|
CANADA Of the many books that came out last year, two of my favorites were from the Great White North, sort of3. Darren O'Donnell's first novel Your Secrets Sleep With Me (Coach House Books, Toronto) left me as winded as I was when I recently caught up to the end of Michel Houellebecq's The Elementary Particles4. I've called Secrets5 "a bible for the dispossessed, a prophecy so full of hope it's crushing" elsewhere (and I'll stick to that summation), but suffice it to say that it shares with the second of the aforementioned favorites, Corey Frost's The Worthwhile Flux (Conundrum, Montreal) [and Houellebecq's book too, for that matter], the characteristic of being a window onto my favorite late current in literary production, that of the sublimely possible. I received Flux in a parcel of mail sent seemingly randomly from the Torontonian referenced above, a man who however knows my tastes in books6. I read Frost's earlier tome, My Own Devices (also Conundrum), a couple years back in a state of giddy anticipation after the first of its many antitravel or "untravel" pieces, in which Frost or a fictional counterpart suffers mightily -- horrendous intestinal difficulties, language barriers, anything else you can think of -- on a literal and very metaphorical trip round the world. Of the longer narratives in Devices, though, for my money nothing comes close to the explosion of wonder between the coded jumble of sentences in Flux's pieces. Frost wrote them for performance, originally, and their fractured points of view and giddy linguistic flights belie the fact. I once saw him perform at Quimby's here in Chicago, typically fresh on the tail end of a bad case of the flu and a consequently abbreviated stint on the Perpetual Motion Roadshow back in 2003. In the memorized and I suspect at least slightly improvised performance, Frost keyed up some bass-heavy trancelike music which seemed to fabricate an urgency behind the giddiness of his fractured narrative. In short, though I enjoyed the performance enough, I wasn't quite convinced, and it would seem that putting pieces of this nature into print would deaden them. Such is not the case. And here's why. The first piece in Flux ("A Few Advanced Yo-yo Tricks") begins on a train. I began it on a bus. "Two people are travelling7 on a train. Suddenly there is an accident." These are the only words on its first spread, opposite a photo of boxcars running along a track cut into a dirty gray hillside in an unknown locale. (In fact, the book's full of Frost's photos from locales around the world.) This particular morning the bus was crowded with commuters headed east downtown on the Chicago Avenue line. It was earlier than normal for me. The bus lurched to a stop at one of the many nondescript corners between Western and Damen, sending a short woman, standing with a very large bag at my right, careening down the center of the compartment, taking out a younger sort of gangsta guy on her way. It caught my attention, but only briefly. I turned the page: "But they're both okay." The gangsta dude and the woman embraced each other on their way up from the bus's floor, the woman then prizing her very large bag and apologizing profusely, the gangsta almost tenderly brushing the dirt off her shoulder. The Chicago denizens behind me roared a chorus of cheers and the whole compartment erupted then in applause. The gangsta's face darkened a shade. Moments like these, when a work of art so utterly (and stupidly simply) crystallizes the world around you, imbues it with if not any particular significance then at least a beauty apropos of the damned uncanny nature of human experience turned literary…these moments I find so rare as to be things of indescribable beauty. It's a kind of simple verisimilitude, yes, but one taken to another level, a feeling of simultaneous parallel experience, maybe, the possibility of a second plane of lives, two trains on the same track each only occasionally departing from the other's course, and that only to merge again and shock you blind.
To maximize these moments, move to a North American or European urban center (if not there already) and read The Worthwhile Flux on the trains and buses that ferry you to and from your workplace. Read slowly. Spend a moment between each page staring into the eyes of your fellow travelers, even for a few seconds after they've noticed your gaze. From the third spread: "A nuclear device is stolen from a former Soviet Republic, but it is soon recovered." You will find titles such as these: ...and the title track, about among other things a trip to an abortion clinic and the demise of a relationship and conspiracy theorists riding on trains, forever between points, in flux. In a book like this, in which clarity of vision bursts from the space between the sentences, from the motion of turning a page, the fadeout requires a slow fizzle, it would seem. The end is beautifully chosen here -- a piece called "It's Bits World," beginning thusly... "They were looking for a total transformation of mundane experience into bliss. It had become necessary. The winter came fast and hard, and it stayed a long time. The potatoes froze in the ground, there was not enough wood for the stove, and the modem was too slow. There was a war, and people were being asked to recycle aluminum. It was the off-season. I am so sleepy right now, but I'll tell you something: you should regard every anomaly as an opportunity to be awestruck." Corey Frost is purportedly coming to Chicago with Sherwin Tija and some others. Go to his show. The ever-industrious Mr. Gleason-Allured is working on securing a venue for May 12 or 13, I believe. Stay tuned for more. __________________________________ Todd Dills is the editor and publisher of THE2NDHAND, which brings you this neat sort of "editor's corner" or "letter from the..." or what have you, winged mightily by Mr. Dills -- who most certainly loves you, and love being the product of communication, maybe... -- and launched every other week, we hope, for your reading pleasure. E-mail Dills at will by clicking on that word, yes, back there. He loves to hear from you. 031205 Books by Todd Dills: ALL HANDS ON: A THE2NDHAND READER Like placing your ear beside some kind of magical, future radio and listening to the shocking world of the strange and new.... ALL HANDS ON, an anthology of new work and old, features the best of the magazine and a look at what may stand as the underground lit world's most interesting contemporary writing. --Punk Planet THE2NDHAND has been the most exciting literary vessel in Chicago, opening a comfortably padded room for the anecdotal fiction writers and the experimental tale-spinners to play together where no one will get hurt. Read through this collection of four years worth of stories, and you'll see the line between the two isn't as clear as all that. And in the way the strongest species survive, it would seem the cross-pollination that happened over the years has strengthened both sides. --PopMatters.com Or mail a check for $12, made out to Elephant Rock Books, to THE2NDHAND, P.O. Box 479045, Chicago, IL 60647. FOR WEEKS ABOVE THE UMBRELLA To order, mail a check made out to Todd Dills or carefully concealed cash to: THE2NDHAND Or buy now using any major credit card via PayPal (allow a few weeks for delivery): |