When I come to a book, I want very badly
to love it deeply, to find myself enthralled and enraptured by it, to have new avenues
of intimacy and perception opened within my mind, to come away ecstatic and electrified.
If this is not possible, the next thing I want is to really fucking hate it, to
be able to cast the book down in disgust and point at it with a baleful, imperious
finger as I declaim that this shit right here
is exactly what is wrong with essays/art/the academy/the world/etc etc etc. The Best American Essays 1997, edited by
humorist Ian Frazier, denies me both of these experiences. It is a collection of
mostly reflective, mostly humorous essays of uneven quality.
But
first, the publication stats: 24 essays total, most coming in under 5,000 words,
with 5 from The New Yorker, 3 from The New York Times Magazine, 2 from Harper’s, 1 from The Oxford American, 1 from The
Paris Review, 1 from The New Republic,
1 from The Threepenny Review, 1 from Allure, 1 from High Plains Literary Review, 1 from Sports Afield, 1 from The Atlantic,
1 from Under the Sun, 1 from Creative Nonfiction, 1 from The Missouri Review, 1 from Esquire, 1 from The Massachusetts Review, and 1 from Granta. Nothing too surprising here: as with many years, BAE is dominated
by the major New York publications, with a smattering of national magazines and
well-regarded literary journals.
And
secondly, the quirky ephemera: my copy of BAE 1997 came used, with an inscription
on the title page reading “Happy 20th Birthday, Love Mom + Dad” (evidently
the gift was not well-received?), a red ribbon straddling page 160 and 161, smack
in the middle of Lauren Slater’s emotionally claustrophobic Black Swans, which recounts the repetitive
horrors of her struggles with OCD. This essay has been diligently and methodically
marked up in purple highlighter, though no other essay in the collection has received
such attention. I suspect that one of the previous owners bought the book just for
this essay, though there is no way to ever confirm this.
And
now, the main gist: it was difficult not to think of this collection as The Fourth State of Matter & Other Essays
rather than as The Best American Essays of
1997. And who could blame me for being drawn to this particular monument, for
wanting to read the whole collection in light of it? Jo Ann Beard’s account of the
1991 University of Iowa shootings is easily one of the best known contemporary essays.
I teach it to my Intro to Creative Nonfiction undergraduate students, and almost
every intro-level instructor I know teaches it in one form or another. When asked
by strangers—on planes, in bars, in waiting rooms, and in all the other places of
forced, inescapable conversation—to clarify “what creative nonfiction is” I usually
just tell them to read The Fourth State of
Matter. I’ve re-read it for teaching or research or whatever probably 4-5 times
in the last 18 months. Normally I approach this essay in my teaching persona, and
I always nudge/persuade/coerce my students into talking about Beard’s prose on a
near-microscopic line-by-line level: what kind of details does she provide? Does
she use particular sonic patterns? Is her vocabulary more Latinate or more Anglo-Saxon?
Are her sentences long or short? Are there recurring sentence structures? What sort
of metaphors does she rely most heavily on? That teaching persona makes me seem
like some kind of deranged whip-brandishing New Critical martinet, obsessed with
cracking the codes of style and technique, and so it was a pleasure, maybe even
a relief, to read it this time with an eye towards the holistic experience.
And
it holds up beautifully. The Fourth State
of Matter is elegant and brutal in all the right ways, with a swerve that still
feels forceful and yet inevitable even after so many re-reads. Nothing demonstrates
the sheer excellence of this essay better than the ending, an imagined conversation
with a departed friend:
In a few hours the
world will resume itself, but for now we’re in a pocket of silence. We’re in the
plasmapause, a place of equilibrium, where the forces of the earth meet the forces
of the sun. I imagine it as a place of stillness, where the particles of dust stop
spinning and hang motionless in deep space.
Around my neck is the
stone he brought me from Poland. I hold it out. Like this? I ask. Shards of fly wings, suspended in amber.
Exactly, he says.
But
Beard’s essay feels a bit like an anomaly in this collection, which is dominated
by short, mostly wry essays, sometimes a little thinky, sometimes a little nostalgic,
sometimes a little ranty, and sometimes a little mysterious. The strongest of these
is probably Hilton Als’ Notes on My Mother,
an elliptical unfolding of an enigmatic relationship, which opens with an absolutely
killer line--“Until the end, my mother never discussed her way of being”—and keeps
that balance of smart lyricism and pleasing opacity all the way through:
All the women in my
family wanted me to become a black male for the same reason: they wanted to define
themselves against me. I tried to please them, because I adored them. I thought
that being an auntie man was a fair compromise, but it wasn’t.
Alphabetical ordering
means that Als opens the collection, and Joy Williams closes it by channeling the
snarky spirit of H. L. Mencken for The Case
Against Babies, an essay bubbling over with joyous condemnation of reproduction,
of overpopulation, of ecological arrogance, of all the bullshit sentimentality that
comes with anything involving babies. What lies between these two, Beard and a few
other exceptions aside, ranges from pleasing-yet-forgettable personal essays to
sheer crap. Dagoberto Gilb has an amusing anecdote about the whirlwind of emotions
that came when he first saw a stranger reading one of his book in public. Cythia
Ozick, Lukie Chapman Reilly, Frank Gannon, Charles Simic, and Naton Leslie all have
well-executed reflections on some variant of family story or history. Gay Talese’s
Ali in Havana has an absurd, wonderful
concept—Muhammad Ali meets Fidel Castro at a really awkward formal reception!—but
at 13,000-ish words the piece just drags and drags and drags, failing to keep me
awake for the ensuing carefully-observed international comedy of manners (I was
unsurprised to find out, through judicious use of Google, that Talese saw 12 rejections
for this piece before Esquire agreed to
publish it). Susan Sontag offers a truncated, phoned-in history of the decline of
cinema as an art form. Thomas McGuane’s Twenty-Fish
Days, published originally in Sports Afield,
gives us a narrative example of the “kind of poetic singularity” that sometimes
accompanies fishing trips. I am certain there are readers, somewhere out there,
who care deeply about the “poetic singularity” made possible by fortuitous angling.
I am not one of those readers.
I should make a special
note here about how I am deeply drawn to, despite myriad reservations, My Habit, Paul Sheehan’s essay about his
crack vial collection (which, at 562 entries, was easily the largest crack vial
collection in the world). Sheehan willfully, almost dickishly, ignores all the big
stuff—he doesn’t want to talk seriously about the racial implications of drug policy,
or the socioeconomic structures, or any of the half-dozen other loaded issues. He
doesn’t use crack. He just wants to collect a ton of crack vials, for reasons he
admits he doesn’t fully understand, and this leads him to wander the streets of New
York, at odd hours in odd places, looking for vials with new colors, new caps, or new
designs. Sometimes he pretends to be a priest while doing so, because evidently
people ask fewer questions when priests dig around in the trash or the snow for
crack vials. There’s something oddly charming about this man’s “obsessional predicament”,
about this fucked up flâneur, this perambulating asshole who lets us have a little
peek into his mind, who lets us feel up the textures of his weird brain for a few
minutes.
This is, I think, what
we mean when we talk about essay-as-a-verb, when we talk about the mind of the author
being consubstantial with the text (or however that damned Montaigne quote goes),
what Ian Frazier meant in the introduction, when he talked about “the voice unspooling
in the essay’s present time”. Those of us who write essays unspool ourselves in
this weird, intimate, idiosyncratic sphere, and the best essays from BAE 97 tended to be the ones who directly
owned up to that. Frazier described his individual selection process as follows:
“I think the essays in this collection are great. I liked many essays that I did
not choose, but I liked these the best. To say what moved me about various specific
ones would not be to tell you much of use to you.” When I first read that, I thought
it was a bit of a cop-out, a lazy way of getting out of the hard work of justifying
his decisions. But I’ve come around to Frazier’s side: sometimes you like the jerk
with the crack vial collection, and sometimes you don’t.
*
Will Slattery helps curate Essay Daily. He
is an ex-cheesemonger, a CNF MFA candidate, and was once described by a friend, during
a heated argument, as “a violent homosexualist”. He tweets on occasion: @wjaslattery.
<< it was difficult not to think of this collection as The Fourth State of Matter & Other Essays >>
ReplyDeleteI couldn’t agree more! In fact this title would be appropriate for *any* book containing 4SM, of which, it turns out, there are two others. The story first appeared in the June 24/July 1, 1996 double issue of The New Yorker magazine, but has since been reprinted in:
• The Best American Essays 1997, as we know
• Beard’s own 1999 book The Boys of My Youth
• 2007’s Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction. (Man, I can *not* recommend this book strongly enough.)
Note also that there are two versions of 4SM which I’ve come to refer to simply as the earlier and later versions. (The earlier version is what appears in both The New Yorker and BAE97; the later version appears in The Boys of My Youth and Touchstone.)
I recently completed a parallel reading of the two versions and most of the edits are minor enough that neither version is demonstrably better than the other, although it was interesting to see how Gang Lu is introduced noticeably sooner in the earlier version (He’s mentioned offhandedly at the start of section 4—the “At the office, there are three blinks…” section—but in the later version he doesn’t appear until the 7th paragraph of Section 6—the “They’re speaking in physics…” section).
Steve Russillo
High Point, NC