satisfying complex one with his hatred of Monitors and other nuances we are given. Some of the described ‘environments’ of care are quite astonishing.
            Being a gestalt real-time book reviewer with the various spin-offs that have developed within me since I started this activity in 2008 as a sort of Conway beginner, perhaps the first such in literary history, then I can empathise with him and the danger of the above ‘insanity’ involved. I could mean this quite seriously. But I keep my powder dry.
            I would tentatively say, in media res, that this novelette is also ESSENTIAL reading for those who are students of the SOUTHERN REACH trilogy, as much else in this anthology so far, to a greater or lesser degree, is RECOMMENDED reading for this purpose.
            (To be continued)
            • IV – VII
              “‘Of course you didn’t know,’ said Williamson gently. Conway wondered why it was that such a young man could talk down to him without giving offence; he seemed to possess AUTHORITY somehow.”
              The imaginative pace continues, and I am not disappointed at the continuation of both the visionary spectacle and the subtle complexity of character. As an aside, the ‘junior interns’ here grown tired like our own junior doctors and need pep-shots to carry on working, with corridors later being used as overflowing wards. Meanwhile, Conway’s prejudice against Monitors is tested when he befriends and is befriended by one of them called Williamson, someone who later lambasts emergency casualties from some ‘insane’ war and refers also to “stinking crawlers.” And there is later a stunning scene that must outdo much other SF I have read, when a rogue ship crashes into the hospital itself, creating more problems for the hospital staff, and contortional negotiations of structure to get in or out of dire situations (for the characters we have grown to know), events that are thrilling. As I have said in earlier real-time gestalt-contact with books, books with whatever rare sickness or skill, that a few of them at least not only change what is within the reading brain but can alter its physical shape, too!
              (to be continued)
              • VIII – XI
                “Get this, I’m not going to kill an intelligent being!”
                From a “cosmic ark” to an “unidentifiable something” to a rogue as yet unknown survivor causing mayhem among the “gravity fluctuations”, Conway’s deep dilemma of kill-one-to-save-others (or not) eventually arrives at the merged polarities of “his maturity, or moral degeneration”…
                I sense there are big things going on here, big things in Conway’s motivations, his loyalties to self and others, big things that are paralleled by big entities and multi-tentacularly bred life-forms and structural aberrations and an ‘insanity’ with which this text infects the reader, even at the end, where the psychological subtleties and complexities prevail, and outcomes remain open-ended beyond the ending, even though the immediate dangers are over for now, and Conway’s relationship with Monitor Williamson intact. “Williamson won’t dare die . . .”
                The character of Conway is a literary masterstroke, a SF one, too.
                External dichotomies he needs to face. Affinity with alienage, or “a xenophobic neurosis”. Compromise or automatic accident? Intelligent being or tantamount to a pet dog? And questions of mental health.
                The four letter classifications of all the creatures are fascinating, too,
                The rogue survivor itself is an interesting premonition of the repercussions of today’s serial killing, or suicide terrorists. “Wouldn’t you WANT to die rather than go on killing . . . .?”
                Thanks, anthology book, for the experience of this novelette that reaches toward all points of the moral compass.
          8. THE VISITORS by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
            Translated by James Womack
            “more straightforward and at the same time more complex”
            …like all good literature.
            A delightfully deadpan account — during an archaeological investigation of Apida Castle near Pendzhikent — of Visitors looking like huge spiders, aliens thus christened as Visitors by the one whom they capture, a tale complete with “loessal dust”, “cheap cigarettes”, black helicopters, and the pride of humans against mere machines – or machines against mere humans?
            “Hedgehogs have appeared at the top of the ship again. [This makes no sense. Lozovsky mentions hedgehogs nowhere else in his account.] They spin round, give off sparks, and vanish. A strong smell of ozone . . .”
          9. PELT by Carol Emshwiller
            “…for what was one more strange thing in one more strange world?”
            This is the genre of what will become known, following this review, as dog-didacticism. Perhaps, rather unlikely though. Disregarding that, this is, taken objectively without any human-didactic slant on it, a strange vision of alien animals on a distant planet called Jaxa, and the interaction between a human man’s pet dog helper and the man’s hunting of the native animals, all seen from the naive viewpoint of the dog. But where does naivety stop and didacticism start. They say the pet-owner and the pet often grow alike. The deadpan descriptions of the aliens are thought-creatures that will stay with me, as participants in a dream. And the dog’s name is Queen something or other. Mustn’t forget I am an animal, too, on an even stranger but jaxaposed world. King’s wind in the keyholes hoping to unlock the doors without the proper keys…
          10. THE MONSTER by Gérard Klein
            Translated by Damon Knight
            “And these shadows leaning on the sills disappeared one by one, while men’s footsteps echoed in the street, keys slipped into oiled locks,…”
            This is quite a find, starting with a radio commentary of our world’s very first alien from outer space, landed in the park, no danger they say, but a woman is worried about her husband who was returning home through that park…
            A tale that eventually leads to the most horrific and poignant subsumption, with a disarming naivety of narration and incantation of a woman’s name that are absolutely perfect for it. It reminds me of Jean Ray’s short fiction (I reviewed here) and excels it, at least at this one critical cusp between SF and horror, seasoned with a Munch-like angst.
          11. THE MAN WHO LOST THE SEA by Theodore Sturgeon
            “…for they were all one and the same thing . . . the thing called unreachable.”
            A stream of consciousness like Joyce and Beckett, but one that makes exquisite sense, the boy with the beta model in his hand, a model gradually becoming more sophisticated down or up the Greek alphabet of prototypes, the sick man when he was a boy or the man is the boy himself: the extension model used to fit the sick man’s footprints in the sand, reconciling the seeming madness of some reality of what has happened, the mathematical conundrums of the satellite that brought him here. A Mars a day helps you work, rest and play. Rest in sand, play with model, work at summoning the sheathing swaddling sea…
            A masterpiece. cf Report on Probability A by Brian Aldiss.
            Like real-time reviewing towards a gestalt. Not only this story on its own but this whole big book of stories. So Far.
          12. THE WAVES by Silvina Ocampo
            Translated by Marian Womack
            “I find it obscene that countries have fallen apart and people are now organized on the basis of the order of their molecules and the waves they emit.”
            A densely packed short short in 1959 where I interpret it being a predictive dystopia of categorising people via social media today, resonating the keys one strikes, the waves one ignites, with those of others, linking those who want to sell with those who want to buy, to the bottom bone of forbidden personal knowledge.
            The checking out of Womack and Womack’s album titles, notwithstanding.
            (I have previously real-time reviewed over forty of Silvina Ocampo’s short stories HERE.)
          13. PLENITUDE by Will Worthington
            “Make no mistake about it; there is a kind of connectedness between the seemingly random questions of very small kids.”
            Unlike between the heavy deliberations of us grown-ups?
            This is a very satisfying child-growing-up story of a father taking his son to the city from the basic hand-to-mouth life in the country, a story worthy of Flannery O’Connor at her best, equally full of seemingly complex connections and tentacular clauses of prose ratiocination. The only (only?) difference here is that the city, with its inhabitants living in shelters called ‘grapes’ with a frightening insectoid security, is far more unconnected to those human beings still living in the countryside like the protagonist, his hard-working wife in pre-politically correct times, and his two sons. But the power and meaning are the same between such an interface of social mores, as it was in Flannery’s stories wherein words for people were never scrutinised for what they said about the people using such words.
          14. As a prelude to my review of THE VOICES OF TIME by JG Ballard (a new work for me today, turning out seminal to my interests), here are two relevant quotes from THE GLASTONBURY ROMANCE By John Cowper Powys –
            “His mind seemed at that second absolutely balanced on a taut and twanging wire between two terrible eternities, an eternity of wilful horror, and an eternity of bleached, arid futility, devoid of all life-sap. He could feel the path to the horror, shivering with deadly phosphorescent sweetness. He could feel the path to the renunciation filling his nostrils with acrid dust, parching his naked feet, withering every human sensation till it was hollow as the shard of a dead beetle! The nature of his temptation was such that it had nothing to redeem it. Such abominable wickedness came straight out of the evil in the heart of the First Cause, travelled through the interlunar spaces, and entered the particular nerve in the erotic organism of Mr. Evans which was predestined to respond to it.”
            “He was killed instantaneously, the front of his skull being bashed in so completely, that bits of bone covered with bloody hair surrounded the deep dent which the iron made. His consciousness, the ‘I am I’ of Tom Barter, shot up into the ether above them like a released fountain-jet and quivering there pulsed forth a spasm of feeling, in which outrage, ecstasy, indignation, recognition, pride, touched a dimension of Being more quick with cosmic life than Tom had ever reached before in his thirty-seven years of conscious existence. This heightened — nay! this quadrupled — awareness dissolved in a few seconds, after its escape from the broken cranium, but whether it passed, with its personal identity intact, into that invisible envelope of rarefied matter which surrounds our astronomic sphere or whether it perished irrecoverably, the present chronicler knows not.”
            There are many other relevant quotes I once made from this book here: https://weirdtongue.wordpress.com/quotations-from-the-glastonbury-romance-by-john-cowper-powys/
            • THE VOICES OF TIME (1960) by JG Ballard
              An opening to die for…
              “Later Powers often thought of Whitby, and the strange grooves the biologist had cut, apparently at random, all over the floor of the empty swimming pool.”
              This is a mighty scientific-spiritual portrait of characters involved in Toynbeean ‘challenge and response’ against and with the cosmos, the existential cries of number-coded eschatology, amidst close-encounters-type building of obsessive concrete walls instead of mountains in situations of what can now since be called ‘Ballard-like’ abandoned places on earth, experimental sleep deprivation extrapolations, an Area X in proto-utero. Silent genes in latent literary suspension. We SEE time itself. Alarm clocks slept through, and ‘alarms’ in organisms themselves. All in a felt ambiance couched by optimum prose for such pessimums. Synaesthesia born from mere human words expressing the inexpressible. Astonishing.
          15. THE ASTRONAUT by Valentina Zhuraviyova
            Translated by James Womack
            “: chess, a new variant, with two queens of each color and an eighty-one-square board. . . . ”
            This is a seriously inspiring story journey – in those days in our future where journeys took astronauts ages and ages to get from one star or planet to another – and it was important what their CVs showed about their hobbies to while away the time, and this group have some interesting hobbies, the Captain, for an example, being an oil painter… This journey seems to become a blend of the previous ‘Snowball Effect’ and ‘Last Question’ stories in this book, as the crew need to optimise the journey after a major setback, a scenario involving Zeno’s Paradox considerations, an inverse tontine, preserving fuel, jettisoning other things, either to reach their destination and not return to Earth, or go back to Earth before reaching their destination. The result is a tribute to the nature of mankind, amidst haunting resonances regarding the Captain’s sacrifice and legacy, a stunning journey as a parallel to another to-and- from journey through the nature of his paintings.
            Without detracting from that serious inspiration, this story also suggested to me these slow-motion real-time reviews of mine and my earlier contention that reading this very big book is a device to defy death!
          16. I have not yet started reading the next story in the book…
            THE SQUID CHOOSES ITS OWN INK by Adolfo Bioy Casares
            Translated by Marian Womack
            …but I just finished a few minutes ago the first story in a new real-time review here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2016/08/31/orthogonal-vol-2-code/ and it’s a writerly Squid story of which the above title would have been a fine alternative title. I find this to be an amazing coincidence!
            My review of the Casares will appear below as soon as I have read it.
            • “Godfather said that the visitor was shocked to discover that the government of the world was not in the hands of the best people, but rather in those of people who were decidedly mediocre.”
              This Argentinian community has its own “Iron Lady”; they did not need to go to war with one! Meanwhile, in an engaging comedy, there is a lot of walking on eggshells here as the townsfolk read the runes of why a pivot sprinkler is moved to a warehouse, and why text books are needed there in such rapid amounts of consumption. I sense there is a book-learning and waterspray-addicted catfish, squid-baited by printer’s ink — or an alien looking LIKE that — come here to save its own race’s collateral damage from our weapons of mass destruction, to wrest them from the Trumps of our world….
              A ‘ dying fall’ ending gave me a wry smile. Soon to be wiped from my face, I guess.
              “Whenever there are elections, […] then your beautiful humanity stands revealed naked, just as it really is. It’s always the worst ones who win.”
          17. 2BR02B by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
            “The painter gestured at a foul drop cloth. ‘There’s a good picture of it,’ he said. ‘Frame that,…'”
            This painter in his conflict between representation-as-repression and abstract art as the true message is a telling complement of the painter in ‘The Astronaut’ reviewed above. This story of population control by a jettisoning and replacement process is also akin to that Astronautic journey’s tontine Snowball Effect. This now believable Vonnegut utopia as dystopia is the Drupelets Effect in literature, words crowding the page, then jettisoning some to make spaces for words and paragraphs or reading between the lines.
          18. A MODEST GENIUS by Vadim Shefner
            Translated by Matthew J. O’Connell
            “I can only love a really extraordinary man, but to tell you the truth, you’re just a good average fellow.”
            This reminded me of some of the lighter ‘pelican’ miracle interfaces and reversed Swiftian modest proposals of Leena Krohn, both of these writers modest geniuses, I suspect. As is this story’s main protagonist, inventing, inter alia, skates for skating on water, as he courts and woos the pretty girls, but most of them are girls who seem to prefer inventors of, say, soap that turns black on the face when used – so as to deter soap thieves! The finale, taking the modest genius’s inventions to cosmic proportions, is still light and airy. A story that has SF’s good feeling side.
          19. DAY OF WRATH by Sever Gansovsky
            Translated by James Womack
            “Now we will all know that to be a man it is not enough to be able to count and to study geometry.”
            With the Beckettian feel of Evenson’s Collapse of Horses, the journalist accompanies the forester across the mesa. A world where scientific humankind has inadvertently – or by a strange set of coincidences regarding bifurcated life-paths explained towards the end – created animals called Otarks, that are more human than humans, with maths skills coupled with cannibalism. It is a direct template for today’s Daesh State, where animals use electronic social media. A story where, for one rare time, didacticism actually works. Memorable perpetuo moto as inverse tontine…
            “Even the children didn’t laugh.”
          20. imageTHE HANDS by John Baxter
            “Six people, to be exact.”
            A story of some men under surveillance having arrived from staying on another planet, each growing extra body parts. Grossly envisaged growths, and by my ability to Dreamcatch gestalts paying off here, this seemed a better story than it actually would otherwise have been. And also by the fact that it coincided this same afternoon with these two simultaneous real-time reviews here and here, one mentioning another story entitled HANDS and the other a trudge on a beach followed by spotting six entities….
          21. DARKNESS by André Carneiro
            Translated by Leo L. Barrow
            “More important than rational speculations was the mysterious miracle of blood running through one’s veins,…”
            This is a story of a world suddenly subsumed by Byron’s darkness. At first the protagonist helps a family in his apartment block. A microcosm of negotiated obstacles within darkness. Then outside, while scavenging food, he is helped by a blind man already in his own lifelong microcosm of practised darkness. As the sun seeps back, these Chinese Boxes or Russian Dolls of microcosm and macrocosm, one within the other, and one within the other again, take on a telling and added force. As Voltaire once said, cultivate your own microcosm in case it is the macrocosm.
          22. “REPENT, HARLEQUIN!” SAID THE TICKTOCKMAN (1965) by Harlan Ellison®
            “…and he stared down at the neat Mondrian arrangements of the buildings.
            Somewhere nearby, he could hear the metronomic left-right-left of the 2:47 p.m. shift, entering the Timkin roller-bearing plant in their sneakers.”
            “The shift was delayed seven minutes.”
            It seems highly preternatural that I happen to re-read this classic story after many decades on the very day when the UK news is full of the SportsDirect® HARLEQUIN comeuppance by the TICKTOCKMAN (or vice versa?) both of whom survived this story by all accounts.
            And also re-reading it during the news of the UK junior doctors and their seven day week, by cancelling their next strike on the assumption that weekends no longer exist except as a glitch in the precise timing of eternity?
            No wonder, in 1965, HE® referred in this story to the “communications web” as well as Thoreau.
          23. NINE HUNDRED GRANDMOTHERS by R.A. Lafferty
            “…it would be wise not to seek to be too wise.”
            This is magnificent. A sort of Lobster Effect as an example of Zeno’s Paradox. No point in trying to describe such a famous story, other than the fact that facemasks as burqas or real faces take on a new topicality. Hands “everywhere-digited” as faces, too. Names as their own motivational characters, and retrocausal Creation’s First Causes as teleological or ontological jokes… The mind never stops boggling at this work.
            I genuinely recall standing beside RA Lafferty at the outlet troughs of the World SF Convention in 1979 Brighton. We did not speak.
            “Nokoma was likely feminine. There was a certain softness about both the sexes of the Proavitoi,…”
          24. DAY MILLION by Frederik Pohl
            image“They met cute.”
            And that three word sentence seems to sum up a whole wishful far-future and its iconic love story. This witty-chatty monologue to YOU the reader NOW, about that far-future age of bodily and mentally expressive freedom when ‘queers’ were not called ‘queers’ and trans just a way of life, and babies predictable as to their nature still inside the womb. Except that, as this text says, progress doesn’t go in a straight line, and gender of humanity has many new appendages and oubliettes to be proud of or be sickened by, plus new perfectibilities, straight or bent images that develop from good to bad and back again, depending on your standpoint in retrocausal time. Babies and wombs in a different interface, too, I guess.
            And now what else do we foresee via this monologue? Love-making at a distance!? By analogue! Will never catch on. Sexting by text? Or Skype?
            I’m off to listen to d’Indy. A bit less jazzy than Monk for my taste.
          25. STUDENT BODY (1953) by F.L. Wallace
            “He could learn a lot about the animal from trying to kill it.”
            This story seems to have been printed out of chronological order of publication and, having now read it, I can infer why. As this work’s own digger — or, as it calls it, a “Crawler” — finds out, there is something about slow-motion reviewing of real-time that can spot the leapfrogs of evolution, even if one tries to disrupt that pattern with the equivalent of a non sequitur, here a robot cat.
            The story concerns Earth’s colonisation on a planet where the discredited Biologist had predicted no pests, and also where the net effect of equipment towed there means more expected of the colony and the equipment needed in a sort of inverse tontine or snowball effect that parallels the fast-motion evolution of the pests, that in turn parallels the naked Creation myth that neatly brackets, as student-bodies, this work at its beginning and at its end. Perhaps the speediest evolution conceivable is that of the Ouroboros represented by the plot itself?
          26. This real-time review will now continue HERE.

          SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends (1)

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          SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends


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          Just received my purchased copy of this book.
          Edited by Peter Coleborn & Pauline E. Dungate
          ALCHEMY PRESS 2016
          Work by Allen Ashley, Simon Avery, Stephen Bacon, Simon Bestwick, James Brogden, Ramsey Campbell, Mike Chinn, Gary Couzens, Sarah Doyle, Jan Edwards, Paul Edwards, Liam Garriock, John Grant, Terry Grimwood, Andrew Hook, John Howard, Ian Hunter, Tom Johnstone, Mat Joiner, Tim Lebbon, Alison Littlewood, Simon MacCulloch, Gary McMahon, David Mathew, Adam Millard, Chris Morgan, Pauline Morgan, Thana Niveau, Marion Pitman, John Llewellyn Probert, Rosanne Rabinowitz, Nicholas Royle, Lynda E. Rucker, Steve Savile, David A. Sutton, Steve Rasnic Tem, Mark Valentine, Joe X. Young.
          My long-term on-going page for Joel HERE.
          Hopefully as amends for not being involved, for whatever reason, in this book, I intend to carry out a real-time review of it in the comment stream below…

          30 thoughts on “SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends

              • “If some of the stories are not rigorously perfect, it doesn’t matter. Each of them has been written as a tribute to a man they regarded as a friend; a friend whose presence is deeply missed.”
                I intend this slow-motion review to be my own such tribute to Joel, along with my Joel page linked above.
                I have just read Pauline E. Dungate’s introduction where the above sentence appears. It is a fascinating and admirable account of the reclamation of Joel and his literary accoutrements from his abode.
                There are example photocopies of Joel’s handwriting in this book but as far as I can see there is no systematic attempt to link fragments with the various authors’ adaptions or continuations. I will report back on this as I go through the book fiction item by fiction item.
                Admirable, too, that proceeds of this book are due to go to Diabetes UK.
          1. JOEL by Chris Morgan
            “Not death, then, but immortality.”
            I refer to this finely touching (and half-harshly realistic!) tribute, not because it is among the book’s various introductions, but because it is set out typographically as a poem or free verse. I loved and reviewed Joel’s poetry and free verse.
            • List of ‘introductions’:-
              Foreword by Peter Coleborn
              Introduction by Pauline E. Dungate
              Joel by Chris Morgan
              Not Dispossessed: A Few Words on Joel Lane’s Early Published Works by David A. Sutton
              The Conscience of the Circuit by Nicholas Royle
          2. I intend to read and review each story in this book on a rough daily basis.
            Any links to authors’ names will be to my previous reviews of their work.
            EVERYBODY HATES A TOURIST by Tim Lebbon
            “…passing tables laden with empty bottles and glasses and surrounded by people who were all starting to look the same.”
            Jenny as narrator is starting life and work anew in Birmingham and she visits her friend Emily, the only person she knows there. This is a frightening portrait of alienation even from a friend, with a scene in a dance club that will stay with you. That alienation is itself subsumed by an incident in the city with flashing lights that “were mostly blue.” And suffocated by cloying visions of other people having sex. I’d say a text worthy of the infusion Lebbonane. Alienation as a paradoxical blend of outward dispersing and inward swaddling forces?
          3. Pingback: Real-time reviews | The Alchemy PressEdit
          4. THE MISSING By John Llewellyn Probert
            “I switched the computer off. That was what you were supposed to do, wasn’t it? Switch it off and on again to make it work?”
            Something thus remains; something to restart.
            This is an important story, I sense, in the book’s context, a story that was bound to appeal to the likes of me, with someone discharged early from hospital after cerebral trauma, taken by taxi back to a disarming blank memory, a potentially blank home, a blank hobby, all of which should have meant something. A hobby about films. Even the friendly taxi driver can’t really help.. The film THE MISSING – a reference to a film directed by Emmanuel Escobada? The bleached stills of monstrous creatures and bandaged children, notwithstanding
          5. CHARMED LIFE by Simon Avery
            “It was like sleeping with someone made of shattered glass.”
            If you read some of my past reviews of Joel’s work, you may see the expression “Lane-like” to describe the stories being reviewed. I never meant that in a facetious or critical or, even, a ouroboric way. It was just a statement of fact, as cuttingly frank as the relationships being adumbrated, the bleak environment being carved, the haunting diaspora of souls and bodies often brought on stage as a finale. It was an obsessive and incantatory feel I meant by “Lane-like”. All credit to Avery, when I say that this powerful, touching text is the quintessence or apotheosis of what I meant by Lane-likeness.
            It tells of your being discharged from psychic care after a brutalised separation from a partner, back to the scene of that trauma. You were the brutaliser, it seems, but now via, some awareness of self as a discrete being like a shadow or reflection, there is a difficult catharsis, after the self dares you back into the dangers of that dark and drugged world whence such relationships are formed. There is far more to it it than that, and I cannot do justice to it here. But it is a scenario where Lane-like becomes truly ouroboric, this time. A clinching catharsis.
            Another example, too, of this book’s turning on and off to reboot or heal?
          6. ANTITHESIS by Alison Littlewood
            “: strobe lights echoed the chest-deep duff-duff-duff of the bass.”
            This equally powerful story is in fact the baseline or bass line of the previous story, an anthem of antithesis, a theme and variations on an original theme, where the rediscovery of your ex with that ex’s new boyfriend in a rock pub called the Night Side is a tension not only between musical notes but also between believing that the good forces you sense as a “presence” of angels or guardians are on your own side and then believing they may be on the side of the night’s side against you, as you try to grate away the face between him and you, another self that created a new Ouroboros…
            Or that’s how I see it in the evolving context of the book. Something not “averted” but brutally transcended. The allowance of the guardians or witnesses, notwithstanding. And today perhaps we are those witnesses by dint of this book.
          7. DARK FURNACES by Chris Morgan
            “No longer was steel strip being rolled and coiled, then chopped up and pressed into small anonymous shapes vital for industry. It was a semi-urban district with no name, no clear centre and no live music.”
            A threnody of “sudden passivity” as well as a convincing but constructively oblique tale that is based on a theme and variations from Joel’s ‘Where Furnaces Burn” book, whereby pensionward-tiptoeing policemen — despite the tale’s believable narrator policeman’s best endeavours — nod through suicides as simply suicides, and witnesses’ and/or suspects’ facial expressions hide the significance of a haunting Goth girl’s dire entropy upon all those young (and older?) men that she happens to deploy her scrawny self upon…
            Ultimately a text that is deadpan passive in itself, as a metaphor of our times, with dead bodies ironically called dark furnaces…
          8. imageBROKEN EYE by Gary McMahon
            “Everything was rushing in and pulling away at the same time:”
            That Littlewood/Lane ‘antithesis’ again. That Lane-like Diaspora or Ouroboros, both of which I have already mentioned in this review . As if the word ‘night’ explained everything. A tower block and orgy as both Diaspora and Ouroboros, invited and spurned to join their wall of suppuration and passion, in various permutations, amid the dereliction of the direly endemic urban existence pervading Joel’s visionary fiction. And one of those sorry souls who multi-collects the video boxes as old-fashioned creatures themselves audibly shuttling along with their once spooled or spoolable nightsters depicted within, coming to life to confirm the life we’ve left others to share, after unspooling them from the twisted towers of flesh…
            You can always depend on McMahon, when at his best or, even, at his less than best. But the optimum McMahon is when he is both those things, in “simultaneous attack and retreat”, as here.
          9. STAINED GLASS by John Grant
            I have always found this author’s work compelling with crisp turns of phrase, a narrative drive and panache.. And this story is no exception. But its brainwave is that the story holds, as a vessel, the secret of a darker canalised pungency of a Joel Lane fiction, like this story’s own described brandy balloon-glass is that same vessel holding a drink with the taste expectation of what it is meant to hold…. It is as if the crisp narration configures the characters from the fiction its has distilled, for example, the Thatcherite poll tax, a train journey through the Hell of Bosch’s dark furnaces, and a scrawny woman called Ellie threading herself through a panoply of reincarnated memories reflected in a singled narrative mirror’s “synchronised shards of random truth and fiction.”
            Ellie, too, for me, is that scrawny Goth threading the above Morgan story’s Dark Furnaces.
          10. Pingback: Real Time Review by Des Lewis | Jan EdwardsEdit
          11. As an another aside, this is my gestalt real-time review of Joel Lane’s edited BENEATH THE GROUND anthology. This book was published by Alchemy Press in 2003 (their first publication?) and my review was during 2009 when I think AP was dormant and awaiting its resurgence more recently?
          12. THREADBARE by Jan Edwards
            “I would much prefer coffee, with a slug of brandy, […] The stoneware mug, the one with the moulded dragon curled around the belly, is tactile, almost animate when filled with warm liquid.”
            …which echoes powerfully Grant’s use of ‘vessel’ to contain Lane, and it is the taste as expectation that counts. And I was completely disarmed by this story, by its utterly chilling Tarot session where past recriminations and broken affairs are transcended or made more bitter, a way of seeing or ‘reading’ things via the vessel this time of occult prestidigitation, as well as, later, by the real images in the texture evolved from the woman’s workaday loom, but also pareidoliac images within the snagging, teasing, worrying weft and weave, an effect that resonates with her evocative dreams of coldly urban Tyseley…as led by a fox to someone else’s lair or its own earth? The earth and fire of actually fulfilled recrimination?
          13. Pingback: Threadbare – Real Time | Jan EdwardsEdit
          14. THE DARK ABOVE THE FAIR by Terry Grimwood
            “‘The Last Time’ faded away.”
            A paean to ‘Not Fade Way’? And ‘Something Remains’.
            This, for me, is an evocatively seminal fiction work upon the Mods and Rockers phenomenon in the early 1960s, of which I was a direct witness. In fact, I now live in a seaside place where one of the biggest ‘battles’ took place.
            Here, it carries a convincing genius-loci of seaside fair and at least a poignantly tentative tinge of the Capulets and Montagues motif in the believable characters of the Narrator as the Mod and Simon as the Rocker….
            And a dawning retroactive ending with, for me, the musical ‘dying fall’ of the Animals and Stones in palimpsest




            The Pain Tree and Other Stories – Charles Wilkinson

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            13 thoughts on “The Pain Tree and Other Stories – Charles Wilkinson

            1. THE PAIN TREE
              “Only when one had the courage to feel pain, only when one surrendered to it completely, only then would colour come back into the world.”
              This novelette is exactly what I look for from literature at its optimum – or constructive pessimum? How have I managed to process through life without reading it – till now? Serious question.
              At first I thought of Sarban, Henry Green, Elizabeth Bowen, LP Hartley, &c. – a patchwork of my literary passions, emanating from Ian’s patchwork of life, regathering himself from a sudden adult blank, a visit to a dentist, as if a Proustian by dint of Molars return to Le Grand Meulnes of boyhood, and now returning to that village and seeing how those children you grew up with have changed, how perhaps you changed THEM, for good or ill, or how their torturer dentist of a father changed you all by memory’s retrocausal innuendo? The sublimation of pain by referred sharing it with a tree or its roots, or your own roots? Or a canopy’s mask of childish miming and your tutelary Aunt’s tug-of-pain?
              Throughout reading this work, I found myself raising my arm, from time to time.
              image
            2. A STORY OF RAIN AND SNOW
              “We always flew Quinlan Air. There were rumours that the pilots were Bulgarians who had difficulty in understanding the instructions of the air traffic controllers, but it was cheap and the planes were reassuringly full of nuns.”
              Exquisitely funny, this tale of Howard’s non-End and his Mother’s End as if written by a modern-literary, this-turn-of-the-century and witty form of EM Forster, complete with reference to the gloomier Shostakovich symphonies (though I personally find his String Quartets better in this respect) and, even, Hindemith, and nosebleeds fit for the sound of Schnittke, and ice cubes for nosebleeds, and an obsession with hands. — [HANDS was the last story in this author’s other collection I reviewed here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2016/08/18/a-twist-in-the-eye-charles-wilkinson/#comment-8029. I described at the start of that review my ‘overlap’ with this author. But I have found another connection now, as this Paintree book I am reviewing was masterminded by the late lamented Alan Ross of London Magazine, and CW also appeared in what I assume to be Alan’s SIGNALS II with this very story I am now reviewing, while a story of mine had earlier appeared in Alan’s SIGNALS I in 1991. Also, in that review of the other TwistoftheEye collection, I compared CW’s work, at least in part, to that of John Cowper Powys. I now find out from this Paintree collection’s dustjacket of CW’s connection to the the Welsh county of Powys!] — Meanwhile, this story of rain and snow is also a well-characterised study of a man called David with his wife Julie, his rather resentful friendship with the successful politician Howard, together with its backstory of childhood friendship, a patchwork of memory and today’s resentments and painful aftermath which resonates with the eponymous Paintree story itself, as reviewed above. With turns of phrase and observations to die for. Compare that story HANDS where I said earlier that there was an expression in it that should have been in a poem. This story teems and sprinkles with such expressions – but they all seem to work into a fine gestalt of prose.
            3. PILLARS OF ICE
              “…now she wouldn’t ever find out who the murderer was.”
              As I read that sentence in its powerful context, I literally cried. I rarely cry over literature, but I did here. Either my recent bereavement came into play here. Or, rather, it must show the utter power of this relatively short work, with which I would compare the power of RETURNING in the TwistoftheEye collection.
              I, too, as a Grammar School boy, visited old people instead of playing games. I, too, thought there was something wrong with me and something unstable about the earth. To tell you more about this work would spoil it. Other than it is perfect.
            4. VISUAL AIDS
              “It was as if children imagined that teachers existed only in some parody of Bishop Berkeley’s universe:”
              …or a Swedenborgian artefact in a diversionary ironmonger’s shop. I am sure I have met Swedenborg before in Wilkinson works. Looking a bit like my old Latin teacher from 1961.
              This is a sad, but funny story of a history teacher with some sort of barrier between himself and his pupils – and between himself and himself? When told by his head of department to spice up his lessons with visual aids, our hero relents and finds himself at last. His wife disappears with an ex-pupil, too. I laughed, but I wanted to cry. Or dance a galliard.
            5. IN THE DARK
              “‘Well he had this vision of life, of a pattern which he believed in.”
              …except he realised it was a pattern he had put together from books and things like Blake. I am a bit like Brian, with my search for a gestalt via the hawling and dreamcatching of books. Although I don’t clean my teeth as often as he does or change my shirt fifteen times a day, and I don’t stay in bed till noon nor drink myself silly. Part of me might, but I keep that part at bay. Brian is Joanna’s husband, Joanna who does go out to work and is nurtured (wooed?) by her lady boss Melanie who keeps one piece of screwed up paper in the waste bin to prove the bin was not a mere ornament. Brian is in this story for the same reason? The other characters being part of the bin itself, beset by red wine stains or the indelible smell of cat urine? I particularly relished the need for lubrication in this story, like rain for the car windscreen-wiper, moisture for parchment, sweat for desiccated flesh etc. And the vision of a sail-drenched boat, or a cartoon ship made galleon-manifest, a bit like that the children used in Sarban’s Calmahain?
              A story that is another treasure to find, although, with only one reading so far, I have not explored all its treasure’s constituents. I shall make a home-made bookcase before I read it again. Try harder to be a practical husband to obviate any uxorious waywardness toward the distaff rather than the spear side.
            6. GREENER THAN BEFORE
              “…and on lawns tusked for croquet only part-time gardeners admired the hoops…”
              They keep on coming. This is a genuine Aickman-like classic that all Aickman lovers must read before they die or before they are buried beneath a ha-ha.
              Seriously, Wilkinson may not even have read Aickman when he wrote this genuine masterpiece of literature? Yes, a masterpiece of general literature as well as of the weird fiction genre, in which way many of his earlier stories (as this one) and the more recent ones (in TwistoftheEye) actually deserve to be classified.
              Let me go through some of the leitmotifs of this one, although I can’t do justice to this story in a review. A narrator who already has the genius(loco)soul of this book and also of the TwistoftheEye one, hypochondriac, preoccupied not now with Brian’s earlier wet lubrication but with green paint encroaching on surfaces real and artistic, his mother 83 years old who is far more energetic than him, off on her travels, both of them bereaved, him with a brother he did not really get on with, she with a son she no doubt preferred to the narrator, a narrator involved with theological studies, with central hearing concerns and water temperatures (ah, that water, again, after all), with a sort of walled secret garden – and, at school, in his memory, an Augustus John triptych turned into a dart board, and, as with my own school in the early 1960s, all the boys calling each other by their surnames, plus ma and mi if there are brothers at the same school – and that emerging revelation might be one plot spoiler too far for this story – so, please do read it for yourself.)
            7. A MAN OF ABILITY
              “And that’s all I can remember: the sunlight in the field, the cows lying down, the cyclist blocking our way and the laughter I didn’t understand.”
              There something about that in the whole of this book so far, a sense of not understanding life by understanding its obliquities only too well!
              This is another story, I am afraid (by being in fear of over-appreciation), that I admire greatly. There is nothing overtly supernatural about it or weird in the weird fiction genre sense, but it is intrinsically weird in a sense that deploys realities that become more real as outcomes of disarming strangenesses or inscrutable ‘objective correlatives’. And a sense of place and time that is a sort of no man’s land between the Second World War and, say, the early 1970s, in the Isles of or around Britain – and straddling or blending both those bookending eras.
              This is a narrator’s eye view – from boy to a will’s executor – of his Uncle Val and Aunt Charlotte, through the prism of himself and through that of his own parents. A sense of Uncle Val’s sticking with loyalties and abandoning them in turns, taking on new social groups and then retrenching, along with agencies like the SAS in the background, wishful thinking, cheap bragging, resolutely hands-off cold-gardening, subtle concupiscence, recondite gambling, and a propeller in the hall … And utterly sad permutations of burden upon those who endure such behaviour or merely frown upon it. A tightening conflux of backstory events leading to the inevitable implosion.
              A masterful portrait study of humanity at its most optimal, which is not saying it ever rises much above the worst. Pathos and bathos, as a way of hopeful life.
              [I am definitely not saying that this free on-line text (‘Small Fry’, a story of mine written in the 1990s and published, in 2003, by Prime Books as part of the ‘Weirdmonger’ collection) is anything at all like this Wilkinson story’s viewpoint-and-plot or, of course, anywhere near as intrinsically well-written or enjoyable as a story in itself, but, for me, it has a co-resonance to offer.]
            8. NEDDAMAN’S TIMES
              Neddaman bores the village pub locals with the cryptic clues of his daily crossword, ever twisting reality into anagrams, as I often do with my real-time reviews. As if anagrams have intrinsic preternatural meaning essential to the understanding of the ‘synchronised shards of random truth and fiction.’
              Taken his wife to live near a noisy road rumoured to be an accident blackspot. She now has a phobia about going out in case the road sucks her in.
              With visits from a boring, maritally abandoned daughter and a grandson who has just started walking and interfering…
              All with what one would assume to be a tragic outcome for the Elder Nedda.
              A sad scenario; a light touch with a dark poignancy. Even Wilkinson’s lighter weight stories carry significant laid-back literary panache. More than just a gewgaw.
              (Blackspot – single out the pluraliser and switch for an old TV programme.)
            9. FRIEND AND FOREIGNER
              image“The first night they climbed up to the top storey of the only tower block and watched the campus scintillating beneath them in the navy-blue air. And the Ecumenical Religious Centre had a spire — of sorts.”
              …as one of this story’s three main areas of time-and-place – that campus, and another author seemed to be familiar with it in his story ‘Scrubs’ that I once reviewed here. I was familiar in real life with that same campus, too.
              This work has a deadpan poignancy to conjure with, if not to die for. Thomas plaits his time trifold now from an inimically archetypal bedsit, with a landlady who has strict rules of bath and kitchen for him, despite noisily entertaining loose morals in her own room… He still tussles with the mysteries of central heating, and also Powysian mystic visions (“A scent of sweet apples”), and he recalls the missing Martin he once knew in that earlier campus, son of a railwayman-become-vicar, and does Thomas dare summon the motivation to ring the vicar to enquire about Martin? And he also recalls previous schooldays with Martin, and with a well-characterised older foreign boy who had been friend of the Shah of Iran…well, it’s not a long story but it is a full plot. In those days, people hadn’t yet really crystallised their own xenophobia…
              We feel Thomas’s yearnings for a patchy past by dint of it being marginally less patchy than his present. A musical ‘dying fall’ thought of mine, and there is also a ‘dying fall’ ending to this meandering but sharply observed story.
              “At the bottom of the right-hand pocket lay an iceberg of tissues, roughened with forgotten colds.”
            10. THE LAST OF THE LOFTS
              “Monteverdi has been replaced by something anaemic by Mendelssohn.”
              A man who plays the Vespers at board meetings of his candle company must be a man to admire. Yet — as a bookish man, hating barbecues and pub pool competitions at which his wife excels, hating those who make spiky dolls out of cocktail sticks with pub food — he is writing the history of his Loft family and the further he reaches heavenward, chitinously and/or eschatologically, the further he reaches the last loft of all, I guess, bedridden-comfortable like Brian, his not having been appreciated by his wife and children nor they by him. To say the least.
              A removal van is coming to take him away, ha-ha.
            11. TREASURE
              “There were three or four quite unnecessary gates. Uncle Gustavus had erected these himself and kept them in a state of good repair accorded to no other structures on his land.”
              There seems something intrinsically important about that quote in connection with this whole book and the TwistintheEye one, too. And, here, the mention of the wooden tuck box or the wireless programme called ‘Sing Something Simple’ — and the treasure hunt, as if the children in Famous Five grew up and left their uncle’s care only to become characters in Wilkinson stories.
              This is another time-and-place meandering one, but sharply observed, like Friend and Foreigner. With objective correlative ‘gates’ – on the coast of what I take to be California under scrutiny by doctors in mufti, one who turns out to be Uncle Gustavus from those earlier Blyton stories and dreams of an octopus guarding treasure. And his English boyhood backstory. It as if Wilkinson himself has become my octopedal guardian angel, with my finding my ideal fiction writer, and he his ideal fiction reader. That’s the way all good fiction books should make ALL their readers feel. And this one does, judging by what I feel about it.
              I have now bought Wilkinson’s latest story and I expect any day to receive a hard copy of the latest edition of the catalytic Theaker’s – or at least personally catalytic / self-transcendent in my own literary reading and writing life. I shall review that new story and link to it below in due course, after I have received it.
              (My previous reviews of his work are linked from here together with those of Christopher Harman whom I placed on that link-page BEFORE I knew he had also written a Bailrigg story!)
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            Something Remains (2)

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            Something Remains


            CONTINUED FROM HERE: SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends (part one)
            lane
            ALCHEMY PRESS 2016
            PART TWO of my gestalt real-time review continues in the thought stream below…

            18 thoughts on “Something Remains

            1. CONTINUED FROM HERE: SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends
              GREY CHILDREN by David A. Sutton
              “A bedpan for a bed.”
              An extremely powerful, often constructively staccato or jagged prose depicting child abuse and entropy, old workhouses now morphed into worse modern hospitals as part of urban dereliction, and how abuse and dereliction, porch and pavement, actually morph or blend into each other. Just as the two child victims’ own trial and error as rapist or lover blend together, too, and give us, I read, at least a hope the cockroach or doll becomes an angel, rather than vice versa. And the child still a child, beyond the grey.
            2. THE TWIN by James Brogden
              “Bits of brokenness spray out on the spit of his breath…”
              Brokenness, Brogdenness, this is a vision of referred pain, as Anthony transcends a climbing accident, dream or truth, with his search for the ‘energy of pain’, including the tapping of others for it. I think this is the first time I have seen Lane-like tropes — Lane’s customary tropes from his canon of work as well as, here, the left eye as exchangeable marble — become so painfully crystallised as a reaching out for hope from within that very pain … especially also in conjunction, here, with a striking description of the ouroboric self, a feature that I mentioned earlier in this review.
              Anthony’s own partner suddenly becoming the point of view at the end is a narrative device about which I keep my powder dry, as I need to read the work again, which is always a good sign.
              As an aside, a left eye and toy marbles happen coincidentally to have been important in my own life…
            3. THROUGH THE FLOOR by Gary Couzens
              “When James and I had sex, he always began by taking off my glasses, lifting them from my head and gently resting them on the bedside unit facing inwards, sightless eyes witnessing my being taken.”
              On the surface, a serial fling in simple romance-textual terms, but, eventually, for both parties — backstory in interface with backstory — there are slants on how to look at the concupiscence of their acts, for example James wanting her to be boyish, her wanting to be tantamount in a Goya painting, and other permutations of where each eponymous ‘floor’ is situated, in bodily terms.
              Each body with its own permutations of eyes like tiny mouths opening and closing, for those potential slants of sexual vantage point. Until, for one of them, the floor is taken away – tragically.
              This tellingly deceptive story works, from below the surface as well as along it, depending which way the reader comes at it.
            4. LOST (i.m. Joel Lane) by Pauline Morgan
              Nuggets hidden he “would have shaped into poems, stories.”
              A poem that perfectly crystallises one of this book’s Images of Joel, including a tantalising grief, a never again being able to reach him…
              but ever still within reach…
              at least partly because of this book, where his friends have used those nuggets or fragments found in his home to shape him with these new stories and poems, back again in gestalt with us.
              (My own offered ‘earth wire’ to this gestalt: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/1479-2/, still on-going.)
            5. Pingback: Something Remains reviewed | The Alchemy PressEdit
            6. FEAR OF THE MUSIC by Stephen Bacon
              “‘You can’t half bust some moves on the dance floor yourself.’
              He glanced at the quotation and smiled. ‘Nietzsche.'”
              Somewhere in this otherwise workmanlike text, it is claimed that there is no longer any middle ground. This story is an ironic emblem of a middle ground itself, I guess, as if trying to prove that the passion of a new relationship — the fire perceived and envied in the belly of your lover’s life, the art of dancing as proof of that fire — comes to one of two extremes: a point of ennui or a desperate self-dosing. Ecstasy as a two-way filter. Meanwhile, the spontaneous fire eventually burns itself out. Within and without. Metaphorically and literally. Strictly, too.
            7. BAD FAITH by Thana Niveau
              “A portable fan propped on the bar stirred the dense air without cooling it.”
              It is as if this corpse-apophthegm of a prose and human-interactive vision was written for the likes of me, for me TODAY, possibly the hottest day in mid-September there has ever been in this part of the country. “He clambered into the shower but even the water from the cold tap was like soup, warm and cloying.” And more such word-sharply humid images. I hate heat.
              It is also written for me as dog-hater – and a hater of people who own dogs. Although I suspect ‘hate’ is too strong a word that has just been used by me in the bad faith that the hate of the heat has given me. And in the heat of this reading moment.
              A Meloy mêlée of dogs – and ‘frozen’ tableaux of people become their own dogs.
            8. WINDOW SHOPPING by David Mathew
              “The way that Mark ignores the bitch makes her want him more: she italicises her body on the back seat.”
              An ingenious, crisply written, nonchalantly amusing, bound-to-be-underrated story with a completely surprise ending. Not a long story, but a full plot. With glory-holes in their full glory. And cottaging at arm’s length. And a smooth trade as antidote or supplement to the rough.
              Aptly it also has a puppy – and a pub called the Doghouse – as a follow-up to the previous story!
            9. image
              by Liam Garriock
              “The creatures depicted on the walls haunted me as I left, as though they were hitching a ride on my back out the rotten darkness into the outer world.”
              …giving me a crucially mixed feeling as to whether this text is now thus upon my back – or it’s a catharsis that I hawl here, in tune with the text’s headquote from Machen, as another jewel for Joel.
              It is certainly something I would like to see judged by other readers, too. On the face of it, a workmanlike story taking the narrative policeman-investigating and self-questioning scenario of the ‘Where Furnaces Burn’ book to the setting of Edinburgh. A ruthless gang in a terrible area of the city; its ‘Satanic’ emblem is the F name shown in the above title, a name supposedly not on any internet search, whilst it was an uncredited force claimed to be behind the infamous evil men of history… This gang is led by an individual who abducts a schoolgirl…whence the plot continues to unfold.
            10. SWEET SIXTEEN by Adam Millard
              “Outside it was already warm, shaping up to be another hot day in a long line of them…”
              And, again, the heat of the day, the heat of this next reading moment, made me contemplate and eventually respect the nature so far of all the stories (continuations of the Joeline Fragments) that his friends have chosen to present in tribute…
              This one reminded me of the unwelcome duty of picking up slugs from my kitchen floor over the years…but beyond my experience or at least beyond any memory of such experience was this tale’s treatment of first love at sixteen between a girl and boy morphing off into a guilt trip and insectoid horror of a most gruesome nature… And then I smiled, knowing this could be seen as a commendable exercise in the nostalgia for many people of my age of once reading, with youthful abandon or rebellion, the Pan Book of Horror Stories…
            11. “The expected snow did not come that year, although the sky looked heavy with it,…” and I am pleased to report that the next story is the deliverer of such snow and ice …. pleased, bearing in mind my earlier complaints above about the heat in and out of this book…
              BURIED STARS by Simon MacCulloch
              “Is that how it is, being a ghost?”
              …or a buried star?
              This, to my mind, in a presumably pre-email and pre-mobile modern world of the city, is the perfect Joeline exquisition – a sensitively and darkly poetic prose account of the narrator, his relationships, his neediness (here regarding an invitation – or lack of it – to a New Year’s Eve party), his lack of grip (as one often gets In wintry weather, too?), his backstory that also concerns the fragility as well the slipperiness of ice, his resultant guilty dreams – and his life’s objective-correlatives: black space’s embedded stars…
              Leading to an epiphany of horror, a catharsis, too, as many of this book’s stories are.
              “(the city never feels like real outside, it’s too enclosed by itself).”
            12. AND ASHES IN HER HAIR by Simon Bestwick
              “Fragments.”
              Ashes are fragments from many things all made the same thing by fire. This story, from whatever fragment it is made, is overtly the story of a call centre worker under strict employment rules, wringing out, from the results of a soul’s combustion, his own casual relationships with this book’s earlier waifs and strays – and wreaking sustenance from near-poisoned food, as well as eventually becoming complicit with acts of arson-into-ashes taking place in the vacant lot near the office where he works … with a swaddled outcome wrought into being as if for his embracing of a bereavement as well as of a potential birth. Heartbreaking.
              [My previous Bestwick reviews HERE and HERE.]
            13. THE PLEASURE GARDEN by Rosanne Rabinowitz
              “They still raided gay clubs in those days. The police wore gloves, ‘protection from AIDS’. Fools. He once saw a copper wearing washing-up gloves.”
              Rosanne’s evolved fragment becomes an evocative summoning of the cranes as the girders of a cat’s cradle genius-loci of South London, now and then. THEN, when Daniel, as a young man, attended the Pleasure Garden club; he met someone who NOW seems to have outlasted beyond the club’s demolition, and beyond 30 years of his own invisible wear and tear, hauntingly glimpsed from a train between Clapham Junction and reaching further South or West, as Daniel returns to the area, an area that has changed over the decades, of course, as Daniel has also changed; people do outside of fiction. He tries to contact a woman with whom he used to be in cahoots on sexual-foraging quests for each of them in the old days. From the Hot Desking work, today, NOW, he is doing on WEEE, the electronic waste that simply adds to the attrition of reality, a bodily desiccation as if part of some cyber-industrial dereliction, I guess – and Daniel reaches some Lane-like choreography (amid the ‘crane constellations’) with a music mix of old times and wrought passions, with not a diaspora but a regathering, a regathering, each to each, for this book, amid the still recognisable fragments of the Pleasure Garden…
              “He picks up a fragment and holds it close to his chest.”

            Something Remains (3)

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            Something Remains

            CONTINUED FROM HERE: SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends (part two)
            lane

            ALCHEMY PRESS 2016

            PART THREE of my gestalt real-time review continues in the thought stream below…

            My own long-term on-going page for Joel HERE.


            22 responses to “Something Remains

            1. CONTINUED FROM HERE: SOMETHING REMAINS – Joel Lane and Friends (part two)
              ——————-
              THE REACH OF CHILDREN by Mike Chinn
              “The morning was already close and humid, but he was still wrapped in his old leather jacket. He made me feel hot just looking at him.”
              Literally and metaphorically hot? And indeed, don’t tell me, it IS still hot and humid today, despite MacCulloch’s snow!
              This is an affecting threnody of a city-dysfunctional life in a residentially tenanted ex-warehouse, a world of bruises, forced sex, self-euthanasia, grabbed casual jobs, and the endemic “staircase lady” crying in a different language.
              This is the tale of the narrator, his relationship halted due to the circumstances of his girlfriend’s pregnancy. You know, I do not know much about the type of music Joel enjoyed (but we often had conversations on-line about classical music but he would have loved Bowie’s Black Star, as I do, and the latest Nick Cave) – yet, I can’t help noticing that many of this book’s stories mention some group called Joy Division, as this one does. This fact seems obliquely significant, especially now when we discover the name of this story’s version of the bruised waifish girl is supposed to be Joyce, and during this story’s wonderfully striking ending (especially in conjunction with its title) we learn that the narrator was once called Joey….
              Then, of course, there is the Joel Division…?
              My previous Chinn reviews: HERE and HERE.
            2. THE MEN CAST BY SHADOWS by Mat Joiner
              “Morbid but beautiful.”
              This story is powerful not necessarily as a plot that stretches its legs convincingly as a series of compelling causes and effects, but more as an art installation or textured poetic vision in the form of prose. This one veritably cloys and congeals with an elusive human emotion – a triangular structure of three men, one now dead from suicide, and one creating photographs as a twelve-man jury on jury-rigs that are allowing bits of themselves to impinge upon the world and the remaining relationship, and all the cross-intentions and recriminations. The actual style, too, crepitates with many images that take you by the scruff of the neck, like “People say ‘lived-in’ of a face but someone had used Marc’s as a squat.”
              The dark emanations from the art installation of the soul and of human existence here subsume and increasingly loom as more and more worrying to the reader like “crimes without witnesses”.
              This work seems, at an inchoate level, to present an apotheosis of Joel Lane’s soul-searching works as angel-monster “Rorschach blots”, the subtle photographic fiction of some of John Howard’s works, the tracing-paper palimpsests of Quentin S. Crisp, and more. Such a rich cocktail I am sure is an acquired taste, one that needs working at, laying yourself selflessly open to?
            3. THE WINTER GARDEN by Pauline E. Dungate
              “‘You like the cold?’
              ‘It seeps into all of us in the end. Numbs the pain.'”
              The male protagonist – down on his luck, alcoholic and losing his love life with his girlfriend Jo – visits (somehow for the first time) a sort of semi-secret garden attached to the building where his attic flat is situated. He meets a fey youth from the garden, brought indoors by him inadvertently, and a woman gardener stockier and older, and he has a one-night stand with a skinny Goth who becomes aware of the fey youth. And thus spooked by all this and by the scent of a plant he had also brought in, he seeks out the support of a woman friend whereby she and her own house also somehow become entrammelled by the spell…
              Often nicely written, but it was a scenario that did not convince me, but that is probably my fault.
              I noticed another reference to Joy Division in this story, and, perhaps, significantly the Cure…
            4. NATURAL HISTORY by Allen Ashley
              “Humankind does not deserve such an alchemical treasure.”
              This is satirical-modern stuff – a crisp, cleverly word-playful monologue by a Daytime TV viewer, with a backstory about his parents and love of ‘Peter Pan’ that he is keen to impart, with business ideas about an elixir of life, local politics, conservation, interest in the natural history museum, and I am afraid, on one reading, I got rather confused. On the face of it, genuinely brilliant, witty stuff, but I could not see where it was going or why.
            5. THE SECOND DEATH by Ian Hunter
              “The wool moved and I could see it was a sheep trapped in the barbed wire […] certain if it opened its mouth it would speak to me.”
              From a blend of Dungate, as I said “significantly the Cure…”, and Ashley’s elixir of life (here, elixir of death) and his Doolittle talking to the animals, we now have this extremely poignant and haunting Hunter work, with a second more lasting death, I guess, better than the first, whereby the protagonist’s father is dying in a hospice and the son abducts him out into moors in Scotland for a last ride, to somewhere adumbrated by a grey woman at the hospice…
              Cutters, embedded spider-scars, and blood blossoms, and much else to savour and suffer. And an open-ended ending with an implicit musical ‘dying fall’ that perhaps echoes on forever.
            6. BLANCHE by Andrew Hook
              “Things happen.”
              A work that seems a seminal subliminal work for this book, where the eponymous character becomes the thing his name DOES as a verb, as well as what the name IS as an adjective or noun, amid references that haunt subliminally, together and separately; Man Ray, Tennessee Williams, Joy Division, Nancy Sinatra, architectural Brutalism, bone as skin, skin as bone, as well as music group names from fiction or truth that populate this striking genius loci of a dance hall reaped from its existence over the years, even this multi-palimpsest one that the gestalt of DVDs — DVDs that student Gavin is given by Blanche in the sexual-oubliette or backroom while a tribute band or, even, a tribute band of a previous tribute band, performs in the main arena — a gestalt that presents a striking visionary dance hall’s temporal cross-section of an experience. Eraserhead or Freezerhead, the subliminals hang on…
            7. THE BODY STATIC by Tom Johnstone
              “And he began telling her the story of the ‘first people’ whose god was in their image rather than the other way round.”
              …as told to the bereaved mother or distrusted grandmother by the “thin stranger” or “strip of a man”, a mother whose son, oblique-tellingly for this book, had died from tantamount to corporate manslaughter. And this story is as if a message is passed through it by static – the most non-static static possible as it travels faster and faster by powerful audit-trail through the events of this ingenious work and, via that means, reaches a form of ironic retribution for those guilty of that corporate tragedy. As if whatever Joeline fragment Johnstone used was that very static-in-utero.
            8. THE BRIGHT EXIT by Sarah Doyle
              A particularly beautiful poem in the context of this book. A beautiful poem, in any event.
              [This is what I said about a previous work by this poet – “…of a death of sleep, like birth, prefiguring a yearning for life itself…?”]
            9. YOU GIVE ME FEVER by Paul Edwards
              “He was the only one who could have known what it’s like to be me.”
              Evolved from another Joeline fragment, no doubt, this presents a curdled but memorable vision of a many things in a relatively short space, mother and son reunited, Frankenstein’s monster, Jekyll and Hyde, another ‘Fred and Rosemary’?
              The subtext, like many subtexts after the texts themselves have fled the mind, lingers unknown and unknowable?
              You give me fever, or you give me forever?
              “Soon winter’s chill reached my bones and I was so desperately glad.”
            10. THE OTHER SIDE by Lynda E. Rucker
              “‘Let’s go on a picnic,’ he’d say, and two hours later you’d find yourself sitting with a spread in the middle of some godawful housing estate…”
              A yearning, aching, meaningfully dream-meaningless story of the narrator Mark’s search for an ex-lover, the missing Adam, Adam who found sacred beauty in the ugliest places, whose sex was usually casual and recreational, who often spoke of the ‘edgelands’, which concept this story deploys wonderfully.
              Mark, in contact with Adam’s twin sister and in difficult relationship pangs with his girlfriend Polly, eventually reaches some form of catharsis, in the terrain where Adam was last seen, a catharsis that arguably I would include in this review’s concept of the ouroboric self.
              There are some very striking scenes in this work, rhapsodic as well as disturbing.
              “Really important dreams don’t come true; you go on dreaming them, and they change you.”
            11. OF LOSS AND OF LIFE: JOEL LANE’S ESSAYS ON THE FANTASTIC by Mark Valentine
              (Non-fiction)
            12. SHADOWS by Joe X Young
              “There are so few angels these days.”
              Angles, too, as Google now allows the world to look from all angles at once? This work starts as a portrayal of a grim world of the homeless making the best of things, aspiring to sheltered property run by Shape, progressing to benefit claiming. This protagonist tries his hand at pavement artistry, receiving drawing materials for free from a generous market trader. Then, in a deadpan, inexplicable, almost absurd outcome (like most things in life, I find), he turns out to have been put in apparently haunted room no. 104 in the Shape accommodation, haunted by a mathematics professor whose shadow sort of gobbles up people from the wall, including Osram, a man who also lives there and looks like a light bulb. 104 is a primitive imperfect number, inter alios, with many divisors, as I Googled here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/104_(number)
            13. I NEED SOMEWHERE TO HIDE by Steven Savile
              “The first numbers were written down by the Egyptians, and the first real mathematical puzzles solved by the ancient Greeks.”
              The previous story was a sort of mathematical one. And the number 99 is mentioned in two separate contexts in this Savile story, and one of the 2 sisters playing fancy dress in this plot (the one aged 7) ends up with makeshift angel wings. Except I hope desperately that they are not makeshift but real.
              That is just my way of procrastinating before needing to face my review of this powerful, nay, devastating story. But one has to face things eventually, I guess. It is a story of a girl whose 13th birthday is tomorrow and, later in this story, today, and she is given the Blue Falcon hero costume by a friendly shopkeeper (like the market trader in the previous story).
              The characters of the parents of these two girls are built artfully, accretively, and their battles with life end up as battles with themselves as well as each other, particularly the mother. The father, however, has already lost his own battle with the ouroboric self and the repercussions can only be conveyed by the way the story tells it, not by a bald statement in a review such as this one. These repercussions are also tied up, for me, with xenophobia and the nature of Brexit Britain.
              Not often do I come away from a story feeling so shellshocked.
            14. COMING TO LIFE by John Howard
              “They need to escape into the air, not into something else, like paper,”
              And in many ways this Howard text is this book’s attempt to let a Joeline fragment regather and fly with the wind from the tenement window, take the claustrophobic boards off, having put them there in the first place – a spinning outward from the inbuilt textual diaspora or regathering of Souls, Angels, Monsters, or just ordinary folk depicted by, say, Brueghel or Lowry, those Lane-like diasporas or regatherings mentioned earlier in this review…
              On another deadpan or dream-like level, of today’s existence in frail, inadequate housing, in a blow the house down wolf city, this is the love story of Justin and Paul, their attempts to stifle Britain’s own eternally Windy City, and to summon or neutralise or evacuate the people from the walls – ironically, those thousands or millions today without walls at all, as a trope, possibly authorially unintended, of our desperate times, a trope that works.
            15. THE ENEMY WITHIN by Steve Rasnic Tem
              “There was something vaguely outside geography about navigating the narrow canal path, passing under signs that always pointed somewhere else […] as if he were travelling through no place to anywhere he liked.”
              This author seems to have crystallised the atmosphere of Birmingham canals (where I once spent some holidays narrow-boating), whether from his experience or through some tapping of forces close to this book? I sense this book is indeed more than a book. And this work is, for me, a fine restrained coda, atmospheric and evocative, revisiting the often unequal relationships of lovers, a toing and froing, going and flowing, some lies, some jealousy, some leakage, some interpretation of the other one’s dreams, and an inchoate outcome, a coming together of the gestalt of repercussions, including crimes, even murders, and corporate manslaughter as a result of dangerous machinery, repercussions often cathartic, sometimes simply emblematic of life’s cruelty and urban dereliction. Simply there to be there, or that ‘travelling through no place’…
              This story also echoes the previous one, a fighting by the two lovers (instead of between themselves) against the entropy of bad housing and general existence, together, despite their differences. Until they are simply not together at all.
              Killing me softly with your song. Killing us, killing someone already dead, killing someone who was never born, softly with renewed life. Joel’s song, that this book sings, fragment by fragment. Dispersed and regathered simultaneously. “…as if he were travelling through no place to anywhere he liked.”
            16. AFTERWORD: THE WHOLE OF JOEL by Ramsey Campbell
              (Non-fiction)
            17. Thanks to Alchemy Press, Peter Coleborn, Pauline E. Dungate, those who excavated in a Tyesley Road, and all the writers.
              A special book, a worthy tribute. My comments above about its fiction should be taken as a gestalt.

            Uncertainties Vols. 1 & 2

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            UNCERTAINTIES Vols. I & II

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            Edited by Brian J. Showers MMXVI
            One Foreword by John Connolly
            My previous reviews of SWAN RIVER PRESS books are linked from HERE.
            Stories by John Reppion, Derek John, Martin Hayes, Robert Neilson, John Kenny, Reggie Chamberlain-King, Maura McHugh, Sarah LeFanu, Timothy J. Jarvis, Mark Valentine, Lynda E. Rucker, Peter Bell, R.B. Russell, John Howard, Steve Duffy, Emma Darwin, Rosalie Parker, Steve Rasnic Tem, Mat Joiner, Helen Grant, Mark Samuels, Gary McMahon, Adam Golaski, V.H. Leslie, Reggie Oliver.
            When I review these anthologies, my comments will appear in the thought stream below….

            28 thoughts on “UNCERTAINTIES Vols. I & II

            1. THE FAERIE RING by John Reppion
              “Decades of teaching experience showed in the way the firm and distinct full stop hung in the air transforming an ordinary, polite sentence into a definitive ‘No’.”
              I went to a Junior and Infants school called St. George’s in the 1950s, and although an email was mentioned in this story, I am filled with that very English time and place. A time when, in hindsight’s triangulation, complex beliefs were made simple and thus handleable. Here, a young woman painter visits the school’s turf maze or labyrinth or faerie ring, and her painting of it subsequently becomes obsessive, and she returns to the school during its Summer Fayre, to triangulate the ring from all perspectives. A genuine sense of genius loci is transmuted by the woman’s own aftermath of vision and mutated vision, later blamed on a physical condition. Ultimately chilling, and highly memorable, I predict… (Three full stops there, not an ellipsis…)
            2. Any links attached to authors’ names in this review are to my previous reviews of their works.
              FROM THE ARCHIVES OF THE WESTMEATH EXAMINER by Derek John
              “How can we ever begin to understand the infinite complexity of a life lived backwards and forwards in eternity?”
              A series of newspaper fossickings, the results of which from 1889 to 2015 are here shown about Rathsheehy House. Drawing a gestalt from these, their Irish history references, and patterns of fox hunting, and connected scions, one derives a sense of the ‘ghost’ or embued darkness trope of that building.
              I have often referred in my real-time reviews to the power of ‘retrocausality’, and when you read these texts in the order printed, you will gain a sense of this power, one that thus builds its ghost or trope more strongly than I have ever before recorded by what I call a hawling process.
            3. WELLAWAY by Martin Hayes
              “Not too long, but I don’t mind travelli–”
              An engaging old-fashionedness of style depicts Loralie travelling from Liverpool Street to Ipswich (a line I know well, where trains sometimes halt all too unexpectedly) – to the Suffolk coast and a hotel run by a friendly woman and her middle-aged son. Loralie is recovering from a traumatic loss of a partner, of whom she thinks she sees the naked resemblance in the bedroom’s framed photograph of a woman and an oak tree. The eventual outcome is one of recurrency by onanism and magic … and etched into the tree is the word WELLA–
            4. ON A CLEAR DAY by Robert Neilson
              “I guessed that if you stared long enough you might see just about anything.”
              A highly atmospheric, gentle, well-characterised story of a bookshop-café in a resort on the west coast of Ireland. Its owner, and the customer in possession of a large range of walking-sticks, one of which he shows the owner each day. But that does not do full justice to this story that I imagine eminently anthologisable into the future with ghost story or visionary proclivities. What they together see through the mist on a tantalising stretch of coast elsewhere is built up immaculately, as far as anything depicted within mist can be picked out immaculately at all. A vision that achingly attaches to the customer’s backstory and the café owner’s aftermath of future memories about this encounter.
              (Yesterday, I happened to write this very short short of which a staring out at the sea was part. An approximate co-imbuing with the Neilson story (first read today) by a French Lieutentant’s Woman feel…?)
            5. LAST LOVE by John Kenny
              “…that in the last moment in extremis lay the greatest expression of life.”
              When I first saw the title ‘Uncertainties’ for these two anthologies, I assumed a sense of the traditional supernatural, the uneasy, the questionable nature of ghosts, even an arguable homeliness or comfort of the odd MR Jamesian pastiche/tribute or quiet horror. Indeed I am already sure there are fine examples of such sensitive weird and atmospheric fictions within these anthologies, but I now realise that the ‘Uncertainty’ possesses also a more serious, dangerous, challenging or brave quality.
              This story about Gerry, at first, I thought seemed arguably an expanded examination of the rationale I inferred above at the end of the Hayes story but now with someone being used in the ritual who, I guess, might have appeared in a Spielberg film with a red coat or wearing a red mackintosh in ‘Don’t Look Now’, and in many ways it may involve that rationale, but a rationale with the proviso of the protagonist’s various denials about what he is doing or feeling, influenced as he seems to be by the backstory of his very negative parents, and his own search for the tipping-point of existence, by chasing the noumenon of self. A catharsis, a purging. An adumbration of condemnable acts – but without live people involved in such acts by their becoming Gerry’s own self-fiction about them? There are some scenes in this remarkable story that you will never forget, I suggest, the ‘sculpted’ burial and unburial of a surrogate ‘objective correlative’ in the wilds of nature, the glimpses of this ‘objective correlative’ with its mother, discrete drops of rain (or seconds of time as a discrete entity) into a well-defined area of paranoia, “the greatest jolt of connection”, “It made the eyes appear almost completely black, at odds with the ghostly skin surrounding them, otherworldly in an intense, erotic way.” Desire and thirst for knowledge as two sides of the same coin. A fisherman with a tug on the line – like this rambling attempt at dreamcatching this story? A “grasping imagination.” A “vast oblivion.” “…no revealing of the irises.” The crowding in of Gerry’s mother and father.
              I keep my powder dry about this remarkable work.
            6. A LETTER FROM MCHENRY by Reggie Chamberlain-King
              “It took two sticks to carry him now and we both — Louisa and I — had to hoist him from his seat.”
              A meticulously woven story with a texture and traction that threaten to hang about like an unopened letter you might, one day, dare open fully to sense its full implications, such as the eventual, as yet inscrutable, fate of Louisa here, as I wondered, still wonder, about the girl’s fate in the previous story. And McHenry’s sticks, just two of them untangled from the whole clutch of walking-sticks in the Neilson story…
              This story has a constructive Dickensian feel but further enhanced by the feeling that letters, the letters within the letters, are cloying and reaching out like those sticks to entrap you. Who wrote which letters, which slope or characterised swirl create different implications or messages, and how do they interface with the childhood backstory when McHenry and the narrator were boys and the grandmother was a catalyst for what happens later, almost a Dorian Gray revelation perhaps as the narrator takes to manly work on the ships again?
              I can easily imagine this text working at several levels, most levels, I suspect, working their magic upon those who choose at whichever level to read it, or all levels working subliminally together in gestalt, even while one also senses that an inimical force — under cover of the Intentional Fallacy as literary theory — has sent this text to you to read by opening this book.
            7. THE LIGHT AT THE CENTRE by Maura McHugh
              “It’s baltic out.”
              A workmanlike, well-written scary-party scenario in a housing estate in the middle of nowhere, where three guests, primed with hubris and backstory, arrive together in a car, then separate to otherwise share spliffs, expletives, frights – and a nemesis (that seems to me to be a premonitory metaphor for Brexit potentially touching Ireland with specific mention of “EU Money”…)
              I don’t think this story was written for the likes of me. My fault and my loss.
            8. FRAN’S NAN’S STORY by Sarah LeFanu
              “…between two deep rhynes,…”
              A quietly enjoyable tale as told, in the tradition of most hairdressing establishment’s endemic small talk, by a young girl hairdresser to a new customer as she gives her tantamount to what I almost imagined to be a sheep dip!
              Although it was sometimes difficult to picture such a tale being so well told in these circumstances, I did appreciate the ambiance of the telling and of the tale itself. The tale concerned an old man shepherd and his three-legged dog during the foot and mouth epidemic. A poignant tale with a haunting finale.
            9. FLYBLOWN by Timothy J. Jarvis
              “…Silvina jabbing her thumbs at the keys, like she was putting out eyes.”
              This text, in its own way, is a text of a text, like a secondhand transcription of insectoid terror, thus feeling to me as if it was written in the same way as Silvina was texting in that quote from it… On the surface, a tale of Kate who abandons Silvina for Jade, the latter pregnant, and we learn of S’s hatred of babies or small children, and K tells us of S’s old-fashioned mobile phone, but, after S vanishes, K finds a smartphone inside S’s book of stories by Silvina Ocampo (after whom S was named by her mother), a smartphone with a password based on Machen’s ‘N’… And the transcribed terrors continue, insects and drones, a dead lamb, a strange photo studio, and a small girl who I think is a dark caricature of each of the girls in the Kenny and Chamberlain-King stories … all disturbingly head-scratching. Genuinely disturbing, too, if only because I am not really worried for the characters in the plot of my suspended disbelief, but because I am actually worried about my perception of the author himself, worried for him, someone who has actually sat down and acted as conduit for this mind-sapping transcription of text, by planting his fingers one by one with purposeful venom on each letter of the manual typewriter as if in a killing-pattern of bloated insectoid letters, one by one – dead flies in the shape of small human beings…
              (My earlier detailed real-time review of over forty stories written by Silvina Ocampo is here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2015/05/13/thus-were-their-faces-silvina-ocampo/)
            10. TO THE ETERNAL ONE By Mark Valentine
              “‘In the whitest marble,’ I continued, ‘there are always veins of black: in the darkest basalt there are always sheens of light.'”
              ….as with all Valentine’s works.
              I am a big fan of his works. Are you? Then this one is unmissable. A prime example of his style and ethos. To be added to the Ex Occidente canon as well as to his many equivalently wonderful ex-Ex Occidente works. imageMy reviews of nearly one hundred Ex Occidente Press books – Valentine and non-Valentine works alike – are linked from HERE. All my reviews of Valentine’s works Ex or ex-Ex are linked from HERE (as well as of the works of John Howard, who, I notice, has a new story appearing in UNCERTAINTIES Vol. 2).
              This story is generic ex-occidente, in the sense of an elaborate fakery of the ex-oriental, for example the Ottoman Empire or a para-Palmyra vision, also a generic, eventually spurned, valentine’s card to a gamine waif called Felice who is “wasteless” and I assume wasted or waistless, a creature as enticement to calligraphy and the stamps-and-banknotes collages across history’s blurred frontiers of nationalism and/or religion.
              There is no way I can do justice to this work in a review nor yet fit it into this whole book’s possible gestalt. It just is, sitting alone in a Wicker chair amid a Mid-Eastern mock-up of a Gentleman’s club… It is both an importantly genuine currency of literature as well as a forged one, the genuine and the forged taking it in turns to be the lead partner in the collage- or palimpsest-dance, and your ticket to becoming a titled person reigning over one of the world’s Biblical locations or of other religious-cultural oubliettes of ancient history. (Above image by PF Jeffery)
            11. THE SÉANCE by Lynda E. Rucker
              “‘That doesn’t look like the tree.’ I pointed at her sketch pad. “Only it does. It looks more like the tree than — than the tree does!'”
              This story is not about a séance, or perhaps it’s in the sense of the synonymous word ‘sitting’, in the way an artist’s subject sits for the artist – but here somehow the sitting’s in the sense of a woman’s self-portrait… as well as in the sense of her Sapphic loved one’s own portrait (at the distance of a childhood’s crush) of that self-portrait being worked from a gestalt of sketches and other posthumous works left behind or hoarded, with some really haunting implications, one of which is the ambiance of Pickman’s Model.
              It is genuinely disturbing, as well as poignant.
              This story ends the book with an obsessively artistic triangulation of the subject, as the Reppion story started the book with another artist character’s similar obsessive triangulation of her subject. A neat bracketing for this set of mostly remarkable stories…great in vastly different ways within this tentatively new genre of Uncertainty, and these stories often seeping through at the edges with their own versions of Rucker’s sketched artist’s sketched homunculi…
              THIS ENDS VOLUME ONE OF ‘UNCERTAINTIES’
            12. VOLUME TWO

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              THE SWING by Peter Bell
              “I remain, moreover, mindful, indeed wary, of the beguiling logic of coincidence, which can lend spurious significance to random events. Nevertheless, I conclude, for what it’s worth with a coda,…”
              Swing one way, then swing the other?
              A fiction story in the mood of true ghost reportage, or true ghost reportage disguised as a fiction story? I swing both ways about it, in the genteel non-modern sense of that expression, almost both ways at once, or as a swing twirling out of control in neither direction, somehow, in reading about this group of young teenage people – soon to grow up into adults within the parameters of this text – and their youthful experience of the man with a Borgward and his photograph of a tree with a ghastly ghostly shape of a girl hanging from it. And, now between the swings of the Catholic censer and in its more modern sense of suspicion, why would young children have thus hung themselves, and continue to do so, as if in a dreadfully recurrent coda oscillating between truth and fiction…?
            13. THE MIGHTY MR. GODBOLT by R. B. Russell
              An impulsive journey by Tonya on a train to the half-hour seaside. While Michael goes to see someone in Warrigg about buying a stamp collection, collecting stamps on a one-in one-out basis (for budget housekeeping purposes).
              It’s not a long story, but it is a delightfully full plot. But to cut a full plot thin, she gets mixed up on a special private journey – a slow motion last train journey, even as slow as Zeno’s Paradox, by the well-respected, now deceased Mr Godbolt, owner of the railway with its railway smuts and stamps, not a bolt for God but more like a dawdle to death!image
              A trackside landscape impermanent as a forsaken caravan, with a blockish, vaguely industrial building on the horizon; she needs to abort her trip by jumping and then walk back along the track to Warrigg to find Michael where, apparently, Godbolt’s journey was so slow it had not even started!
              All sounds daft when told back to you. But when actually reading it, it makes more and more delightful sense.
              (As an irrelevant aside, Cyprus was noted for its railway stamps and the above otherwise plot-assonant image is from PF Jeffery.)
            14. THEN AND NOW by John Howard
              “I opened the door to the balcony, letting in gusts of wind and an odd tear offered by the sky over Berlin.”
              An earthquake is a tear, too. And this story is, for me, an everlasting slow-motion earthquake of modern history and that history’s individuals. Amid (a) the highly word-honed atmosphere of Berlin today and in 1945, via the palimpsest of photographs (the architecture of people as well as buildings), and the subtle innuendos between them, as if, say, a changed glance — between one person and another photo just a few moments later of the same person — is the real ghost. And amid (b) the emotions and love today of three men for each other, in ways of acceptance and sacrifice, one of them now dead, the other two remaining as the dignified two ends of the triangle left alive. Very subtle, very sensitive, with the triangulated coordinates of the photographs and of those three men being a new ‘then and now’, but which is which?
              This story takes my gestalt real-time reviewing in reverse, not leitmotifs to gestalt but gestalt to leitmotifs, perhaps for the first time –
              “The pedestrians had all come from the same place, the same event, and had been photographed just at the point when the unity of an audience leaving a performance starts to break down into its constituent parts. The larger body, psychically as well as physically, begins to resolve itself back into smaller groups and individuals making their way to their separate homes.”
              The event was a concert of Bruckner, Beethoven and Wagner, not Elgar and Vaughan Williams…
              This work is classic vintage John Howard – and I also recommend, as supplementary reading, these two books from Ex Occidente Press deploying Howard’s Berlin – books that I reviewed a few years ago here and here.
              image
            15. THE ICE BENEATH US by Steve Duffy
              “He’s determined to haul it on out like the biggest goddamnedest fish that was ever pulled out of an ice-hole on Bent Iron,…”
              This is a good, well-characterised, genius-localised, old-fashioned, Tem-synergous Tale of Terror…
              About two ‘old farts’ not exactly in love with each other’s company, but necessarily steeped in seasoned friendship, as they return to their fishing cabin, with all manner of hooks and lures, after, the last time when they were, experiencing a bloodily, stenchily cataclysmic meeting (now recounted in italics) with an intrusive native Indian and that native’s conjurings of a capital letter for the word ‘crow’ and somehow summoning, too, I guess, the “no-see-ums” of 9/11…?
            16. CLOSING TIME by Emma Darwin
              “The last of the city daylight prints itself through the big, metal-squared windows onto the studio floor, in a pattern I know as well as I know my own hands.”
              To need to say she knows her own hands tells me a lot about this narrator, yet I believe every word this retiring lady says in this absolutely wonderful account of leaving her work studio for the last time, after many years. The day is today. She is uncomfortable with modern contraptions. It all rings so true, and if it’s not true, I would hide my own hands from sight.
              She originally bought the studio from a painter who had trained under Burne-Jones, and, long ago, in 1963 (a year I remember so well myself), there was much snow, historical, life-endangering amounts of it, and her studio started leaking and she needed to investigate the leaks through an otherwise permanently blocked doorway which leads…
              Now if I told you where it leads, it would completely spoil this story. I found it a great experience to be led in there, and into where it further led, and what or whom she found there, alongside perhaps disconnected memories of wartime days, utility decoration, war-work, and when she was present in times of London’s Elizabeth-Bowenesque blitz, I guess, and memories of her sister and boyfriends, the Light Programme, and more.
              This account is magical as well as believable, but when I was actually present in 1963, it did not seem magical to me then, as it does now having read this work. And when she was present, investigating leaks, in 1963, she began to believe that her earlier wartime experiences magical from that new vantage point. Which makes me think, with a rush of elation, that 2016 will be magical sooner or later, as I return to it in some shape or form, from some departure point in the future. At closing time.
              Meantime, I shall follow this lovely lady to the pub, to watch her give the keys to the studio’s new owner. And it suddenly seems logical that if I do not believe what she described in this work, I may not even exist at all.
            17. Possible plot spoiler here? I generally try to avoid plot spoilers in my reviews. Meanwhile, most of my feedback indicates that readers read my reviews alongside me, after each story or after finishing the book, i.e. as a genuine accompanying REview not as a PREview which most other ‘reviews’ tend to be.
              HOMECRAFT by Rosalie Parker
              “Jonathan shone the torch under Sylvie’s chin.
              ‘You look like a zombie!’
              ‘How would you know what zombies look Iike?”
              ‘They look like you.'”
              This is an engaging, seemingly gentle, slowly accretive story of two children (brother and sister, I assume) who have run away from their Aunt and Uncle, and now making do in a derelict, downtrodden house – with little money, but with the nous to survive, and careful not to be seen together in case that gives them away. The characterisation — of the boy as an imaginative soul pretending he’s a ship’s captain, as well as a practical carpenter, always fearful that his sister will not return from her forays on the outside, and the girl’s building part of the house as a shrine, the soul of the house, as it were, answering their wishes — is perfectly conveyed. As is the worrying ‘overlap’ between the pawnbroker or jeweller she visits and the uncle she has fled…
              The throwaway ‘dying fall’ ending is also perfect.
              (My previous Parker reviews are HERE and HERE.)
            18. HALF-LIGHT by Steve Rasnic Tem
              “The blinds were down as she’d requested. She hated seeing outside when she couldn’t be there.”
              A moving, nay, devastating vision from the point of view of an old woman in hospital, her perceptions of the behaviour of the doctors and nurses, her own out of the body experience seen straightforwardly, and the single sentence she heard (or what she thought she heard) a doctor say towards the end of page 87, a sentence that seems to crystallise more about the nature of death than a million other books, especially when said in such a deadpan manner in such a context.
              The content of this woman’s experience, as seen by her, is exactly how I empathically perceived another old woman in hospital dying recently. The whole relatively short work is a powerful experience to withstand, but worth every single word and every item of its adept wordplay, too.
            19. IMAGO by Mat Joiner
              “Beat seven shades out of me.”
              “…she felt joy and cold and nothing.”
              I think it is relevant to report that I have not read much before as written by this author (except one collaborative story), but I find myself today reading and real-time reviewing two separate stories by him from two separate books (in the on-going pre-set course of my reading).
              One story seems to be the shadow of the other one, but which cast which?
              They are otherwise quite different; this one is about a boy who was bullied by other boys (all such boys with “narrow eyes and thick arms”) and he has lived with a memory of escaping from them into a derelict house and seeing…
              Seeing what? Something you half-saw, you recall, along with him? Now, grown-up, with his girl friend, he persuades her to drive to that house so that he can break in again…
              But this story itself is like seeing something in it, something the title yields, seeing a meaning that you cannot quite remember but you need to remember it, assuming you crystallised it anyway as a meaning, but only re-reading might serve to disclose it or serve to compare its shadows.
              The contents compared with the form. Or within the form.
              All I will say is that meanings often need to mature.
              (Just discovered another story by this author that I reviewed (in 2010): ‘South of Autumn’ here. The other works are shown by the by-line link above.)
            20. THE EDGE OF THE WORLD by Helen Grant
              “the maelstrom of uncertainty”
              Uncertainty as a male-sturm und drang– Blakean, Byronic, Wagnerian, John-Cowper-Powysian, as this story taps into an archaeological worker’s chequered modern-style love life, his existence as part of an inchoately eternal-infinite tapestry’s “hem” and “seam” (then his self as “splintering mosaic”) as well as, literally, at the edge of the world that he can see from his Scottish coast vantage point, handling, with petulant destructive intent, the petrosphere artefact as Platonic solid, his study of which is a career move; he is due to blog about it, a perfect carved stone sphere from ancient times, showing its own contrastive ‘intent’ and ‘order’, while today mankind merely lets hang a computer mouse as if upon a gibbet.
            21. THE COURT OF MIDNIGHT by Mark Samuels
              “new quests for nothing”
              Adding to the uncertain menu of this book’s Uncertainties, this tale is more fanatistical than realistic, less a ghost story or psychoreality or a brush with the supernatural than a sickly dark fantasy, a mad Chambersanity, a petulant Poesy, a moribund masque, the writer Melchior having lost “a position of great respect and status in society” and beset, along with other artists and writers, by lunar fever… come to the Court of Midnight with his English gin so as to follow up the promise of a doctor called Dr Prozess. Including a striking scene with Melchior’s friend Santon finally falling by the wayside, and we realise the dreadful diminuendo involved, as, one by one, the residue of us thinkers and artists and poets wanes…
              My extrapolation of this provoking work –
              But we sense that our own preciously mannered masque alongside these gifted words is one of realising that the process is of a tontine not of a deadly attrition. And the writing here is writer Melchior’s pitch for such a prize. While the rest of us wait in great suspense for our own telegrams of a hopeful process of procession or a doomful moon’s precession (sic).
              “repeated but forgotten”
            22. WHAT’S OUT THERE? by Gary McMahon
              “He can’t bear to see her face, not unless it is real. A photo isn’t enough;”
              The uncertainty of ‘Uncertainties’ is also the uncertainty of not knowing how dangerously scary any of its stories is going to be, so if I say this story is VERY scary, that might be a spoiler. So, I’ll say it is a pussy-cat of a story. Well, it is that, too. One with a cat-flap and something or someone outside beyond that cat-flap once the cat has struggled in through it. And I can’t lie. It is a plainly-spoken tale of a man who works as a building surveyor, with a cat that used to belong to his deceased wife, and remembering other past events concerning animals – and now meeting someone again he used to know, the chance woman vet he now needs, all of which you expect to cohere into a sane meaningful denouement with a message to impart. If I now say ‘cohere’ is not the right word at all to describe your relationship with the ending, that may be a lie, as the cohesion here is making you regroup in face of the challenge of this story, almost a fast sudden adhesion as cohesion with the ending, as you struggle through a cat-flap of revelation to get at a meaning you know is simply there … unless it hasn’t already got your own meaning first as its own.
            23. RUBY by Adam Golaski
              “The woman who’s interested in me is distracted by the joint that’s making its way around the circle, though she touches my arm and says, ‘Stay.’
              ‘You stay,’ I say.
              I go.”
              I really like how UNCERTAINTIES Volumes 1 and 2 are presenting all the various distinct varieties of weird fiction that I love, and not only that, with some future classics of this distinctly constituted as well as multi-palimpsest genre.
              Golaski is a case in point, my having recently real-time reviewed 84 separate items in the last two books of his that I read. (See link above).
              RUBY is a fine example of his work, as I follow this man in blurred interface between distinct places and people of his life, listening to music on reel to reels, watching joints passed if not shared, but there is no way of describing this story’s Ruby other than by reading about it in it.
              Believe me, this is class.
            24. THE MURKY by V.H. Leslie
              “; it would be easy to imagine things hauling themselves out…”
              The mökki, the löyly, an accretively and hauntingly objectified then subjectified vision by outsider Ben of this Finnish scenario of lake and summer cottage, triangulated or hawled along with his Finnish friend Simo and Simo’s woman Liris having invited him here, with unself-conscious nudity, sauna, steam, swimming, apparently forbidden mucky murky marshland, and then hawling out of perhaps the appropriately named Heta, a woman Ben fetches from the marsh back to the mökki… A paradoxically blended homogeneity and heterogeneity (heatgeneity) spiked through with switches of nature applied to scald as well as subsume. The sacred löyly – steam, as it explicitly is, or something far more intrinsic between human beings?
            25. LOVE AT SECOND SIGHT by Reggie Oliver
              “We were in the middle of September…”
              For those who love the work of Reggie Oliver, this is unquestionably a real treat. I could inadvertently give you many spoilers; all I will say is that I strongly sense the presence here of the personal as well as of the creatively extrapolative – not that “bleak no-man’s-land between tonality and modern atonalism”, but a memory of your past with a certain place and person (since mostly forgotten), a memory experienced before life directed you to another more pre-destined place and person (if pre-destined CAN have a less or more?)
              Certainly the regretful, as well as the assured, and the perceived ‘avant garde’, the characterfulness of various parties of the past extrapolated into the future, even beyond their own capacity to subsist, eventually towards the ghostly, as if the ghostly can also have a ‘more’ or ‘less’ attached to it. A musical comparativeness. A performance still to be perfected. All possible paths of pre-destination equally to have been loved and responsibly exploited, whichever path it had turned out to be.
              The feelings of this deceptively powerful work continue to resonate… It is the apotheosis of Uncertainty, or a Certainty that Uncertainty is the optimum Certainty. I have a feeling that these two volumes of stories are full of things where the authors have truly given of their best, these being some of my genuinely favourite writers in what I see as the genre I was always pre-destined to love, but now seen, in sudden memory, as this genre of Uncertainty, a pre-destiny now clinched to house them. Tomorrow, I might have forgotten what I thought. But not now, having written it down here.
              I shall now read the volumes’ two forewords for the first time.
              end



              The Hauntings at Tankerton Park – by Reggie Oliver

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              7 thoughts on “The Hauntings at Tankerton Park – by Reggie Oliver

              1. This is a picture book of constructively old-fashioned drawings, often off-the-wall and haunting tableaux, led into letter by letter, passing TWICE through the alphabet, starting with “A was an armpit that loomed in the fog.” And ending with “Z is for Zadok, the Butler’s young son / Who burned the poor Zombie to ashes for fun.” For children and the child-like alike.
                I dare not photograph any of the pages as that would destroy their initial effect, intricately drawn as they are, beautifully stylised into another world that can exist only in special magic books like this one. Witty, charming, often literary-aristocratic, and grotesque, with cast spells beyond words. Each alphabetic letter is also separately illuminated. Highly concentrated representational designs, but ones in which you will spend whole lifetimes finding new curlicues and intaglios.
                I am not an expert on artwork, but I think you will be entranced – and I confidently predict it will be highly sought after and praised by those cleverer about such things than I am.
                • POSSIBLE SPOILER
                  It must have been a real labour of love and taken just forever to do.
                  The second alphabet shows how they tried to deal with the monsters and hauntings in the first alphabet. But that might be a spoiler. I shall get rid of the spoiler by cutting it out with scissors later.😉



                Brown is the New Black – by David Rix

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                4 thoughts on “Brown is the New Black – by David Rix

                1. Pages 7 – 21
                  “‘It’s using fake shadows,’ he said. ‘Breaking up the shape.'”
                  A gradually involving scenario where you soon become camouflaged as a reader – from yourself, unaware perhaps you’re reading. This is a post-holocaust London scenario, beautifully, yet somehow sparely, evoked, the girl and boy couple failing to exploit black as their own camouflage from the slightly or potentially aggressive (so far) hunters and the noble naked wanderers… moths, bones etc., all seems naturally to fall into this genius-loci of situation and place. Even the potential provision of electricity, that I questioned about to myself earlier, but perhaps I couldn’t find myself to ask. So, it is good to break off as part of a real-time review, to think of these things. Like also asking why scissors are not mentioned when the girl starts making clothes from fabrics in various shades of brown, designs without a belt line etc., as what now seems to be an alarmingly efficient camouflage.
                  A delightfully oblique conjuration of an obliquity of dress.
                2. Pages 21 – 40
                  img_2507“It is hard to grasp how high railway platforms are until you are on the tracks below them.”
                  …like looking up from between the lines of this text, looking at its slowly revealing meaning of how the world used to be before these railways became derelict and open to a walking (or even biking?) improvisation. The couple, sexually aware as well as naive, when parading sometimes half-naked, half-camouflaged, as the girl does, in front of the tall and noble slow-motion real-time fully naked wanderers, with, also, a brush against a hunter and his gun, and a brush against art in bookish and painterly form, while missing music amid the silence. This is a hypnotic journey, half mindless, half deliberate, a sleight of mind that prestidigitates the ‘group consciousness’ that at least this book contains as some sort of bridge between then and now. I have woken from the journey, having felt I dreamt it, not read it. And I mean that as a significant compliment.
                  By tear, rip or meticulously unpicked seam, a flash of flesh shows that white is the new moon…
                  end



                :)

                  Interzone 266 - Black Static 54

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                  Interzone266 BlackStatic54


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                  My previous reviews of INTERZONE and BLACK STATIC as published by TTA PRESS are linked from HERE.
                  Fiction by Tade Thompson, Georgina Bruce, Ray Cluley, Malcolm Devlin (X 2), Aliya Whiteley, Steven J Dines, Ralph Robert Moore, Julie C. Day…
                  I intend to review the above fiction during October and my comments will eventually appear in the thought stream below.

                  11 thoughts on “Interzone266 BlackStatic54

                  1. img_2509BLACK STATIC 54
                    I reviewed SJD’s story in Black Static #48 on 26 September 2015 HERE, showing a photograph of me in front of Salisbury Cathedral…which brings me aptly to –
                    PERSPECTIVE by Steven J. Dines
                    …which also features Salisbury Cathedral.
                    “But if those letters were an anagram of a revelation meant only for you…”
                    A powerful point-of-view collage triangulated between the man and his youthfully rape-scarred fifty something wife, now blind through stress, feeling her way in the dangerous field of life like a kitchen and in her field of dreams with its sky-river and poppy-like daisies and rotten apples holed by worms, both fields artfully conveyed. Hauntingly and disturbingly so. Triangulated with the man who raped her, the man come back now to stalk her…the words say so, the numbers say so, read them, count them up and see it all, see the things he leaves, the things her husband does in his mind with mirrors and imaginary gloryholes echoed by her own “hole inside her” and the letterbox he pokes to get at the stalking rapist, fingers straight through a magazine paper image, a paper page a bit like that Salisbury Cathedral one, if a different image, an image implicitly like the Origin of the World painting by Gustave Courbet…
                    This stuff is worrying stuff, it gets at you, and I guessed the ending, but even guessing it right, as I think I did, made it seem even more surprising, even more shocking. And that is an amazing perspective,
                  2. A PINHOLE OF LIGHT by Julie C. Day
                    “Digital images all have the same basic limitation. They’re incapable of connecting us to the dead.”
                    A moving, often poetically expressed story about a photographer, a darkroom one, not digital, who uses it to seek his deceased wife, in touching unacknowledged visionary collaboration with his well-characterised small daughter (and her teddy bears) and with his cousin friend of the family called Pete… the latter pair are in cahoots painting a mural as part of this inferred project. A mural with a red borderline between what they have painted and what they haven’t yet painted, reminding me of the dreamfield in the previous story and its poppies and rotting apples (explicit “field” and “poppy” in the Day)… The words somehow, for me, become stitched to the brain rather than passing through it, like the photographs are developed more and more by the photographer on his skin, as I learn more and more of his widowering backstory.
                  3. NOT EVERYTHING HAS A NAME by Ralph Robert Moore
                    “I lost track pretty early on how many hands I let grasp mine as they shuddered and went lifeless.”
                    You MAY be pleased to know that this is up to the high RRM benchmark of disturbing fiction that lingers afterwards with you and continues to grow increasingly disturbing for possibly years afterward. This work has a last line that is something else – one, with its implicit meaning, exceeding even THAT benchmark.
                    Without giving away spoilers, this is a tale of an 18 year old girl, a virgin in two out of the three ways, and a 30 year old swaggerer in a bar who wins her in a bet over pool play from her young diffident boy friend…
                    She has four tests for him, the fourth one being a bit like coming out of this work’s closet, if fiction CAN have a closet to come out of, a closet perhaps more powerful than what the closet-leaver alreaady is. Like she has her own Dines gloryhole from earlier in this magazine’s fiction, built in as a portable voyeur. You won’t get it from that, and if you do get it before reading this RRM, you may wish you hadn’t EVER got it, depending on who or what you think you are or who or what you see yourself becoming.
                    I think now that I must have seen, relatively recently, RRM’s thin things retreating while I was in a hospital at the point when I finally let go of someone’s newly lifeless hand…
                  4. DOGSBODY by Malcolm Devlin
                    “They fell to silence for a moment and the argument at the pool table, violence brewing, filled the gap.”
                    This novelette (the third such in this magazine) has violence brewing not only at RRM’s pool table but also in the ‘rapture’ of his visions, here now delivering unto ‘grace’. For me, these are darkroom-processed – not digital – word-photographs of the fifth anniversary of a recurrently auto-correctable werewolf plague that affects a select number of the population, a new select group like ‘gays’ used to be, out of their own closet, and begun to be accepted in a deadpan way, almost a masque or a slowly pent up dance between social groups, our hero here being part of both such dances, social and wolfish, now in a workaday painter’s bib, coincidentally (?) meeting the woman, shedding her own skin of business civility, in a were-pub, having been interviewed by her for his old professional well-suited, well-garbed advertising job he had before the initial plague. That dogsbody or blue collar masque, that method-acting, that mannered interchange of mores and moods and brewing violence (and a once wolffish transmogrification that may never happen again), that masque, that lugubrious dance of social waltzing as one gets drinks in two kinds of pubs, is a whole panoply of low-key spiritual-GPS manoeuvres between, inter alia, a barroom brawl and a flirting exchange. The whole two-pubs thing In this work and the two bars’ socially acceptable miming emotions takes up a huge mind-boring (‘bore’ in two senses) chunks of this mesmerically downbeat text. The conversational machinations are like initially Feldman-like, then speeded-up, minimalist music with complex glimpses of what monsters they might turn into – or like RRM’s thin things, I imagine. A strange work, not only weird-strange, but also attritional-strange in good and bad ways of a reading experience. Intentionally so, successfully so, and more! And dare I wonder in which direction the transmute-filter works between both public sides of the above by-line? A diffident work. A disarmingly major work.
                  5. img_2508INTERZONE #266
                    THE APOLOGISTS by Tade Thompson
                    “I ramble on, because Nico has encouraged me to free-associate,…”
                    I apologise in advance for taking this advice, something that is my wont anyway, as I try to fabricate at least an impression of this story, now it has been read and vanished somewhere between the enforced ‘”variability” and the “Proustian fugue” of my mental sump. Let me tell you that I loved it, loved its hilarious vision of an Earth taken over by aliens who then apologise profusely, if with the odd word out of place, for destroying our world and helping the five surviving humans rebuild it, that is to rebuild a remembered London and its population, with a go-between alien called Nico who tries to have a Tom Jones image (Welsh singer not Fielding). I can’t go into all this work’s conceitful gems, but it starts with a pub-world bar-ethos called the Cock and Bull synchronously in tune with that in the above Devlin work. A line of expletives given to make any human simulants more realistic is another highlight. Where do I start, where do I end, in failing to do justice to this provocative (sometimes poignant) streaming of proto-empathic Tadery? I think I should perhaps consult one of its “prayer-points.”
                  6. EXTRATERRESTRIAL FOLK METAL FUSION by Georgina Bruce
                    “Whilst I have no objection to creative interpretation, no matter how whimsical,…”
                    …But I can’t help but draw synchronous connection BETWEEN the alien’s need for language perfectibility as a transmitted human facsimile AND the Tadery above, as I ponder the intriguing Sapphic triangle here of Alien Jane (Alien only in name), Mariel of media studies and Susan the exolinguist. One of them writes a love letter to another of the trio with the more restrained, but fundamentally similar, “chemical reaction”, similar to the “suppurating” love letter sent to her by a real life alien who in humanity’s real-time is spatially-temporally extinct. Full of social satire and inter-professional tweaks of reaction and reference, and I can’t help but admire the internal “fatal paradox” of this work as well as its attitude to piano music played by Lang Lang. Still echoing in my mind, as all good literary works should.
                    (And the alien’s sexual slime of the tentacles — that turn up in the transmission from an extinct world, written as if not written by anyone, the fact of being writerless making it even more evocative as a non-language sensitivity of sexual body instead of straitened mind — becomes Jane’s apricot yoghurt that also turned to slime?)
                    [It seems poignant and perhaps relevant to report that as I finished writing the above, I have since been watching news reports of Rosetta’s deliberately induced crash upon the comet, still broadcasting to us even though, in its own 40 minutes’ earlier real-time, it has already crashed.]
                  7. [But perhaps the Rosetta ‘delayed’ synchronicity of crashing mentioned above was really one for this story’s review….?]
                    SIDEWAYS by Ray Cluley
                    “There’s a big gap where I lived for a while, where my life went sideways.”
                    This seems like a well-researched but marvellously extrapolative portrait of test pilots in the 1950s. It is a substantive work that I can easily imagine being recurrently anthologised; very well-characterised with the plot’s earliest backstory flying with the the near future and with a further future’s present day by turns, with believable descriptions of the new aircraft being flown, prefiguring some version of the stealth of the future, I guess, and the men who flew them, and their families, and the deeply touching aftermath of certain events, and what is seen as an unforgettable vision during the flights in one particular aircraft.
                    There are here more barroom intermissions that add to this review’s treatment of such an accreting ethos with these occasions’ manoeuvres being of equal importance to the actual flights of imagination and truth that the fictions otherwise deploy.
                  8. THREE LOVE LETTERS FROM AN UNREPEATABLE GARDEN by Aliya Whiteley
                    “But our love is not sticky, and it does not drag me down, it elevates me. It gives me wings to rise above the slime.”
                    A significant reference, there, preternaturally coincidental to the Georgina Bruce story and the Ray Cluley one!
                    Here are more love letters for this magazine’s fiction, seen and read from one side of the correspondence between disparate souls, with regard to a mass sought-after flower’s bloom and its scent, and the bloom’s propensity to wilt upon each person’s inhalation of that scent. A constructively oblique poetic work that manages to have a fey, even effete, sportsman boxer as part of its concept of an ultimate tontine. Today’s SF magazine as the new fin de siècle Go-Between?
                    “…the sweetest moment is the unrepeatable moment. Gardeners live for each bloom…”
                  9. THE END OF HOPE STREET by Malcolm Devlin
                    “…she planted it as close to the house as she dared. It didn’t block the view. Its scent was too subtle to mask the smell of bodies as they turned, but it was a gesture, and sometimes that was all that was possible, sometimes that was enough.”
                    This novelette (the third such in this Interzone) is probably one of the most difficult works of fiction I have ever had to comment upon, not difficult however in understanding the plot, but only in commenting upon it, giving it a context within this Interzone’s fiction as well as alongside this author’s other novelette I read in the last few days as reviewed above. I tried to find the painting it mentions of a woman slightly disturbed to be found in her cluttered kitchen. I think I found it, but not sure enough to reproduce if here, a painting that seems to seal this book like the pre-Raphaelite painting did in Brian Aldiss’s Report on Probability A. This Devlin is a significant work, accretive, attritional, an insidious account of a row of detached houses that gradually become ‘unliveable’ in and the inhabitants have to move to other houses in the row. It has the darkness holes, stealth geometries and gaps of the Cluley. The scent of the bloom quoted above reminding me of the Whiteley. A pre-fabricated stage- or film-set as if housing simulants from the Tade Thompson. The extinct star to real-time world type of communication between discrete abodes, their propensity to drop off and become temporally extinct one by one towards some ultimate tontine, here the tontine prize being Christmas and Boxing Day (not the sport of Boxing, but surely a resonance there with an earlier work in this Interzone?)
                    It is more method acting, another masque or mannered drama of events, reminding me also of Alan Ayckbourn theatre and Brian Aldiss’s novel ‘Report on Probability A.’ And more I can’t yet nail down. The work is undeniably something really special. A pattern perhaps of today’s alienation and housing crisis or a satire of residential committees? Another One End Street? A template for Brexit? Still accruing its effect upon me, even though I have finished reading it.
                    There is much more in Black Static and Interzone in addition to their fiction – and, meanwhile, this is another gestalt of these magazines’ fiction that has never disappointed me since I started real-time reviewing it a number of years ago,
                    ————
                          

                  The Warren – by Brian Evenson

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                  6 thoughts on “The Warren – by Brian Evenson

                  1. Pages. 7 – 22
                    “For me, memory is not only at times flawed and corrupted but also overlapped and confused, one personality hiding parts of another, blending too, so that the selves within my head…”
                    I have not completed that quote from this book, because I am not sure whether I shall get out of this warren of words, should I do so, and if I do get out, whether I shall get back in again and be recognised for what I am — but anything containing concepts such as in that incomplete quote is certain to magnetise me further into this book, with my having had a life-long interest in Proustian selves. Equally, I can see that Proust has an over-rich tenor when compared to the sparer, leaner prose of Evenson. And then I suddenly remembered that earlier today I was progressing with my review of Samuel Beckett’s complete short fiction and my entry today here about his “From An Abandoned Work” seems coincidentally and amazingly apposite to what I have so far read in this Evenson book.
                    • Pages 22 – 40
                      img_2517“Everything was once connected, responded the monitor. Everything still is.
                      An intriguing continuation of the narrator’s speculation about the warren, its monitor and his separateness or not from a man called Horak…
                      Just as intriguing perhaps – I said earlier that this text has a spareness and leanness, at least when compared to the oft-thought over-rich texts of Proust, but of which (along with Beckett) this fictional journey so far otherwise reminds me. But sticking out like a ‘sore thumb’ here is the word ‘flavescent’ to describe the colour of some, presumably untypical, blood. The type of yellowishness, for the record, shown on the design above is an example of flavescent as a colour. Also in the Scott Moncrieff translation of Proust’s ‘The Captive & The Fugitive‘ we have this: “I raised my eyes to those flavescent, frizzy locks and felt myself caught in their swirl and swept away, with a throbbing heart, amid the lightning and the blasts of a hurricane…” [A flavescent is also the name for a sort of songbird.]
                  2. Pages 40 – 66
                    “The flesh will learn to be subject to me.”
                    This is an entrammelling journey, a quest in a warren of words not just for the self but for the self’s body from within an alphabetical series (centred on the vagus nerve?), not an existentialism of eschatology, as in Beckett or Sartre, but rather it is perhaps uniquely an existentialism at the other end, at the point of natalism, something that has already given ironic and inadvertent birth to anti-natalism in, say, Ligotti, but in Evenson it is a trial and error of survival as a unique being. A Proustian process.
                    A warren not of Chambers’ lethal chambers but of birth ones?
                    I, too, am feeling my own interpretative way here, as in my own warren of dreamcatching. I am either hitting on genuine solutions in the form of plot-spoilers (for which I apologise) or complete nonsenses (for which I do not apologise). For example one of the identities here is Wollem – mellow yellow?
                    “…we are vomiting a yellow fluid that slowly colors red.”
                    • Pages 66 – 93
                      Lie down and die, the muffled chorus within me suggested, but that other me, the one currently in charge of the body that conveyed all of us, refused to give up.”
                      Like a Greek Chorus taking ownership of the statues in a de Chirico painting?
                      Well, part of me feels incredibly smug (does not a Petite Madeleine cake dunked into a cup of tea make the tea more flavescent?)…
                      Another part or me feels incredibly crass.
                      Read this novella and tell me what you think. I dare not say more for fear of real spoilers. Other than the fact that it is a mighty work. Lean and spare as well as flavescent.
                      The secret is to ask the right questions.
                      end



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