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BIBLIOFILE
Kapow! Press
chapbooks
by various authors
(Kapow! Press, 22 pages, $4 each)
Like being given
an exquisitely wrapped gift, only to expose a well-meant yet useless
item, the unveiling of Kapow! Press' illustrated poetry series in
miniature is disappointing. Chicago poet Shappy's sensitive
little poetry boy is the most impressive of the lot. Heavy
on the pop-culture references, uncomfortably funny and strange as
hell, this mental soundtrack is accompanied by drawings reminiscent
of the lovable losers from the Andy Capp or B.C. comic series. Drawn
by Sam Henderson, of MagicWhistle comic fame, they are a
fitting accompaniment to the well-worn themes of self-obsession
and alcohol.
Local talent
Kevin Sampsell contributes with a minikin titled Etiquette for
Evil. With his own brand of original scenario, Sampsell takes
the reader on a high-strung journey into the mind of a reformed
Catholic. This is a land where the devil wears "filthy and/or torn"
socks, enjoys sticking his hand in your mouth and has a strong dislike
for Mickey Rourke. Schizo mastermind Ivan Brunetti's drawings
complement Sampsell's words with an exaggerated style, producing
a most lovable Prince of Darkness.
While the freak-show
illustrations of The Misfit Clique are expertly done
by David Lasky, a wunderkind in the mini-comics underworld, the
poetry of Juliette Torrez comes off like a sophomore's first draft.
Comic artist Rafael Navarro, best known for his pulp comic Sonambulo,
illustrates The Girl with the Glass Eye in a minimalist's
chiaroscuro. It's a shame some of that dramatic depth hasn't influenced
author Kenn Rodriguez, who embarrasses himself with laughable metaphors
involving Mexican food. Lisa Warner
Mary and O'Neil
by Justin Cronin
(The Dial Press, 243 pages, $21.95)
In the last decades, the literary standard for mainstream contemporary
fiction has been set by the Iowa Writers' Workshop. By now, Iowa
grads' work sounds pretty much the same, which is why it's so comfortable--and
predictable--to read. So it's exciting when one of these hardworking
McHacks tries something we've never seen before.
Justin Cronin's
debut, Mary and O'Neil, explores life's unpredictability
in a series of linked pieces. In the first segment, "Last of the
Leaves," O'Neil's parents visit him at college. It's a long, richly
detailed tale, steeped in New England nostalgia and the smell of
burning leaves, that ends tragically, providing a springboard to
O'Neil's adulthood. The book continues with well-drawn scenes plucked
from his life as well as the experiences of those near him--his
sister and Mary, the woman he marries. Some scenes venture into
the dangerous territory of sentimentality, but Cronin usually treads
cautiously.
Mary and
O'Neil is a perfect example of the Iowa formula: the correct
balance of character development, description and plot. But the
author adds an unexpected element that most male writers wouldn't
touch: feminine intuition. From the first piece, the women possess,
to varying degrees, an ability to grasp the metaphysics of life
in a very physical way. A few of these portrayals are over the top
even for metafiction, such as when Mary, reeling from an abortion,
is visited by the spirits of her future children. But Cronin uses
a delicate touch to examine things that have baffled male scribes
since the dawn of paper. It's very refreshing. Thanks, oh hallowed
Iowan, for trying something different.
Susan Wickstrom
The Body
Artist
by Don Delillo
(Scribner, 124 pages, $22)
Don DeLillo's
first novel since 1997's epic Underworld is a far sparer
work. At 125 pages, The Body Artist details the unusual period
of grief experienced by performance artist Lauren Hartke following
the suicide of her husband. What makes her grief unusual lies in
what she discovers upon returning to her rural New England home:
a small, fragile man, apparently unable to produce anything other
than cryptic non-sequiturs, sitting in his underwear in an upstairs
room.
The pleasure
of reading DeLillo is not merely that he is immensely talented,
but that he is nearly fearless. The mundane, married-couple-breakfast
scene that opens The Body Artist is material most writers
would compress or skip; DeLillo expands it, investing breakfast
with mystery and beauty. His strings of words, at their most breathtaking,
are both well-wrought and true: "She moved toward the table and
the birds went cracking off the feeder again. They passed out of
the shade beneath the eaves and flew into sunglare and silence and
it was an action she only partly saw, elusive and mutely beautiful,
the birds so sunstruck they were consumed by light, disembodied,
turned into something sheer and fleet and scatter-bright." It's
difficult to respond to passages like that with anything other than
a quiet "Yes."
It would be
disingenuous to claim that I understood every bit of The Body
Artist. It is, at times, intellectually obscure. But complete
understanding isn't required for enjoyment, and DeLillo expects
his readers to do a little work. His considerable skill is evident
on nearly every page, so it's well worth the reader's effort.
Dan DeWeese
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