“The Morning After the Sixties” — an Interview with Darcey Steinke, Author of Sister Golden Hair

There is a passage in Lawrence Wechsler’s book on contemporary perception artist Robert Irwin which reads: “Throughout the late fifties, Irwin continued to survey the progress of other artists, groping for a way of seeing his own work more clearly. Slowly his emphasis shifted; whereas previously he had phrased the challenge in terms of gesture’s seeming authenticity or the painting’s compositional consistency, now he began to think more in terms of the canvas’s physical presence.” I was reminded of this quote as I interviewed novelists, essayist, and text-based artist, Darcey Steinke about her new novel Sister Golden Hair, out from Tin House this month. Steinke is a writer whose work has always been deeply engaged with perception — the perception of religion, the body, and the text as a kind of spiritual reservoir which must capture that sense of authenticity through struggles with form.

In her new novel, set in the 1970’s in a decade of “devolution,” where one could count “ten Nixon signs on the highway as they passed,” Steinke’s work branches out and begins to deal with the physical presence of a decade and those crises which defined it. Here is a conversation we had one morning over coffee — Darcey in her house in Brooklyn and I trying to catch the internet’s passing flame from my kitchen table in the Catskills.

Part I: The 1970’s, Feminism, and the Crisis of Self-fulfillment

DeWitt: As I was reading Sister Golden Hair I was thinking a lot about the role of time period and place in the novel. I think having been a kid that grew up in the 80’s, I’ve always really romanticized people that lived through the 70’s and came of age during that time. My own parents didn’t necessarily have a strong relationship with the 70’s as a time period, despite having lived through them. So, I have this kind of cultish fascination with narratives of that time. I was looking back on that famous Didion essay “The Morning After the Sixties” from The White Album and there was a line in there that reminded me of your novel where she said, “We were all very personal then. Sometimes relentlessly so. And at one point we either act or do not act. Most of us are still. I supposed I’m talking about just that. The ambiguity of belonging to a generation distrustful of political highs. The historical irrelevancy of growing up convinced that the heart of darkness lay not in some era of social organization but in a man’s own blood.” That made me think a lot about your novel, this description of it on the back says, “It’s all about awaiting new sexual mores, and muddled social customs and confused spirituality.” But more than that it specifically reminded of the father character in your novel and how he becomes a cipher for this change that’s somehow happened between the 60s and the 70’s. And I didn’t know if you could talk about what that “morning after the 60’s” was for you and what made you write about this time period?

Steinke: I’ve always wanted to write about the 70’s because — I mean there’s some good stuff about the 70’s. The Ice Storm would be a great example of a book that’s similar to my feeling of the 70’s. There are also a lot of things culturally about the 70’s that are ridiculed. It’s all about That Seventies Show and smiley faces and tube tops. And I always feel like when you get that, it’s usually because there’s been a lot of pain.

DeWitt: Fascinating.

I always feel like if there’s a lot of romanticizing of a time period it’s because there’s been a fair amount of pain and confusion about a time period.

Steinke: I always feel like if there’s a lot of romanticizing of a time period it’s because there’s been a fair amount of pain and confusion about a time period. And so rather than think about its bleakness, it becomes, “It was GREAT. We all wore love beads. We wore bellbottoms. There was a lot of pot around.” But in my experience I didn’t really know the difference until I’d lived through many different time periods. You know what I mean? Because I do think that the period of time that you come of age in, you’re always accessed in that time period. And I also think you’re often obsessed — I think you’re right, that there can be a nostalgia for earlier periods that came before you — but I think you’re obsessed with the people that you came of age around. You always have a kind of love hate relationship with them. You’re fascinated with them but you always think, “How could they have been better? What is it about them that made them who they are?” I mean, for me I’ve thought so much about — especially some of these women that I tried to write about in my new book and the challenges they had and the struggles of where they were in history and feminism.

DeWitt: Yes. That was something I thought a lot about in relationship to the mother character who was really interesting to me. And so I was going through literature prepping for this interview I was looking at a lot of the Didion essays that I’d always crawled over that were supposedly nonfiction about that time. And there’s that essay in there too about the Women’s Movement where she says, “In 1972, in a ‘special issue’ on women, Time was still musing genially that the movement might well succeed in bringing about ‘fewer diapers and more Dante.’” And she talks about this idea that the new feminism was about some “yearning for fulfillment” or “self-expression” in that way. There is that line where Didion says, “The have-nots, it turned out, aspired mainly to having.” And that reminded me a lot of the mother character that you build across your novel in terms of her obsession with the wealthy families like the Rockefellers and what they’re doing. I was curious about how you built your ideas of what was going on with feminism at that time. Is that something you witnessed and then built in?

Steinke: Yes, definitely. You know when you’re ten years old — which I guess I was. My time period doesn’t exactly fit, I guess it’s a few years off — but I mostly experienced feminism at first in the house. In my house with seeing my mother react to both actual feminists — like seeing feminists protest on TV and seeing my mother and what she felt about it and thinking, “Where do I fit in that. Do I agree with her? Do I not?” And then also having her feel she was trained to be one thing, one kind of woman, one kind of mother, but that the culture all of a sudden seemed to want someone who worked, someone who had gone to college. And my father really did, I think, play into this too. Especially when women could work, then the house could be different. Could be a different place financially. More wealthy. And my father was definitely the type of person that was interested in that. My father was the type of person who wanted self-development for himself as well and so the idea of my mother working, I think he liked that idea a lot. And I think he raised it to her a lot. And it was really very hard for her because she had grown up being trained — and maybe more so than other people too — being trained to think, “You’re going to work in the home. The home is a beautiful place.” I often think of how much my mother has gone through when I think of Brooklyn. You know, how important food is now. To make yourself a cozy home. All these things I think kind of blew apart in the 70’s. Nobody cared anymore. It didn’t matter if your food was just microwaved. It didn’t matter if you had a cozy home. It was as all about, “How can I fulfill myself to be outside the home.” And that was painful for my mother. Of course the mother in my novel isn’t exactly like my mother, but some of that energy I definitely tried to sort of put into that. I think people can be disappointed in relationships. And there’s love disappointment. And there’s confusion in relationships. But time is like the third parent. Right? When you’re messed up by time itself, that’s kind of epic to me. That’s tragic in a way that’s — even as a little girl, I remember experiencing that. Feeling my mother’s sadness — you know, she was sad anyway probably — but my friends’ mothers too. A lot of sadness among my friends’ mothers, among that generation, that the rug had really been pulled out from under them and there wasn’t really much they could do about it. They could try at thirty-five or forty to go back to school and get careers but really there was going to be this lack in a way. There was no way to really control it. And that to me seemed pretty tough. It was hard to feel like there was something that was done to them by history that couldn’t be made right. I also think that the depth of the frustration and the isolation and the real scariness of it — I tried to put that in the book to. I mean, you know, the sixties ideas that families started to break up. The idea of personal development, how you, yourself, your own life was going to develop, your own desires — a father’s or a mother’s separate from the family — became a focus culturally. Not so much the family unit anymore. When families started to break up because of that, as I said, these women, they hadn’t been college educated. I think of them like proto feminists. They hadn’t been educated to work outside. To take care of their families. And there was some serious financial desperation going on. Sometimes I think more than the culture’s really willing to admit.

DeWitt: Yes. I think so too.

Steinke: I mean there were some families — not just women — really left in the lurch. Seriously. And I feel like I haven’t really seen that written about. As far as the thing I saw then. And I had great — I really came to admire these women who had nothing and whose families had broken up who were supposed to work. And to have kids. You know, there was no real childcare. And to see them get their nursing degrees or try to put it back together was kind of the first thing I ever saw of women taking responsibility for their lives. And you could say it’s not like a woman getting a PhD or becoming president but to me at seven, eight, nine, ten, I could really feel that there was a force — that something cool was happening. It was the first time I really saw, “We can. It’s possible to put this back together.” And that was hard because I saw my mother do it — but my mother’s case was much more fraught. She also went back to college. Which is probably the thing that I’m most proud of her for. I think she got her degree when she was forty-three. It was fraught, but she did it too. And I think that that thing is something that hasn’t really been — you know, culturally I feel like we haven’t really celebrated that. We haven’t both admitted how desperate it was and even just the reality of there being no child support and just the reality of having to start to have this home, to be responsible financially for yourself. It was scary. And to see these women put it back together was so moving to me. So that’s something I really wanted to write about in the book. I hadn’t really ever seen that part of the 70’s written about and I wanted to write about some characters, some female characters, that were both confused and disoriented by that time period and those social changes but also those characters that could make some slow steps toward putting it back together.

I wanted to write about some characters, some female characters, that were both confused and disoriented by that time period and those social changes but also those characters that could make some slow steps toward putting it back together.

DeWitt: Yes. That’s what strikes me as making the female characters in your novel so much more dimensional than other books written about that time period. I actually just read Rick Moody’s The Ice Storm. I’ve always really loved Ang Lee’s cinematic take on the book. And it’s really fascinating to hear you talk about this because I was coming of age in the next generation. I was an 80’s kid. I’ve just finished working on a draft of a novel set in the early 90’s about a mom who I think came from that next generation, the generation that abutted the mother in Sister Golden Hair, that came after it. So for me, it was that my mom did go back to get her graduate degree when I was quite young. We were living in rural place and it wasn’t necessarily like the women there were working. But she was smart and had all these aspirations so she went back when my sister must have been two or three or so, and my mom got her MBA and taught while she was doing it. And that was something that was really important to her. But it ended up being this really tragic story where she went and did that and she stated working when I guess we must have been seven and four. And she’s someone of whom I always jokingly say, “She should have run a corporation. Or she could have run for President.” I mean she’s sometimes, in this kind of masochistic way, very organization focused. And she ended up not being able to.

Steinke: My mom was totally like that. She would come and visit you and she would end up reorganizing your kitchen even though you lived in a rental and you were only going to be there a month. I know exactly what you mean. You can see it. It’s energy that should have been put out.

DeWitt: Right. It’s that entrepreneurial spirit that should have gone somewhere. But it ended up being this sad story because she ended up not working until later in her life, not until around fifty, when we were out of the house and she had a career renaissance. But, back then, after she got her MBA, she tried to put us in childcare. We hated it. And I think she had a lot of guilt and anxiety about having done that. And so she gave it up. And I think that was wrapped up in her ideas of whether she had wanted to have children in the first place. There was still that lingering 50’s pressure of needing to be a mother. Despite the fact that I think if she had been born one generation later, she probably would have put that off a lot longer. She still talks about the way college was thought of back then. That idea of, “You’re going to college to meet a man. That’s why you were going.” And, having gone to an all women’s college that didn’t go co-ed until later, my mom hadn’t done that. And so I think her feeling was, “Ok, I’m already late in the ballgame.” And then I think about what my mother must think about me. I mean I’m thirty-three and unmarried and childless. Those kind of cultural norms have really changed. I think that’s’ what really distinguished your book. I was excited to see a female author deal with women in that time period in a way that really differed from say the Moody book. I mean I love his characters too. They’re portrayed as these almost kind of flat screens that the rest of the world can project stuff on to. And with Moody, it’s all about what the men in the novel had wanted in life and where they’d fallen short of their own images of their masculinity. Their social and intellectual and romantic failures. The things they didn’t accrue. And the idea of female sexuality in that book is always troubling. The girl is going to go into the basement with a Nixon mask on and rub up against this guy and something bad is going to happen. She’s always the kind of instigator. But the mother in that book is really passive in the sense that she goes to the pastor and she has this moment with him but then there’s that key change party and she is horrified by the whole thing and she ends up sleeping with the neighbor just because she realizes her own husband is having an affair. And in a way she is kind of raped culturally by this whole thing. And so it was really exciting to see your character in that she has this similar emotional make-up to the Moody character but her reaction to her circumstance and the time period, and her understanding of what that cultural crisis was, comes from such a different view point.

Steinke: Yes. I think that’s right. I think that’s right.

DeWitt: That was really incredible. For me to see it. It was the first time I’ve seen it in a character in fiction and I was thinking it would be so great to see it on the screen at some point.

“Oh well, the 70’s is already over. We’ve had all these 70’s movies and TV shows.” But you realize that no period is ever really over because they all affect the things that come next.

Steinke: I know! Wouldn’t it! Keep your fingers crossed on that! You know it’s interesting when you go through time — which I’m sure you can relate to since you’re writing something about the 90’s — you realize, you think, “Oh well, the 70’s is already over. We’ve had all these 70’s movies and TV shows.” But you realize that no period is ever really over because they all affect the things that come next. Even this new movement, with new feminism on the campus and Emma carrying her mattress.

DeWitt: Right! I’ve been following that.

Steinke: You realize, “That puts my own life into great relief. Why, when that professor did that thing to me, why didn’t I say anything?” My daughter’s eighteen and I feel like I have to meet her on the subway just because — the neighborhood’s not totally unsafe — but I feel like after midnight, she needs it. And I think, “Why do I have to do that?” This has really made me think. Before, I thought, “Well, this is just how the world is. “ But now I think, “Why? No! Why is the world like that?” That’s wrong. Let’s do something about that. So, I’ve been excited because that’s a way I couldn’t have thought myself. I mean I’ve walked, for five years I’ve walked her home from the subway. And it was kind of a dead place in me. You know I’m not happy about it but it’s made me … it’s been exciting for me to follow things like the campus news. Especially because I saw a collective carry the mattress. Which was really moving and exciting for me. But it’s re-enlivened things for me about my own life and my own past. And that’s what I think going back to a different time period is like. For me, with the 70’s. Of course, I couldn’t have written that book in the ‘80’s or the ‘90’s. We needed right now. The cultural moment right now in order for me to look back at some of these women with sympathy but also with a certain amount of political … I mean, a sense of, “This is what was and let’s look at it honestly.” So it was exciting for me to be able to go back — not that the novel is non-fiction, because it’s not — but to sort of deal with all these characters that I knew at the time and I felt like I understood their passion and their challenges. And to look at them through now. Which is what a historical novel always is, right? It’s never really about 1800 or about 1950 or about 1670. It’s really about the person now looking back. I mean good ones, not romances with different kinds of teapots and different kind of furniture — but the good ones — that’s what they really are. They’re from now looking back.

Part 2: On a Period of “Devolution:” Grandness, An Unconstant God, And Inventing Faith

DeWitt: One aspect I really enjoyed of the book was the feeling that the characters had absorbed the conflict. The conflicts of the time had become personal conflicts for them. It’s wasn’t about creating this patina of — this was the music that was playing at the time, or this was what was on the radio — although there’s some of that too which is really well done. There’s a quote in here that I wanted to ask you about where you say of the dad, “I think his grand plan was also failing. He’d given up church stuff. The prayers. The creeds. The vows which he had told me were a waste of time. We were, he had told me with great enthusiasm, in a period of devolution. Unlearning what we knew.” I thought that was really just so brilliant and typified just what you were talking about in terms of a character that had somehow absorbed all of the larger cultural conflicts that America was going through at the time. And I was wondering if you could talk about that phrase “a period of devolution” and what that means.

Steinke: The way I saw the book, especially as I worked on it more, was that they were leaving the sort of more rigid idea of church which has to do with specific prayers and creeds and then they’re thrown out into the secular world where they have to find grace themselves. So they have to figure it out. Especially Jesse. But the father too. His struggle in some ways — even though it’s not the biggest one in the book — is there too. He got thrown out of the church and he needs to figure out — does he need a system of thought like religion? Or is he able to find grace in normal things? And I actually think that that’s the position that almost everyone’s in now. I mean the world itself. We’ve moved from a lot of certainties, a lot of religious certainties, into a place where maybe people are seekers and they’re interested in a lot of different religions. I mean there are a lot of people of course that actually are religious — they have one faith and still go — but even those people, I would really wonder if they have the same kind of faith as people did one hundred years ago. You know what I mean?

DeWitt: Right. Yes.

Steinke: There’s more room for making it up yourself. Trying to figure out your own personal faith and also what you believe. And I think devolution has a lot to do with that because you have to kind of explode what you think about God. It’s that’s whole idea of absence. Knowing God. Knowing God through darkness because you can’t know him until you devolve all the preordained ideas of religion, preordained ideas of what it is to be feminine, what a family is, ALL of these things. Until you sort of try and give yourself a little room within those things, it’s really hard to be truly alive.

DeWitt: Right.

Steinke: You’re more a concept to yourself than you are an actually truly messy, vibrant being.

DeWitt: I think we’re in that moment now of that crisis of needing a system of thought. You know on the one hand I see religion as being this huge issue that’s related not just to politics but things like violence and war. You can look at the crisis in the Middle East as being one that’s about energy and power and oil — and in a lot of ways I think it is — but in other ways I think we’re at this really interesting moment where faith is at a turning point. Even though I wasn’t someone who grew up particularly religious I feel like I’ve seen religion and its place in life, its sphere in occupying the home, change. I mean my mom grew up Russian Orthodox. Her grandfather was a priest in the church. She went to all of her religious ceremonies in Russian. And that was a big part of life. So in one generation it’s gone from her great grandfather was a priest in Russia to her grandfather was priest in Pennsylvania to her mother ran the Russian Star and my mom being really involved in that, to me. I have no religious affiliation whatsoever. I mean I was brought up that at Easter we went to the Congregational Church because it was the closest one. Our priest Tim Handley was having an affair with the usher. And in that way religion meant nothing to me. It didn’t have anything to do with where I’d come from.

For a long time religion built up this idea of grandness. And now I don’t think that’s working anymore.

Steinke: For a long time religion built up this idea of grandness. And now I don’t think that’s working anymore. I think the idea of grandness and, “I’m God. You’re down here.” It’s just not … I mean religion has to be — not even really religion, because that’s kind of debasing it — but the idea of God. I mean, it’s kind of true, about the idea of God, you have to invent it yourself. I mean, I actually think the idea that God is dead is one of the greatest ideas we’ve ever had because you don’t want to have a god who is constant. You want to have a God who makes some sense within the context of your life. So you have to create that god yourself. And that has to do with devolution. It’s not unlike the class I taught at Columbia, “Wetland, Drylands,” on lyricism. It’s very similar. I’m teaching this other class there now called “Among the Believers,” but as I teach it I think, “This is the same class.”

DeWitt: [Laughs.]

Steinke: All my ideas have to do with suspicion of form. How does the soul fit in the body? How do we fit the idea of living tissue, or life, into something that has form, whether it’s writing or a religious idea? And I always come up in the same place. Curious. Both wanting to explode forms, like I said. But also curious of understanding that for me the best place is to have some forms to think about and then have some resistance, but not complete. I think that’s the idea of a seeker. That’s a form we know about. Whether it’s theology. Or even if it’s science. But then you keep yourself a little bit back from it — you’re not a complete true believer — because you let there be some room in there for what things actually mean and how you feel. And even the Clarice Lispector book I’m teaching is the same idea which is that idea of the form breaking down and then where does the self, the soul, the consciousness, exist within it?

I see it in the next generation of kids too that I see in a college classroom where I feel like, “We need a system of thought” — not religious thought, but maybe something closer to kind of a communal morality.

DeWitt: I feel that crisis personally. And I feel like I see it. And I see it in the next generation of kids too that I see in a college classroom where I feel like, “We need a system of thought” — not religious thought, but maybe something closer to kind of a communal morality. And then I think, well what other system of thought are we attaching ourselves to? Does it have something to do with all this talk about the internet and social media and the way people organize images of themselves? Or does it have something to with the sense that I keep reading in all those kind of trite articles about, “Nobody’s getting married anymore. People can’t commit to things”? And it reminds me of one good class I took undergrad at Brown which was about that Christopher Lash book that came out in the 90’s, The Culture of Narcissism. Which was such a conservative book. But I always love reading it because he talks about all these crises which you write about in your novel. He says the 70’s was awful because everyone just went off and tried to better themselves through some sense of fake spirituality that then ended up eroding things like commitment. And then we see all these contemporary articles coming out saying, “Millennials are never going to get married. And they’re never going to have a kid and buy a house.” And I feel like saying, “Well, there’s a lot of financial reasons for that too. The world looks different now. This generation is also saddled with trillions of dollars of student debt. How can you start thinking about the future if you can’t get out from under your past?” Which makes me think about that idea devolution and where it’s ended up today. Is it in this conservative erosion of commitment that Lash predicts? Or, is there something new that we can commit ourselves to. And I think in some ways it makes me think about things like the Occupy Wall street movement and people’s critique of that being that there was no centralized system of thought.

Steinke: So do you think that Occupy Wall Street movement was lacking a faith base? I’ve often thought that. I mean I would never want to push religion off on anybody. But, you know, the Civil Rights movement had a pretty strong Christian base. I sometimes think that for things to keep going and have meaning, they have to have a multi-religious faith base. That’s something I think about a lot. I’ve been very interested in Occupy, but I’ve also been a little bit confused by its ultimate meaning in a way. Maybe it’s because I’m older, and it’s not familiar to me in a way. Because it doesn’t actually have a faith base. It doesn’t seem to have a faith base, anyway.

DeWitt: Hmm. I hadn’t thought of that. Or, the critique has been that it doesn’t have that phrase you used, a core “system of beliefs” behind it. We’re so afraid to outline those things because it seems like doctrine but then at the same time, without some doctrine, it’s hard to create a nexus of energy around which people can organize.

Part 3: Beyond Place and Setting: Motif As Character

DeWitt: Beyond the sense of the time period, which we just talked about, there’s also a really amazing sense of place in your new novel. I’m teaching the opening of it next week for a class on “Beyond Place and Setting: Motif As Character” and there’s something about place, not just this time period, but this actual physical place that feels so omnipresent but not oppressive in the book. Which I thought was really well done. There’s this passage on page sixteen where you say:

In the evening the rain cleared and we drove over to Bent Tree, passing Long John Silvers, Hardy’s, and a 24 hour do-it-yourself car wash. There was a drive in movie theatre playing a film called Dallas Girls and a string of brick ranch houses with Christmas lights up around the porches and a sign by the road that read massage. After a while, the strip malls got further apart, interspersed with black glass, professional buildings and churches on both sides of the highway. Just before we turned off there was a brick church with white columns, a steeple and a sign which read, “Sin knocks a hole in your bucket of joy.” The parking lot was empty and glittering under the overhead light. Off the highway, I counted thirteen Nixon for president signs stuck in front yards. My father hated Nixon but I felt sorry for the president because he always looked so dazed and miserable. Warm air came through the window. Damp and tinged with the sense food and grape juice.

So, there’s a real sense in your novel not only of the time period but of this kind of physical place. The architecture of the place. It made me think of that book that you taught in class, Seeing Is Forgetting the Things One Sees by Lawrence Wechsler, and all of those perception artists and the idea that the actual architecture of the physical space changes the way people think. And it seems like these people in your novel are of the first generation — or one of the first generations — of pre-suburban dwellers. This complex that they live in is all about being in the car and feeling the wind come through and the early reliance on things like cheap oil and people being about to live in these kind of isolated — that weren’t rural communities — but were isolated communities about which someone like Jane Jacobs would say, “It isn’t a city. It doesn’t have a public street where people can all congregate together. Instead there’s all these separate private spaces which creates all of these weird conflicts. And all these kind of closed doors where you can’t go to a park and invite someone in the park to come have dinner at your house — because that’s a private space. Whereas, if you met them on the subway, you might then go have a coffee in a coffee shop and that wouldn’t be that strange.” And I wondered about the physical sense of place and how you considered it. The actual architecture of building this place and how you went about that.

Steinke: Of course the novel’s set in Bent Tree, which is this duplex complex. And I did live in a place like that sort of for a few years when I was young and I’ve been fascinated with them. And too when I was in high school, it wasn’t that unusual that when families broke up one of the parents would move to a place like that. And the places seemed sad in a way but also kind of fascinating.

DeWitt: Yeah. Kind of sexy in a way too.

Steinke: Yes. Kind of like fermenting people. Where they were trying to figure it out. It wasn’t like the people were sitting back. It wasn’t boring like a lot of the other places were. It had a lot of darkness that sort of exited me too. And I always was really fascinated by the fact too that all of the houses were the same but that different people lived in them. Like beehives. Kind of like the beehive idea. My fascination almost always was architectural. Almost an art-like fascination with the idea these same places. And also when I lived there myself, it always fascinated me the idea of, “Here I am in my bedroom. But I’m not in my bedroom. I would be in my friends’ houses and there it would be their bedroom or their parents’ bedroom. And there was something about the overlapping lives that seemed very liminal to me. Almost like the idea of time — I mean you’re taught, “OK you wake up at nine. You have lunch at twelve.” But this structure of living seemed more true to the way time actually worked. There were layers, you know what I mean? You could imagine, “Oh she’s in that room. My friend is in that room. And my friend’s teenage brother is in that room doing the things he does, thinking the thoughts he does. And I’m over here in my room.” And it seemed like there was a stacking of reality which you could almost experience in real time in a weird way. And that really fascinated me. I mean I was little. But almost in an artistic way. That fascination and thinking about it that way was, I think, one of my first experiences in abstract art.

I always was really fascinated by the fact too that all of the houses were the same but that different people lived in them. Like beehives.

DeWitt: Which makes sense because it is the house. It’s that first structure that you know.

Steinke: I mean it was just this crappy duplex complex, but for me there was something deeply fascinating about that. Deeply deeply fascinating. As both an intersection with time itself. And in terms of narrative organization. All these ideas. It started to spur some of these ideas in me. And then it was interesting to construct the 70’s because I was so interested in — the objects, the songs, the way things looked, the oddness of the time. And I was very careful about it. I looked at a lot of pictures. I read books. I went to places. I went back to my home town, of course, to look at things. And I was very interested, as you said, in trying to not just write about the 70’s as a time but to try and link it to the story, to the characters, to the struggles of the characters. I mean all novels are making up a place, whether they act like they’re contemporary or not. But to brick by brick construct this past time. That really fascinated me. Almost again in an arty way. Not just in a “I’m writing in time period details.” It really wasn’t like that. It was about trying to make this space in which the action I was interested in having could happen. Everything’s connected. I don’t know how else to say it. If the Fred Flintstone glasses hadn’t been on the table, your mother wouldn’t have said that to your father.

DeWitt: That resonates so much with me. The house in the novel I’ve been working on is called The Bottomfeeder because the mother is really unhappy there. But I’ve had that very similar experience as a child. For me, it was split-level house. You can’t just say that’s a metaphor. It’s a physical space. To live in a split-level. It was lopsided. One side of the house was three stories. The people lived here. And the middle part of the house — which was the shared part of the house — was only on one side. Whereas on the other side, in the three levels, there was this lower level where the older generation would stay when they visited. In the “flood zone” area. And you can’t say that doesn’t have some defining principle.

Steinke: The basements in those places were so weird.

DeWitt: They’re so weird.

Steinke: The basement is a separate level of the house and it would be decorated more like Elvis’s jungle room.

DeWitt: Right!

Steinke: They were the unconscious of the house. If me and my girlfriends ever found porn or The Happy Hooker it was always in that space. If cruel things were done to you, it seemed like they were done to you in that space.

DeWitt: IN that space! I relate to the idea of going through research too because I think I made the mistake the first time around of thinking — well, the Moody book does that really well. Of just saying outright, “This was before cellphones. The was before beepers.” And he kind of just lists all these things in a way that feels almost like a plastic shield that comes down really forcibly in the beginning. And I think that works really well for that book but I think it really differs from yours in that in yours its more about creating a relationship to characters’ crisis and these things that surround them which feels more meaningful. I ordered all these back issues of Time on eBay. Because the book takes place in the early 90’s. And the mom in the book is really obsessed with the news and wanted to be a newscaster. And when the Gulf War came out it was the first war on television. And I was thinking, “Well, yes. You need to go back and order all these back issues of magazines and see what they had to say about it.” Because my memory of it is one thing. But I grew up in this place where my parents didn’t really watch TV. So I felt like I grew up in kind of a cultural void. So it’s been really fascinating for me to go back — other than watching shows like 3–2–1 Contact or Doctor Who or all these kind of nerdy intellectual shows, I never really knew what was going on with culture. I keep having these moments of, “Oh! That was the song that all the kids were singing from the radio.” I’m almost reclaiming a narrative that I didn’t really have.

Steinke: But you did. You just weren’t conscious of it. You were being affected by it but it wasn’t a thing that was completely conscious. Also, when I was trying to write my novel I was really interested in what the ideas were at the time. And how to figure that out. Of course there were these shifting ideas of women. Part of the ways I did that was I was reading books written between ’72 and ’76. I was reading a lot of the bestsellers. And of course books like Looking for Mr. Goodbar. Books I’d been frightened of and only read a little bit of. Like The Happy Hooker. And also books like Jonathan Livingston’s The Seagull. In the same way that culturally there was a lot of songs about speedy girls — which I think now that feminism back then was making people think, “Oooh, what is a girl? What is a woman?” There was a lot of books like Sybil. There were a lot of books about women having twenty-five personalities. And there’s a lot, a lot, about women being out of control and dangerous.

Part 4: On Female Sexuality and “The Throbbing Amazingness of a Full Round Human Female Body.”

DeWitt: That was the next thing I wanted to talk to you about. I’m glad you brought it up.

Steinke: I wasn’t necessarily aware of that at six or seven or eight or nine or ten, in a way that was conscious. But I was definitely really aware of the fact of the idea of the scary woman. You know, like Carrie. That woman’s desires weren’t going to derail them but they were going to lead to mass murder. And it was fascinating for me to see that even in the bestsellers of that decade that panic and that fear were being manifest. And that was something that was really helpful to me in thinking about the characters and their actions and their desires on a daily basis.

DeWitt: Yes. I love that about Jesse. I mean she’s so good and clean and pure in some ways and yet it’s not just about a coming of age story where she’s at this provocative moment. The passage I was thinking of specifically is this part about becoming a woman, “It didn’t seem fair that I had to change shape. I wish somebody would have asked me and I might have said yes but I would have liked a choice.” And also the great scene of her watching the neighbor outside where she says, “After a while, I just couldn’t stand watching her. I pulled on my bathing suit, grabbed up a towel from the bathroom and left the duplex for the blinding outdoor light. The only sunglasses were a pink pair I had from when I was little but I figured they were better than nothing. As I stood at the foot of her lounger, I saw how pale my skin was in comparison to hers.” And there’s this incredible description of this woman’s body essentially and the erotics of it. This girl’s fascination with watching that body. Not necessarily on a sexual level — although sort of — but also …

Steinke: I would say on a human sensual level. The throbbing amazingness of a full round human female body. That’s something I really identify with. Before I was interested in boys, I was so interested in women. Female bodies just fascinated me. I can remember so many scenes actually which I wrote but I couldn’t put in the book of being in the pool and the sixteen year old girl’s bathing suit falls and you’re basically rocked beyond your wildest dreams. And it’s not really sexual, which is so weird. It doesn’t make you want to have sex or even touch the person. But just the thing that you are going to become that is so scary, mysterious, amazing. Just the power of that. And that’s something I haven’t seen written about that much either, frankly. I mean there’s a lot about girl crushing. And friendship. And there’s something about women that actually do end up being lesbian. And it doesn’t even really matter if you’re lesbian or not at that point because it just this idea of the human body that you’re going to transform into. It’s just such a powerful thing. I wanted to get at that.

I can remember so many scenes actually which I wrote but I couldn’t put in the book of being in the pool and the sixteen year old girl’s bathing suit falls and you’re basically rocked beyond your wildest dreams. And it’s not really sexual, which is so weird.

Part 5: Wetlands verses Drylands and “Coming Up Through The Water”

DeWitt: I’ve read all your books, so it’s interesting to see how sexuality has changed from Suicide Blonde up until now. One of the last things I wanted to ask you was, I was thinking about this novel in relationship to the wetlands drylands class that you taught. And I was thinking that Milk feels very wetlands to me. It’s this very Duras-ish, prismatic kind of novella. It’s very impressionistic and temporal. It almost has a kind of overt religious feeling. Whereas, to me this book felt more like dryland in the sense that you had taken a lot of those similar ideas but brought them up to a kind of conscious level and wanted to deal with them in that way. Whether it was religion or the time period, or sexuality. And I wondered stylistically from a writing, craft based perspective, was that something you were aware of? It reminded me a bit more of your memoir, Easter Everywhere, in that way. And I didn’t know if that shift related in some way to memory and memory becoming more crystalized with age and so you were moving up onto dry land? Or if it had something to with intellectualization of that and wanting to deal with it on a different level?

Steinke: I definitely think the book you write before has a lot to do with the next book. So, coming out of writing the memoir, I got excited about the idea of — not just writing non-fiction — but the idea of the episodic. I learned something about the episodic way things worked through writing my memoir. I was much more interested in as a novelist with image, feeling, tone, setting something up and seeing what happens. But I think in some ways writing my memoir got me interested in a way in story. And I hadn’t really been interested in it before. And so when I came to write this book I was interested in trying to move some of the ideas through the story. Which, at my late age, seems a little bit embarrassing.

DeWitt: [Laughing.] That’s so funny to hear you say that. You look like you’re twenty-two.

People worry about, “Is the novel going to continue?” But I think one of the best ways we have to communicate deep human things is through story.

Steinke: People worry about, “Is the novel going to continue?” But I think one of the best ways we have to communicate deep human things is through story. I also really love biographies. That, in a way, is the thing we have to give each other. The stories of our lives. And maybe being honest about the stories of our lives. Not that I’m not into lyricism and image, because I’m still love that and I’m still really drawn to those moments in texts where the welt of life comes up and the characters can feel it. But I also think the idea of the life — just the life — the character and their actions and the tedious meaning that that has is more real to me now than it used to be. It’s kind of that whole thing of trying to feel that other people are real. Which I think is so hard. You think you think other people are real but it’s really a lifetime process about being able to say, “This person beside me is a living person with desires. I can’t judge them and can’t know how they feel all the time.”

Phonetic Masterpieces of Absurdity

by Shelly Oria, recommended by FSG Originals

Sometimes after the men leave, Nadine’s body tells her to wait awhile for the water. Make that bath count more. She lies still, and her skin feels too tight on her bones, like someone gave her the wrong size. With a finger that smells of them, she looks for sharpness where she knows she will find it: elbows, knees, shoulder blades. The edges of her bones comfort her, but it’s a feeling that passes quickly, and soon there is need for more, for proof. So Nadine gently touches her cheek with her knuckles; her knuckles are her secret weapon. She thinks: These knuckles could make a peach bleed.
She should probably charge more by now, but she can never figure out what to say, or how to say it.

The men smell of baby carrots, because their five-year-old son mistakes baby carrots for candy, and of sweat, because they are always nervous when they see her, even if they’ve been coming for years. Or they smell of ice cream, because last night their wife tried to revive the marriage with some innovative foreplay, and have Viagra breath, because they stopped trusting their body long before it failed them. It doesn’t matter.

Thursdays are the busiest. She never understood why. On Wednesdays, her BlackBerry keeps buzzing with men’s anticipation until she feels like there are bees inside her ears. So on Wednesdays, saying no is important. I miss you, too, Baby; really wish I could. Every man is Baby, no exception; that she learned early on. Even the sophisticated ones appreciate the gesture: the implicit warmth, the promise of anonymity. But she does know their names, of course, sometimes even their last name, and on a few occasions the name of a wife, a mother, a sister they haven’t spoken to in six years. It pains them, that the sister won’t return their calls. They ask, Why won’t she fucking let it go already? Nadine doesn’t want to look for answers. If they insist on talking, she touches their hair, lets her eyes scroll up and down their torso; she waits for their body to remember what it wants. Really, she waits for the chatter to stop, but the trick is still giving it the space it needs. Once, when it was absolutely necessary, she made tea.

Generally speaking, she remembers more than she should: the bump on the back of their neck, the sweat behind their ear right before they come, the scar on the toe of their left foot and the story behind it. There is always a story behind it. They tell the stories and then retell them. Because, well: if she doesn’t truly exist, surely she doesn’t remember; they desperately need to believe that she isn’t real. But then there are times when she can see sadness in their eyebrows, in their lower back, and suddenly they want her to remember. Temporarily, they acknowledge her presence in the world. It’s funny, but you are the most stable thing in my life, you know? In these moments, she has learned, a nod goes a long way.

The woman, the photographer, Mia, has been dominating her thoughts. Now Nadine even dreams of her. Last night, Mia was elected World President.

Nadine wants to know things like what’s Mia’s favorite fruit, what she looks like when she cries. Mia. She rolls Mia’s name on her tongue until she sounds like a cat. Mia wants to know her, too: the first thing she said was I’d like to get to know you, if you’d let me. But Mia wants to know her the way a painter wants to know her canvas. Besides, there is always a lens between them.

Mia reached her through a friend of a friend of a friend, someone Nadine hadn’t talked to in years. On the phone, Mia sounded aggressive, and Nadine wanted to say, Sorry, I don’t think I’m interested. But for a few minutes she chewed the words like she chews her gum before falling asleep, unable to spit. Finally she said, Okay. She said it softly, and Mia didn’t hear her, so she had to repeat. Okay. Nadine assumed they would meet at some bar or café. I work on the Lower East Side, she told Mia, plenty of places to choose from. But Mia said it would be helpful, for the project, if she could see Nadine’s apartment. She may have used the words natural environment. As in: seeing you in your natural environment.

Nadine cleaned her natural environment even though it was already clean. She bought a new plant for the spot between the TV and the sofa that always looked naked. She made cupcakes, but also got cheese and wine, because she wasn’t sure what the occasion called for. And all the while she was asking herself why she cared so much. People never want to come all the way up to Washington Heights, and there weren’t many people in her life these days anyway, so maybe that’s all it was, she wasn’t used to hosting. But then, in the shower, where her thoughts are always honest, a different answer came: it was the word the photographer kept using. Interview. As in “Last week, Madonna sat down with us for an interview… ” or “In a recent interview, the secretary of state expressed her concern… ”

I’m conducting interviews with a few women — pretty long, thorough interviews, the photographer said in an accent Nadine couldn’t quite place, the words going fast and their ends hard, and then, you know, hopefully I’ll find the best fit for the project, and hopefully she’ll want to go ahead and work together… She laughed what must have been a nervous laugh, but it didn’t sound nervous, and Nadine would later learn that nothing Mia did appeared nervous. If the photographer chose her, Nadine would be photographed and then, if all goes well (Nadine wasn’t quite sure what that meant), the photographs would be on display at some gallery for the world to see. In the shower, Nadine imagined an old Jewish couple, a young babysitter, a professor at Columbia; they were all at the gallery, looking at Nadine’s body in the pictures, and even though Nadine had never met them, they now possessed an intimate knowledge of her, because that’s what photographs do, isn’t it? Reveal.

A photograph: Nadine is standing in her small kitchen, waiting for the water to boil. There’s a yellow and tired quality to the room. Her back to the camera, Nadine is looking to the side, the left half of her face visible. She is about to make tea for herself and for Mia: green ceramic cups to Nadine’s right, empty and waiting. There is nothing suggestive in the picture, nothing that tells the viewer how Nadine earns a living. What you can see is something like disappointment, and this you can see in Nadine’s posture and, if you look closely, in her facial expression. Nadine is disappointed because Mia already has her camera out. All that clicking. How can you talk to someone who just click-clicks all the time? How can you get to know someone who reaches for the camera every time she feels something? You cannot. There is a brief moment in which this understanding sinks in, and the camera captures it.

Sometimes Mia forgets to ask permission. She moves things in Nadine’s apartment to better situate herself — the couch, the seashell sculpture, even the TV. Nadine tenses when Mia touches the sculpture — it was made especially for her, years ago, by a man who could make anything with his hands, a man she hoped to marry — but when Mia lifts the TV with ease, Nadine feels light. She smiles, but another thing Mia sometimes forgets is to smile back. This happens when she is deep in thought. Then she catches herself. The knowledge that she was rude always passes through her like a wave, sudden and tall. By now, Nadine knows to wait for it: something like sadness in Mia’s eyes, and then her spine curves, which looks a bit like she is shaking something off. Then the laughter, quick. Then, sometimes: What can I say, I’m Israeli, aggressive by nature. The only other Israeli Nadine knows is a client, a man who sells rugs on Long Island for a living. He is gentle and weak and likes to be pinched hard.

When Mia pushes the limits, Would you be comfortable taking some of your clothes off, she looks at Nadine with soft eyes that say I will look at you all the way to yes.

Maybe next time, Nadine says, because she doesn’t want the eyes to stop.
One thing she wishes she could explain to Mia: she doesn’t mind the moans. Or more honestly, though this embarrasses her: the moans are her favorite part. When seeing a client for the first time, that is what she’s curious about, and she waits for that one moment, when the animal in him speaks to her. When the moment comes, she listens carefully — through the sound, through the exhale of it. There is information there, knowledge, for her to collect. She does. Later, when she uses this knowledge, the men moan more deeply, openly, air coming out through their throats, their teeth, their pores. This reveals more information, and so on, and so on.

She has something like a playlist in her brain; double-click on a man’s photo and you can hear the sound he makes. How can she explain — to Mia, to anyone — that she understands these moans better than she understands words?

When people speak, they say things like: It is what it is, and I believe her, but I also don’t believe her. Ridiculous, absurd things. But with sound you get something that language can’t hide. With sound, you get the feeling underneath the words.
Feeling, for Nadine, is the place you go to when nothing makes sense. For example: a night spent on a beach, a man with salt in his hair and hands of magic, a man she loved. She said This is the end, right? And he said Not even the beginning, Deenie. As it turned out, they were both right.

All of Mia’s questions are the same question. Something something sex worker something something choice something. Nadine always pauses before she answers. It appears as if she is thinking hard, she knows that. But the pause is the time when she says with no sound, Ask me something real. Every time, she waits for Mia to hear. When Mia doesn’t, Nadine answers.

Would you mind repeating that, Mia asks sometimes; I’d like to record you.
A recording:

No, it’s not that I don’t like the question, it’s just… easy to be seduced by the idea of “what if.” You know? So I try not to do that.

Pause.

Sure I think about it, yes. I’d have made a good social worker if I stayed in school, I think. I’d have helped people. I mean, as I’ve said before, I think I am helping people. But maybe I’d have helped more that way, and maybe I’d have enjoyed that job more. And I wouldn’t feel… I’d be more proud. Of what I do. And I’d have more friends, probably. I had some good friends in social-work school. But when I dropped out and started… working more, we just lost touch.

When Mia is recording, when the camera is away, she is listening. Nadine wants to talk minutes and hours, talk until there’s no way for Mia to leave, talk until the buses have stopped running. One thing she hates about New York — the buses never stop running.
A moment: Mia and Nadine are eating, sitting on the floor. (Can we take a break? Nadine asked. I’m hungry.

Of course, of course, Mia said, but kept shooting.)
Nadine is thinking maybe she should leave the furniture in the other room like that for a while, maybe she should eat all her meals on the floor from now on. Something about it feels like a fresh start. She wants Mia to say nice things about the quiche she made, and when Mia doesn’t, Nadine asks, and the sound of her own voice is soft, too soft. How’s the quiche? Good, Mia says without looking up. Then she nods a few times. What did she expect Mia to say? This quiche has changed my life? And if she said that — if she looked right at Nadine for once and said, Is it possible for a quiche to change someone’s life? Because I think this is the best thing I’ve ever put in my mouth and nothing will be the same after this moment — what would Nadine do?

How old were you when you moved here, Nadine asks, but she forgets the question mark. She sounds like she’s demanding something of Mia, and, expectedly, Mia asks back, Why? No reason, Nadine says, just curious, and Mia says, Let’s talk later?

Later, while Mia is going over her shots from the day, or that’s what it looks like she’s doing, she suddenly says, I was nineteen, and Nadine doesn’t ask, because she knows what question Mia is answering, but still Mia says — somewhat impatiently, too — When I moved here. You asked me earlier. Nadine nods, tries to think quickly what to ask next. You left school over there to come here? she asks. If she allows even a moment of silence, Mia will announce Back to work, in that voice that’s just an octave too low, the voice of relief.

No, Mia says, I left the army to come here, or really came here because I left the army; I needed to get away. Nadine doesn’t understand, and she instinctively tries to hide it. She’s a pro, there’s a thing that she does with her eyebrows — it’s not a nod, which would feel like a lie, and yet it’s always enough, with the men, to make them believe that she got it, that no explanation is needed. Mia stares at Nadine’s eyebrows.

That’s what kids over there do after high school, she says, become soldiers. Nadine feels heat in her face, she knows she is blushing, although she never blushes, hasn’t blushed probably since fourth grade, but she is blushing now because Mia knew that she didn’t understand, knew that an explanation was needed. And inside her embarrassment she senses a kind of thrill, a thrill she never expected, the thrill of being caught in a lie. There’s a brief pause; what words can follow the word “soldiers”?

So all the kids are recruited, Nadine says finally, girls, too? And Mia nods, says, Yup, keeps nodding. After a few seconds she adds, Women do two years, men three. Oh, Nadine says again. She wants to ask Mia what it means that she “left” the army — how can you leave if you’re recruited, did she escape? But she knows she can’t ask that, and yet she can’t think of anything else to ask, although this silence has an edge to it, the recognition in both of them that this conversation is about to end before it really started.

I need to reload the film, Mia says. Would you mind making some tea?
Nadine wants to find the joke.

The first line is: A prostitute and a photographer walk into a bar. The punch line is: Tea. She doesn’t have the rest yet, but still she laughs every time. For a few seconds she can think, What is this thing, it’s absurd, it’s funny. And it is, just then, for a short while. It is funny, and she feels relief in her muscles. She can move her neck without feeling the stiffness.

This happens only once and happens quickly: Nadine gives Mia a massage. Mia is stiff after a long day’s work — Nadine recognizes the stretching of the neck sideways, a thumb searching for pressure points. What comes over Nadine? She doesn’t ask anything. She crosses the room, stands over Mia, who’s sitting on a chair, says Let me help. Does she wait a beat, give Mia a chance to object? Not really. There’s something in Nadine’s fingers that can heal, and when Mia realizes that, feels that, everything may change. So Nadine reaches for her. Mia’s skin is soft, and she smells a bit like detergent, not what Nadine expected, but Nadine can’t focus on that now, only on the knotted bones. She goes deep, could go deeper if Mia let her, but Mia doesn’t relax into her touch, not completely. Mia is quiet. Nadine wants her to moan, is sure she would if she let herself, and she wants to say something, Don’t hold it all in. But she doesn’t. This is borrowed time, she knows, and anything could make it end faster; better not to take risks. Then, for a brief moment: Mia lets go. Her muscles soften in Nadine’s hands, and this sensation makes it hard to remain steady, but she does. She uses her knuckles, rows into Mia, and Mia makes a small sound then, a sigh so low anyone else would have missed it, but Nadine doesn’t, and into this sigh Mia says, You’re good. Does Nadine imagine these words? No, Mia says them, and right after she says them she realizes what she said, her muscles realize what she said. How long does the whole thing last? No more than four or five minutes, probably. Mia gently moves forward, stretches, says Thank you, that was so helpful. Nadine stands there, her hands holding air, looking at Mia’s back.

Everything/nothing happens once again, she is maybe losing her mind probably losing her mind has probably already lost her mind. Otherwise what is this. Maybe it’s simple a feeling is all maybe just a bit different because it’s a woman maybe a different part in her body flutters maybe the beat of the fluttering is different but is that all that is not all. Everything/nothing is how she thinks of it she has no words not even sound. Everything is right there in your hands but it’s like water so nothing is there in your hands in moments it’s gone and you say was it here? It was here it wasn’t here it was here. One moment here it is I am not making it up not imagining and the next moment is upside down all upside down your hands are empty and you think stop stop stop. But the feelings are so strong so fast so quick they do what they want like: lightning thunder thunder lightning lightning lightning.

She practices, out loud, before Mia’s next visit.

So — how did you get out of the army… ?

Do you ever think about living in Israel again?

You know, I’ve been thinking. Maybe if I could ask you some things, if we talked not just about me, this whole thing would feel less strange, more… balanced.

I think it might be good for the project.

So… have you ever been with a woman?

Or, um, even just attracted to a woman?

Do you think it’s possible to be gay for just one person? Or for just a few?

Because, you know, usually I’m not attracted to women, but sometimes I am.

I’m just not attracted to that many people at all, I guess.

So when I am… it’s kind of powerful sometimes.
I think I might be in love with you.
I’ll be gone for a bit, Mia says. I’m going to Israel to shoot. Nadine doesn’t say anything, doesn’t move. This trip was scheduled months ago, Mia says, it’s for another show I’m working on.

Something in Nadine’s body is twitching — it is gentle like a heartbeat and she doesn’t wish to make it stop, only to locate it, only to touch it. She touches the wrist of her right arm, then the left, then her neck in the place where you feel the swallow. She knows this must look strange to Mia, it is strange, but the thing keeps hopping around in her body, or else she has no idea what’s happening. There is a clear sensation, everywhere and nowhere.
You feeling okay? Mia asks. Nadine nods, stops searching though the heartbeat doesn’t stop. Mia is looking for her eyes but Nadine keeps looking away. You know, Mia says, I wanted to thank you. Nadine looks right at her now but keeps her face frozen. This project, the other project, it’s about soldiers in Israel, and I’ve been working on it a long time. It’s been dragging. She pauses now, smiles a smile Nadine has seen before but not often. She is so beautiful. Nadine feels the urge to look away but she knows she can’t, not again, not right now. She doesn’t smile back, and she can see Mia’s confusion clearly, what to do with this new Nadine, where has the eager pleaser gone. But she goes on. Our talk the other day helped me, Mia says. It reminded me why I started this project to begin with — the other project, I mean. You don’t have to keep saying “the other project,” Nadine says. Mia ignores her. It’s so normal in Israel, Mia says, the idea of the military, of everyone being part of that military, a country of soldiers. Eighteen-year-old kids getting M16s, being trained, and no one sees how fucked up it is. It’s, like, “What choice do we have,” “we’re surrounded by enemies,” all that stuff. And for years I’ve been wanting to shout: But can you still see? Necessary or not, can you look at it? Because, well, this is all very personal to me. I’m named after a war, did you know that? My name is the initials, in Hebrew, of the Yom Kippur War. My mother was pregnant with me when my father died, so she named me after the war that took him away. Mia pauses now, looks down. But then… I’m not even sure when, but at some point I stopped seeing it, she says. I mean, I grew up there. It’s all so… familiar. The past few years I’d go and shoot and talk to these soldiers, these kids, and I’d leave every time thinking, What did I want to show again? It was like I forgot. But you — you reminded me. I think it was how shocked you seemed at the idea of mandatory service, Mia says, or maybe it was just talking about it; I don’t often talk about it. So thank you, Mia says, for reminding me that when people hear about it for the first time, they’re disturbed. It’s like I have my eyes back on now.

You’re welcome, Nadine says.

How strange, to hear Mia speak so many words.

It takes some distance from Mia, hours and days spent without her, for Nadine to hear more fully what was said. She’s on the A train home late at night, alone in a fast-moving car, when she understands. Mia was thanking her for her ignorance.

It’s not easy, trying to get rid of a thought like that, and when Nadine tries, the opposite happens, a cramp in her stomach and a new thought, a worse thought, a word: disturbed. That’s what she is to Mia, isn’t it? She’s the soldiers, the thing you see every day but don’t see, the thing you pretend is normal even though it’s sick. The disturbance.

At the end of their last session, Nadine is sitting on her bed, knees to her chest, closing her eyes so as not to hear the clicking. She makes her fingertips remember touching Mia — the back of her neck, her shoulders — while she makes the rest of her imagine how tomorrow will feel.

Nadine’s closed eyes accelerate the clicking; Mia is seeing, it seems, something she has never seen before. And she must be touched, because she is doing what she does when she’s touched — she clicks.

Mia leaves that day like she’s going out for milk. See you later, she says.
Mia’s words on her voice mail months later are garbled. Nadine hears June 5th, hears 6 p.m., hears really, really hope you can make it. Listening to Mia’s voice again, Nadine feels like she’s looking at an old photograph of herself in which she’s wearing clothes she never owned and someone else’s face.

At the gallery, after hours on a Wednesday, Nadine is standing erect looking at herself, and herself is looking right back at her from the wall. The opening was wonderful, I was sad you couldn’t make it, Mia says. And then: Everyone wanted to meet you.

She looks at Mia straight in the eyes then, and there is a feeling deep inside her, the pull of a magnet toward metal. It is hard — physically hard — but she resists the pull. She sees Mia’s need to reach for the camera, to click the moment away.

So… on to the next project? Nadine asks. Not really, Mia says, shakes her head lightly. And then: I’m kind of exhausted. Mia seems to be saying something, and this is the kind of moment that used to get Nadine’s heart beating faster with potential. If only she asked the right thing the right way, if only she managed to open the moment, reveal what’s inside. Well, you’ve been working hard, Nadine says. Mia nods but looks down, says nothing at first, then: I’m never exhausted from hard work. She’s definitely trying to say something. A small voice inside Nadine is whispering, See? It’s always been here, but Nadine tries hard not to listen.

Have you read the reviews? Mia asks. Nadine doesn’t know anything about any reviews. No, she says. Don’t, Mia says, and chuckles, those critics did not go easy on me. Okay then, Nadine says, I won’t. Oh, I’m joking, Mia says, of course you can read them. Nadine resists the urge to take Mia’s hand as she says, These are beautiful, Mia, they’re all beautiful. She feels a bit strange saying this, she doesn’t mean to suggest she herself is beautiful, of course, but Mia is nodding now, closes her eyes, says, I’m very happy to hear you say that. There’s a moment of silence before Mia says, The critics are right, though, that’s the worst part; I’m always reaching for something and not quite getting there. What is Nadine supposed to say to that? Look at you, she wants to say. Dare to look at you, and maybe you’ll get there. But she says nothing.

Outside the gallery they hug, and a car screeches and comes to a full stop for no apparent reason. For a moment they both look at the driver, then Nadine looks at Mia and shrugs, and the car is back on its way. They hug again, because it is easier than saying goodbye, and at the end of that hug Mia grabs Nadine’s shoulders, looks straight into her eyes, says, Thank you. Nadine shakes her head and looks down.

Then there is nothing to do but for Mia to take her hands off Nadine’s shoulders, and when she does there is a sensation between them, a balloon letting go of the air inside it. Nadine wants to stand there with that feeling a bit, but she knows that if she does the next thing that happens will be restlessness, Mia’s restlessness. And she knows this: she needs to leave before the restlessness comes, or restlessness will be the last thing they ever share. Goodbye, then, Nadine says, and Mia says, Bye, and her eyes seem to tear up a bit, but Nadine isn’t sure, it might be from the wind. And on that thought Nadine turns around and walks away, hoping that Mia is standing there looking at her. If she is, she is no doubt noticing the composition — the widening of the street toward the end of the block, the sprawling streetlights and brown skies, Nadine’s back getting smaller — and she is squinting and gently biting her lip, regretting that she doesn’t have her camera.

Searching for the Headless Horseman

Every culture has its monsters: the Slavs have the witch Baba Yaga who flies around forests with a pestle in hand, Amazonian tribes say sea creatures with supernatural powers swim in the river, and the Jews of Prague have the golem, a monster made out of clay and brought to life in the late-16th century to help protect them from anti-Semitic attacks. Of course, people move, cultures expand to different cities, countries, and continents, and the myths twist and grow. The monsters take on characteristics of their new homeland and eventually you go from the golem to Frankenstein’s monster.

In America, our most famous monsters tend to be more recent Hollywood creations who wield instruments of destruction, like Jason with his machete or Leatherface with his chainsaw. There are local myths and legends of Jersey Devils, the Mothman of Point Pleasant, and various UFOs, haunted houses, and regional spirits that go bump in the night, but American evil tends toward psychopathy tinged with otherworldly powers (think Freddy Krueger, a child molester serial killer who is killed but continues to murder through dreams).

Washington Irving, under the pseudonym Geoffrey Crayon, gave America one of its earliest monsters in his 1820 short story “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” Although the Headless Horseman doesn’t show up until the very end, he has nonetheless become a part of our culture. Children know about the Horseman chasing Ichabod Crane on horseback, and the story has been used through the years, most recently in the Fox TV drama, Sleepy Hollow. When you take a ride up to the quaint village of Sleep Hollow in Westchester County — a short trip from New York City — the locals have no problem celebrating their tie to Irving’s famous story. Yet the Horseman, maybe not too surprisingly, is not American in either his own background or the story itself.

The Headless Horseman may have become one of America’s oldest ghosts, but his story was born in Europe and variations of him have long existed in Irish and German folklore. Even in Irving’s story, he is a Hessian soldier whose head is taken clean off during the Revolutionary War, leaving him to rides around at night in search of it. We’ve taken a monster that is foreign in all regards and we’ve kept telling his story for over 200 years.

I took my trip up to Sleepy Hollow on a Sunday morning. Early enough to beat the traffic, I made it there in a shorter amount of time than Google Maps had predicted it would take. I beat the crowds that flock to the area throughout most of October to take the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery tours, or to see the Great Jack O’Lantern Blaze. It could be said that no city in America does Halloween quite like Sleepy Hollow. It’s a place that doesn’t necessarily look like it depends on the Season of the Witch tourist dollars, but it embraces the tag as a famously haunted city nonetheless.

To prepare for my trek, I read Irving’s famous story, collected along with some of his most famous works in a new Penguin Classics edition with a foreword by Irving expert Elizabeth L. Bradley, who supplies some interesting insight into Irving’s infamous villain. Bradley points out that the Horseman “has a touch of kitsch,” which is something that we’ve maybe lost in our contemporary obsession with blood and gore. I was pretty familiar with the story after reading it in high school English, as well as watching not just the 1949 Disney cartoon version narrated by Bing Crosby (my own introduction to the story, by way of a VHS tape rented for me when I was 4-years-old), and a YouTube version of the 1980 made-for-television version starring Jeff Goldblum as Ichabod and football star Dick Butkus as Brahm Bones, but also the episode of Are You Afraid of the Dark? based off the story, the 1999 Tim Burton version with Christopher Walken as the Horseman, and by playing a villager with no lines in my high school’s stage adaptation. I don’t consider myself an expert, but I’ve seen my share of Headless Horsemen.

What I realized as I made my way through the Old Dutch Cemetery, looking at the 18th century tombstones the Horseman was said to tie his horse to at night, was how much the story has evolved over time. There’s hardly any of the kitsch factor Bradley alluded to (far more noticeable in the now-rare Disney cartoon) in the snobby and elitist schoolmaster Ichabod Crane’s reaction to New York bumpkins. They were simple people who could really care less about education, and just wanted to go about their lives in peace. Crane, meanwhile, is fixated on the daughter of a wealthy farmer, which leads to his eventual undoing — whether by malice or exile. Gossip or not, Irving tells us that, “an old farmer, who had been down to New York on a visit several years after,” came back and told everybody that he’d seen the teacher alive and in the flesh. Of course, Irving points out in the last paragraph that, “The old country wives, however, who are the best judges of these matters, maintain to this day, that Ichabod was spirited away by supernatural means.”

There’s a bridge in Sleepy Hollow that’s supposed to be the one Ichabod believed he needed to cross to get away from the horseman, only to find that his hunter can actually get over it after all. The village installed one over a creek that, while not the original, makes it easy to put oneself in the character’s riding boots even today. It’s walking over that bridge where you can not only contemplate Ichabod’s fate, but also wonder if “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” is a story about a German ghost and one particularly famous victim, or if it’s simply a tale of a of brainless jerk playing a prank on the smartypants from Connecticut. Ichabod’s body is never found, and the only other person who actually saw the ghost of the soldier, Brahm Bones, also happens to be chasing after the hand of the same girl as Crane. As he’s making his horse gallop faster through the graveyard, Ichabod Crane is trying to get away from a haunting — either of the ghost or his own inadequacy.

Irving’s vagueness is exactly what makes “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” endure. Irving was smart enough to leave what exactly happened to Ichabod that fateful night unclear, and that is the opposite of contemporary horror, which is so fixated on seeing the deed and its bloody aftermath. With the Headless Horseman, we’re not entirely sure what happened, let alone if there ever was a haunting in the first place. Maybe he was just a lone rider mistaken for a phantom in the dark; but in Irving’s story — one of America’s truly great stories, passed on through time — he’s whatever we want him to be.

Victor LaValle talks monsters, myths, and a Grand Unified Theory of Fear

The Devil in Silver

While listening to Victor LaValle read a short piece on trick-or-treating in Queens, I was transported back to the Halloween nights in Washington Heights when the working class kids from my tenement headed to the building across the street — where the gentrifying middle class families and good candy were — and smashed our fists into the buzzers until someone let us into the building.

Victor LaValle grew up in Queens, New York and is the author of one story collection and three novels. His most recent novel, The Devil in Silver — a horror story set in a New York City mental hospital — was a New York Times Notable Book of 2012. He has been the recipient of numerous awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an American Book Award, and the Key to Southeast Queens. He teaches creative writing in Columbia University’s MFA program.

I asked LaValle about his horror obsessions, what he feared as a kid growing up in the bad old days of New York City, and what he’s going to do when the monsters come.

Adalena Kavanagh: After hearing you read a story about celebrating Halloween night I felt a kinship with you because it sounded like we both grew up in similar New York City neighborhoods. Where did you grow up in Queens? What were your neighborhood bogeymen? I grew up in Washington Heights and didn’t leave until 2009 so I saw the whole arc of the crack epidemic and later gentrification. Growing up in a “rough” neighborhood you’re taught to be careful or street smart and thinking back my bogey men were crack heads, drug dealers, the police and sexual perverts. Though I grew up near crime, in a city known for crime, I’m probably most spooked out in the country where it’s too quiet and nothing is likely to happen. I like to say that when the sun sets, the wind chime becomes the soundtrack to your murder.

What were you scared of when you were a kid? What are you scared of now? How do you think living near crime affects your perception of fear and danger?

Victor LaValle: I grew up in Queens in the late seventies and early eighties. I lived in Jackson Heights and Flushing, neighborhoods that really weren’t too bad or at least didn’t seem bad to me. I think I’d only get perspective on the place, on the city as a whole, when family friends visited from places like Maryland or Virginia. In a way their fear communicated to me the idea that there was anything to fear. Before that I mostly thought of my neighborhoods like, I’m guessing, almost anyone does: home. And the things to deal with were just the things to deal with. I’d totally agree that nothing spooked me more than the idea of the countryside. I read a lot of Stephen King, H. P. Lovecraft, Shirley Jackson and there were all bad advertisements for life outside of cities. All the bad shit happens in the small towns and rural areas. They get otherworldly monsters and demons and whole towns that stone poor girls to death. My biggest childhood fear, really, was just getting beat up by older boys. That’s pure cake comparatively.

All the bad shit happens in the small towns and rural areas. They get otherworldly monsters and demons and whole towns that stone poor girls to death.

I will admit though that at a certain age I became more aware of the idea that New York City, as a whole, was dangerous. I was probably ten or so. But my concerns weren’t really about me they were about my mother. There were two movies I remember seeing that caused my fear. The first was a terrible made-for-TV movie based on the Guardian Angels. The other is this terrifically bad movie called Fighting Back from 1982. It starred Tom Skerritt, it’s just a Death Wish rip-off, but there’s this one scene that I just shouldn’t have scene when I was that age. And it left me afraid the same thing was going to happen to my mother. The whole clip is silly, but the rough part comes about 2:15. It really gave me a shock. This movie took place in Philly but I felt it was a fine picture of the anxiety running through the “gritty” New York of the era, too.

AK: At first I thought that I wasn’t well versed in horror, but that’s mostly because I don’t like the gory type of stuff like the Saw movies. But I think at the heart of it, the monsters in horror or the supernatural are symbolic manifestations of our psychological fears. What do you think horror is? What draws you to horror?

VL: There’s a certain definition for the word monster that I love. It derives, in part from the Latin word monstrum, and can be translated as an omen or a message from the divine. To me this comes closest to explaining the appeal of horror, at least for me. All the best horror, the best monsters, terrify in their embodied state but also in the idea of what they represent. They have to do both. That’s why, for me, something like a dragon doesn’t qualify as horror. It’s fantasy not because it’s unreal (so are Dracula and Jason Voorhees), but the dragon doesn’t speak to any kind of idea or wisdom that causes me to tremble. The dragon doesn’t seem like a message from the divine, it’s just a really big lizard. (Though of course Godzilla does seem like a message, but of course he’s a dinosaur not a dragon.)

In a way I’d say our psychological fears then are actually manifestations of far older wisdom and not the other way round, from long before the idea of the human psyche became codified. I like the idea that part of what terrifies us is the feeling that there’s a world far past what our own minds can come up with. Certainly there are fears we generate but even these, potentially, can be tamed. More frightening is the sense that there are things we can’t tame, can’t even reckon with, and so we tell horror stories to try and reconcile this fact.

AK: I’m most drawn to psychological suspense and the supernatural. I love Shirley Jackson and one of her scariest stories is “The Summer People.” She’s a master of suspense but she might not be the first person that comes to mind because she grounds her suspense in the horrors of the domestic. What are your favorite horror movies, and books? Why?

The Thing film poster

VL: My favorite horror movie — both because of its quality and because of when I first saw it — is without a doubt John Carpenter’s The Thing. I have a vague recollection that I saw it on TV but I’m completely sure that’s wrong. The gore alone would’ve made that impossible in the 1983 or 1984. But I do remember watching it on a TV which must mean someone had it on VHS. Most likely this was one my childhood best friends, Glenn Roth, whose father was a source of horror movies, HBO semi-porn flicks, and actual porn flicks. (He didn’t know he was our source, but that’s beside the point.) Here’s a clip of John Carpenter talking about how and why he made his version and why his monster is simply one of the best ever brought to the screen. (Considering that almost all movie monsters suck terribly once you see them.)

I love this movie for many reasons, but most of all the “moral” of the story was, in the end, about self-sacrifice. At least that’s how I saw it, even as a 13 year old kid. By the end the film becomes a kind of debate about the drive to live no matter the cost versus the willingness to die so that others might live. I’d really never seen a movie tackle this issue and I haven’t seen many do it since. The fact that it did so while showing a man’s head crawl away from its body on legs that sprouted from its scalp was really just gravy.

That said, and on entirely different chord, I’d count Robert Altman’s 3 Women as another brilliant horror movie. Haunting and dream-like, this movie just straight up baffled me the first time I watched it. It still does, but I’ve watched a half-dozen times since.

AK: I’m obsessed with the psychologically unreliable narrator or narrative (think of all the characters in Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House) and the supernatural, particularly Chinese ghosts and spirits, Daoist shaman, and Daoist exorcisms. What are some of your horror related obsessions?

VL: Being raised a Christian, I think my initial feelings/reaction to the supernatural were undoubtedly filtered through that lens. Good and evil, the Devil versus the Lord. But in a way this filter demanded that I not actually be all that conversant with the Bible in order to think of it that way. To actually read that book is to confront the confounding, conflicted nature of both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament and to marvel at the ways that book is more of anthology of many old faiths from the Middle East, incorporating the old gods and demons in order to assimilate them. Once I began to understand my tradition in this light it was easier to sort of leaf backward to Babylonian myths, which were no doubt once Babylonian religious doctrine, Sumerian and all the rest.

And yet it’s not, strictly speaking, my tradition. What I mean is that my Ugandan mother (and even more so my grandmother) were devout Episcopalians because the British ruled Uganda and brought their faith with them. Unlike many other parts of the world, Ugandans didn’t hide their old faiths inside the new one. Most of them cast off the old ways and took on the new and the nation is still overwhelmingly Christian. Weirdly, it’s that absence before Christianity that also interests me. Like a phantom limb of faith. As a result I find myself interested in the idea that there’s a face behind the face, a god behind the gods. Maybe this is just my way of saying that gods or demons or ghosts or werewolves all seem like versions of a newer faith that’s taken place of the older one and that older one, in a sense, is defined by its emptiness. Is this getting foolishly esoteric? I like to think there’s a Master Key to reality, a Grand Unified Theory of Fear. At least some of my reading, and a lot of my writing, is an attempt to track it down. I can’t think of a better way to segue into a Black Sabbath song than that.

AK: “More frightening is the sense that there are things we can’t tame, can’t even reckon with, and so we tell horror stories to try and reconcile this fact.” How does writing horror relieve us of our fears or provide comfort? Is it like the vaccine that’s made from the thing that will make you sick?

VL: I feel like it’s just a pressure release valve, one that not everybody needs or even welcomes. The same way, I guess, that not everyone finds roller coaster rides thrilling. The old, but I think true, take on horror is that it lets us feel the fear without risking true pain. The part I find most interesting is that so many of us need to feel that fear. I think it’s because we understand, on various levels, that existence can be tremendously difficult and downright horrifying. Literature and film and art that acknowledges this fact confirms the feeling and that confirmation alone can be a gift.

AK: In horror movies there’s always a moment where you’re shouting at the screen, “Get out! Get out!” I’d like to think that I’d stay and fight, but I’d probably only do so if the monster, demon, or whatever was about to get my mom, sister, or niece. Anyone else, I’d probably run or just lie down and die. What are you going to do when the monsters come? Are you going to fight? Why?

VL: One of the things I hate most about the modern horror film/television is that neither seems to take into account the sophistication of its audience. I recently reread a story by the wonderfully named Oliver Onions called “The Beckoning Fair One.” (This is a link to an ebook download of the collection from which it comes Widdershins) This story has every now hokey horror movie cliche, even the cat that jumps out from nowhere for a cheap thrill. The story was published in 1911! In other words most horror movie makers haven’t updated their shit in over one hundred years.

In other words most horror movie makers haven’t updated their shit in over one hundred years.

I bring all that up to say that I think it’s an artificial device to have the people stay and fight. Nobody with an ounce of sense would. People get angry when people shout “Get out!” at the screen, but they are doing this because they are protesting an insult to the audience’s collective intelligence. I’d say it was a courageous move to high tail it out of there because if you were faced with a monster or demon your entire understanding of the known universe would have to suddenly be thrown into question! When the monsters come I’m going to open my third eye and obliterate them with my ultra-wisdom beam because if they’re real then my magic will be too.

AK: There’s this idea that horror movies are actually meant to maintain the status quo. That this is why women and people of color suffer the most in horror films. What do you think?

VL: Horror and porn both work to reveal the hidden urges of a society. This isn’t the fault of the genres though, it’s the fault of the people who create them. One of the reasons I’d love to see more women and people of color making films is just so we’d get a much broader spectrum of bizarre, and deeply biased, perspectives on screen. The only thing I really object to is blatant stupidity. Take, for instance, this opening scene from Jurassic Park.

A no doubt multi-billion dollar enterprise has built an island paradise/dinosaur park (not to mention brought dinosaurs back to life) but they haven’t created a cage with a door that can rise automatically? And then, amongst the all-white team helping to get the raptor loaded, the guy who must raise the gate manually is black? Get the fuck out of here. Again, this isn’t the fault of the genre (science fiction) this is the fault of a series of guys — from the director on down — who thought nothing of not only the scene but the life sacrificed. That’s a bigger problem than a genre.

AK: “Once I began to understand my tradition in this light it was easier to sort of leaf backward to Babylonian myths, which were no doubt once Babylonian religious doctrine, Sumerian and all the rest.”

It’s so interesting to me to think about mythology because the way we study myths today we look at them as these superstitious stories but you’re probably right in that at one time they were religious doctrine. Why do you think horror writers or movie makers reach back to archaic religious practice to hang their stories on?

VL: There needs to be a certain amount of distance from a practice or a belief before it can be turned into entertainment. The Da Vinci Code was an event, in part, because it turned a fairly recent and world-dominating faith into mere fodder for a romp. Some people protested I guess, but not enough to suggest it was “too soon.” But the farther back you go the more readers and viewers are willing to buy into all kinds of supernatural stuff they’d scoff at if based on things now.

Many of the Gothic novels of the 18th century are actually set hundreds of years earlier. This was because those authors also knew that human beings are more willing to enjoy a book about the superstitious past rather than the superstitious present, especially if our modern day superstitions have yet be disproven, even the scientific ones. (String theory, I’m looking at you.)

human beings are more willing to enjoy a book about the superstitious past rather than the superstitious present, especially if our modern day superstitions have yet be disproven, even the scientific ones. (String theory, I’m looking at you.)

AK: “Weirdly, it’s that absence before Christianity that also interests me. Like a phantom limb of faith As a result I find myself interested in the idea that there’s a face behind the face, a god behind the gods. Maybe this is just my way of saying that gods or demons or ghosts or werewolves all seem like versions of a newer faith that’s taken place of the older one and that older one, in a sense, is defined by its emptiness.”

Monsters are scary until you kill them, but what seems scarier is that emptiness you talk about here. What are some of your favorite examples of the faceless monster, or the scary thing that cannot be seen or named?

VL: The greatest “emptiness” monster from my childhood comes straight out of The NeverEnding Story. The Nothing!

“Who are you really?”

“I am the servant of the power behind the Nothing.”

Gmork

That’s great horror. My only issue with the Gmork’s explanation is that he labels the Nothing as despair, but this strikes me as still too optimistic. There is a God and it’s not there. To me that’s terrifying to contemplate. By comparison, even H. P. Lovecraft’s Old Gods mythos is too optimistic. After all Cthulu is there in a coma (or something) at the bottom of the South Pacific. Even Lovecraft still wanted to be able to point, in some general direction, at something.

AK: What are some examples of a Grand Unified Theory of Fear? Or if not that, what are the elements you’re looking for in a great horror story or movie?

VL: I do like the stuff that makes you come away thinking a bit. Whether you’re thinking about what happened in the story or about its grander implications doesn’t really matter to me but I don’t want to be entertained alone. Believe me, entertainment is hard enough but the best stuff offers more. Even if I disagree with the idea or the philosophy at the heart of book or a movie I want to feel as if there was a philosophy in play. Be interesting, I suppose that’s the only thing I’m asking. And that’s the case for book, movies, music, and people.

REVIEW: Sherwood Nation by Benjamin Parzybok

At the onset of Benjamin Parzybok’s Sherwood Nation, the entire West Coast is suffering from a severe drought. Chaos reigns: Southern California is largely abandoned and gangs of dehydrated desperados rule the area between every city-state. Massive migrations east, where conditions are marginally better, have caused the US government to blockade the Rockies, sending only basic humanitarian aid further west.

Portland, Oregon, is becoming a desert. Mountains once capped in snow year-round have become brown heaps on the horizon. Summer stretches long into what were once winter months. Rivers have dried and the greenery is gone. Once towering, moss-covered trees are clumps of fire prone bones reaching into the sky. Water rations are down to one unit gallon a day. Every industry has dwindled. Youth unemployment is in the ninetieth percentile. The mayor, whose tenuous control is in constant jeopardy with his own unpopularity, City Council and the National Guard, proposes building a near-hundred-mile trench to the Pacific.

Amidst this dying city is Renee, a 20-something part-time student and out-of-work barista with a mind for water activism. When her first heist goes wrong — the intention is to steal a truck of black market water heading to the wealthy West Hills — Renee finds herself handing out unmarked gallons in the fog of shock. It is a selfless act in grave times caught on tape and aired by the news. Instantly a heroine and criminal at once, she is dubbed Maid Marian.

A fugitive with her face broadcast citywide, Renee flees to the poor and largely lawless neighborhoods of the Northeast. Here, the persona of Maid Marian takes over. She realizes that she has the means to make a change. Supporters first trickle and then pour in. Eventually, under her leadership, a select bloc of the city cedes, forming the tiny, community-run nation of Sherwood.

The country of Sherwood achieves idealistic goals. People bolstered on hope are happy to perform mandatory volunteerism: clearing the debris from many aggravated riots, banding together to create safe streets, saving tax rations to build small farms and reopen schools. But Renee, as Maid Marian, finds herself a dictator. It interferes with her love life and causes constant questioning of her sense of self. The mayor of Portland, desperate to regain control, is spiteful of her bike-riding Rangers, celebrity status and success, and the National Guard plays both sides.

Though the book is action-driven, Maid Marian’s merry band is equally compelling. Characters remain true to themselves as the heat of summer claims lives and sanity, but, as the plot requires, do not remain completely static. Her boyfriend, Zach, the brain, begins as one of the few employed, a creative at the ad agency in charge of the mayor’s campaign. Bea, Renee’s roommate and loyal friend, acts as Little John. Jamal, son of Gregor, a drug lord and longstanding neighborhood kingpin, is her leading soldier. Nevel, Zach’s coworker, digs a tunnel beneath his house to no apparent purpose beside the vague fantasy of saving his family from the plight of end-times within its subterranean walls. And Christopher is the mayor’s partner, backbone and confidante.

Rich with haunting descriptions of a place once wild and now starved and poignant human dilemmas of basic survival, Sherwood Nation is a manifesto on how communities can work together to improve the greater good that does not shy from, sugarcoat, or exaggerate the corruptions of power and outcomes of rebellion. For a political treatise set in an imaginable apocalypse, Parzybok’s second novel is refreshing in its lack of heavy-handed allegory or pedantic utopian preaching. Maid Marian reaches beyond herself to create peace and solidarity in hopeless times. Threatened, others desire her demise and position. It is a clever, if cautionary tale.

Sherwood Nation

by Benjamin Parzybok

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MEDIA FRANKENSTEIN: Halloween Special

A Monstrous Primer: That horror is often perceived as a boys’ club, most fans of the genre would never deny. Horror fiction is home to more Misters than Misses, and those who are active are underexposed. H.P. Lovecraft, E.A. Poe, Stephen King, Clive Barker, Peter Straub and the gang are trotted out as horror’s vanguards, Edith Wharton, Ann Radcliffe and Yoko Ogawa affectionately claimed as dabblers. Not unduly long ago the gendering was not so subtle; Flannery O’Connor’s tales of “mystery and misery and horror” in the South were disparaged by critics as “ highly unladylike,” O’Connor herself for “[slamming] down direct sentence after direct sentence of growing outrage…” As much to say: a woman shouldn’t. The Bram Stoker Awards, selected and presented by the Horror Writer’s Association since 1988, go overwhelmingly to men (the Shirley Jackson Awards, “established for outstanding achievement in the literature of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic,” boasts a more diverse roster.) Such privileging extends to film. Among 26 horror auteurs who were chosen to helm an hour-long episode of Showtime’s 2005 anthology series Masters of Horror not one — not one! — was a female director. Ditto among the three bigwigs summarily crowned as the genre’s elite — Tobe Hooper, Wes Craven and John Carpenter, with nary a mention of Jennifer Lynch, Claire Denis or Mary Lambert. Editorial titan Ellen Datlow says it best in her prelude to Nightmare Magazine’s “Women Destroy Horror!” issue: “For almost fifty years, hundreds of stories by women in the early years of horror, and their authors, were mostly forgotten. “

In dual honor of Halloween and #ReadWomen2014, Electric Literature’s “Media Frankenstein” column is hereby recommending 5 sublimely horrific media pairings to take with you into the week leading up to October 31st in ascending order off freakiness, all 10 (a combination of literature and film) directed or written by women. In the interest of keeping things listicle-like, the music limb has been lopped off.

1ST Creature

TOP HALF: Near Dark dir. Kathryn Bigelow (1987)

Near Dark

Near Dark is a Kathryn Bigelow film and it shows. Probably the only “hillbilly vampire road western” in existence, Bigelow’s movie is gorgeously shot, not least when it comes to the graphic bloodletting. From the death-by-spur scene in the honky-tonk bar to the hotel shootout with the cops, the action is the centerpiece, as twanging with tension and expertly staged as anything from Bigelow (Point Break, The Hurt Locker, Zero Dark Thirty). The plot is elegant and spare. Near Dark’s bloodthirsty undead — a nomadic family unit that calls to mind the members of an 80’s death-rock outfit (think Bauhaus or Christian Death) and that showcases performances from character-actor greats such as Lance Henricksen, Jenette Goldstein and Bill Paxton — roam the dust-blown highways and lonely truck stops of the rural Midwest, making snacks of mortal souls. They come upon Caleb (Adrian Pasdar), a farm-boy who falls in love with one of their minion (Jenny Wright) and whom they subsequently seek to induct into the gang, teaching him their vampire ways; although the word itself (“vampire”) remains unuttered start to finish, a subtle technique of Bigelow’s that estranges the story from bloodsucker tropes, making the mythos seem urgently scary. Yet the movie is more than just cold atmospherics; it also has a beating heart in the plight of the lovers (Wright and Pasdar), not to mention the plights of the other vampires except, maybe, for Paxton’s Severen, who he channels with shrill homicidal aplomb. The role is a companion piece to hysterical milquetoast Private Hudson, who Paxton played in Aliens two years before, a film that boasts Goldstein and Henriksen, too. (Bigelow and Cameron were married at the time, which people frustratingly like to bring up to explain why the former has gotten so famous).

If the supporting cast of Aliens isn’t enough to make you watch Near Dark right now, then look to the film’s grime-washed chiaroscuro, its aura of seedy roadhouses at night, its aimlessness and nihilism, and formal innovations sundry. Bigelow redefined vampire horror in the same way that Danny Boyle did it with zombies (28 Days Later) but nearly two decades before.

BOTTOM HALF: The Orange Eats Creeps by Grace Krilanovich (2010)

Orange Eats Creeps book

I’m not the first writer to reference Bigelow’s Near Dark and Grace Krilanovich’s debut novel The Orange Eats Creeps in the same grave-corrupted breath; critic Tobias Carroll used the crossover as a touching off-point in his 2010 review. Nor am I the first to be taken aback at the aggressive independence of the novel from the film, in spite of what strike me as purposeful nods. The Orange Eats Creeps bills its crusty-punk denizens of the Pacific Northwest as “hobo vampire junkies” hopped up on “crank, cough syrup and blood.” The novel itself reads like a freaky gene-splice of Charles Burns’ Black Hole and Lynda Barry’s Cruddy by way of 90’s hardcore zine culture, with a splash of Blake Butler and Poppy Z. Brite. Its nameless narrator, a vague teenage girl, describes her deathless cohort thus: “We’re blood-hungry teenagers; our rage knows no bounds and coagulates the pulse of our victims on contact… I can’t remember being a child, maybe I never was one. But I’m sure I’ll never die; I get older, my body stays the same. My spine breaks and then gets back together. I have the Hepatitis, I give it to everyone, but it never will actually get me. Our kind doesn’t die from anything, all we do is die all the time.” Just like in Bigelow’s film, the narrator and her band of “immoral shitheads” stalk the lonelier quadrants of the American West with nihilistic heedlessness, raiding drugstores, fornicating in public. Just like Near Dark, The Orange Eats Creeps revels in the flickering menace of quintessentially American roadside spaces after the circuits have gone on the fritz and normal folk are safe in bed. “Safeway at sunrise…” Krilanovich writes. “We storm through the doors… What would happen if you harnessed the sexual energy of hobo junkie teens?” Yet where Near Dark is about actual, if de-familiarized vampires, Krilanovich’s vampires are ambiguously realized; it isn’t altogether clear if they’re supernatural figures who live off of blood or if they’re just so whacked on drugs that their impressions of existence are de facto supernatural. In The Orange Eats Creeps there are no star-crossed lovers, just the reeking trash-scape of the self without end. What both of these bracing portrayals agree on: vampires are existential beings. They tell us as much about life beyond death as they do about life when the heart has stopped beating.

2nd Creature

TOP HALF: The Bloody Chamber: And Other Stories by Angela Carter (1979)

The Bloody Chamber

Angela Carter has always struck me as one of the most criminally underrated horror writers — writers, period! — of the 20th century. That said if you have heard of Carter, it’s probably in connection with her story collection The Bloody Chamber, a company of fairy tale re-imaginings as feminist as they are phantasmal. And yet, when she wrote The Bloody Chamber, Carter never intended for her stories to be read as retellings. In Carter’s own words: “My intention was not to do ‘versions’ or, as the American edition of the book said, horribly, ‘adult’ fairy tales, but to extract the latent content from the traditional stories and to use it as the beginnings of new stories.” These phantasmagoric allegories, then, were baroque, and loaded up with sex and murder.Director Neil Jordan (Interview with the Vampire, Byzantium) adapted one of the stories from The Bloody Chamber (“The Company of Wolves”) starring Angela Lansbury and Stephen Rea in 1984; Carter co-wrote the screenplay. In that story, a re-imagining of the Little Red Riding Hood fable, the wolf — here a Huntsman turned werewolf and described by Carter in the overture as a “grey [member] of a congregation of nightmare” — kills the apron-clad, bible-toting Granny and lies in wait for Little Red. In the original story, Little Red Riding Hood gets eaten herself and must rely on the Huntsman to perform a life-saving autopsy on her devourer to save her and her Granny; in Carter, Little Red seduces the werewolf, engaging in “a savage marriage ceremony” with him to the howling of lupine familiars surrounding Granny’s cabin. The anti-myth is clear enough; Little Red has come into her sexual nature, by her own agency, not a moment too early. Carter’s gory re-appropriation of female sexuality as a supernatural force in The Bloody Chamber would go on to spawn other reinventions of popular myths and genres into the late 20th and early 21st centuries — for example, the excellent werewolf film Ginger Snaps (2000), written by Karen Walton, in which female puberty is likened to lycanthropy, and the immeasurably less excellent Twilight, in which Bela, a descendant of Carter’s Little Red, takes the feminist movement a century backwards. Without Angela Carter, we’d have no Brian Evenson, no Aimee Bender and no Kelly Link; we’d certainly have no Kate Bernheimer. Elsewhere in The Bloody Chamber, Beauty brings about a transfiguration in the Beast (“When her lips touched the meathook claws, they drew back into their pads…”), and Sleeping Beauty is refashioned as queen of the vampires, “the last bud of the poison tree that sprang from the loins of Vlad the Impaler who picnicked on corpses in the forests of Transylvania,” her Prince Charming a blithe young fool on R&R from WWI. In the latter (“The Lady of the House of Love”), Carter writes: “The Countess stood behind a low table… With her stark white face, her lovely death’s head surrounded by long dark hair that fell down straight as if it were soaking wet, she looked like a shipwrecked bride. Her huge dark eyes almost broke his heart with their waiflike, lost look; yet he was disturbed, almost repelled, by her extraordinarily fleshy mouth, a mouth with wide, full, prominent lips of a vibrant purplish-crimson, a morbid mouth. Even — but he put the thought away from him immediately — a whore’s mouth. She shivered all the time, a starveling chill, a malarial agitation of the bones. He thought she must be only sixteen or seventeen years old, no more, with the hectic, unhealthy beauty of a consumptive. She was the chatelaine of all this decay.” Here is Carter to a T. There’s the post-modern privilege of insight conveyed through Gothic, 19th-century prose, the warm trickle-down of the faintly profane, the hint of screwball comedy, the hyper-real imagery, bursting with fluids. Carter made fairy tales scary again by making them stories we haven’t been told.

BOTTOM HALF: Ravenous dir. Antonia Bird (1999)

Ravenous

Antonia Bird’s Ravenous engages in a similar reconsideration of popular folklore, this time in the period setting of a remote California military outpost just after the Mexican-American War. Enter Boyd, played with spooky stoicism by Guy Pearce, a Lieutenant in the Army of the Republic of Texas who has been banished to Fort Spencer at the foot of the Sierra Nevadas for cowardice in the line of battle (a discharge that we learn, ere long, is far more nuanced than it seems). Amidst the gallery of misfits that Boyd encounters when he gets there, including an opium-addled private (David Arquette) and a schlubby colonel (pre-kiddie-porn-scandal Jeffrey Jones), comes another visitor to the Fort, the feral, malnourished Colqhoun (Robert Carlyle) — pronounced “Calhoun” — who regales the company with a hideous tale of wagon trains lost and survival gone savage. Robert Carlyle is magnetic; he and Bird have worked together in the past, and it shows. Carlyle exudes a stately menace that vows to come flying apart any second, recalling his turn as soccer hooligan Begbie in 1996’s Trainspotting; in Ravenous, he’s the perfectfoil for Guy Pearce’s more understated Lieutenant Boyd (in what film, I ask you, is Guy pierce not awesome?!). When things go south, they really do. The myth is question is Wendigo, a flesh-addicted man-beast of Algonquian derivation, which here manifests as a virus of sorts, and travels among the ranks of men, pitting them against each other. It’s this reinvention of popular myth that renders Bird’s film a companion to Carter — not to mention its wryness, its screwball bloodletting, its archetypal characters in moral upheaval. But where Carter’s collection explores femininity, Bird’s movie does the same for men — their ready grasp of evil, sure, but also their humanity. The movie had a mixed reception, probably because it’s extremely bizarre. It’s not quite a comedy, not quite a western and not quite a straight-ahead horror film, either; a blurred quality that could come off as tone-deaf. The soundtrack is a co-production between classical composer Michael Nyman and Blur-front-man Damon Albarn. The banjo, concertina and chorus of strings that usher Boyd onto the grounds of Fort Spencer are distinctly at odds with the period setting, the pastoral landscape, the horrors to come (the vibe is not dissimilar from Johnny Greenwood’s soundtrack to There Will Be Blood). Quirks infuse the script as well, such as when Colqhoun glibly quotes Benjamin Franklin at Boyd, “Eat to live. Don’t live to eat,” or when Jones’ Colonel Hart confesses: “It’s lonely being a cannibal. Tough making friends.” The colonel’s lament is not lost on the viewer. Ravenous is, at its core, a sad movie, more about the redemption of Lieutenant Boyd than Wendigo-fever or Calqhoun’s bloody crimes, and the ending delivers a punch to the heart. As much of a hybrid as Ravenous is, The Bloody Chamber, too, tricked readers, who were broadly uncertain how they should digest it — how its potent admixtures should cause them to feel. And that is the thing about legends, I guess: a good one always lives or dies on the strength of becoming a legend all over.

3rd Creature

TOP HALF: Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn (2007)

Gillian Flynn, Sharp Objects

Gone Girl was good, but Sharp Objects is better. Badly if stylishly misunderstood by Mary Gaitskill in her Bookforum takedown, Gillian Flynn has done for families what H.P. Lovecraft did for space; the menace comes not from the galaxy’s reaches but rather from inside the home. Home is where the heart is, sure, but only once mommy or daddy or hubby has cut it, still beating, from out of your chest. Home is also Missouri, when you’re reading Flynn, in this case the fictional town of Wind Gap, where reporter Camille, who grew up there, returns to investigate the murders of two local girls. The girls have been strangled, their teeth taken out; one of the girls, I’ve had trouble forgetting, is stuffed in the crawlspace dividing two buildings. Sharp Objects, as with other Flynn, is intensely, disturbingly violent, yet not; there are no murder-scenes and no Hostel-style torture, but violence, nonetheless, is there, like blood blooming up through a cocktail napkin. Case in point with Camille, the book’s anti-hero, a term the author has made sure can be liberally placed onto women as well (Walter White and Don Draper both pale to Camille). Fresh from the psych ward, Camille is a mess — she’s got some urgent mommy issues (Southern Gothic belle, Adora); her sister died when she was young and she hasn’t exactly had what you’d call closure; her living half-sister she’s deeply estranged from (the over-developed and uncanny Amma); while the woman herself is a certified cutter, her body a map of her failures and ills — “Whore” on her ankle, “Nasty” on her kneecap, “Girl” on the space above her heart. You know what someone like this needs? An extended return to the site of her trauma, a Victorian mansion with all of the trappings and Flynn isn’t scared to deliver her there so we can watch her world implode. Genre-wise, Sharp Objects is a mixture of Southern Gothic whodunit (think: The Little Friend by Donna Tartt), the family saga of psychological unease (think: We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson) and the serial killer thriller (think: Red Dragon by Thomas Harris). Stephen King blurbed it: “An admirably nasty piece of work…” And though it holds plenty of gruesome surprises — more murders uncovered, both present and past, a gangbang in a slaughterhouse — the novel’s true horror comes not from its filth but the filth that its players inflict on each other, the grim psychological scarring and torture. In many ways, this wouldn’t work were Flynn’s abusers not so real: Adora, the dark queen of bless-your-heart-manners “like a girl’s very best doll, the kind you don’t play with;” step-father Alan, “the opposite of moist,” reading equestrian books in the parlor; Amma, the preening and virginal whore, who Camille feels as much of a need to impress as recoil from in horror and run for the hills. Sharp Objects isn’t existential; you do find out who killed the girls, which fulfills the novel’s promise of a stomach-churning mystery. That pleasure, however, is nothing but plot. Camille’s demons, the people who reared and destroyed her, commit and recommit their crimes. Flynn’s view of the species is as bleak as Lovecraft’s, the signal difference being this: Flynn’s malign intelligences aren’t dressed up as humans and they’re not going to whisk you away to their planet. They are human beings — they’re your parents, your siblings. Relax: they’re here to take you home.

BOTTOM HALF: Surveillance dir. Jennifer Lynch (2008)

We’re all so hot on David Lynch (especially now with the Twin Peaks revival) , but nobody talks about Jennifer, really. That’s probably because she’s a far more transgressive and far less pretentious filmmaker than her father. Where David Lynch defaults to gleeful illogic and robo-tripping tracking shots, Jennifer Lynch maintains control, doling out tension by hot, bloody spoonfuls. Nowhere is this more apparent than in 2008’s horror-thriller Surveillance, for which Jennifer Lynch would become the first woman to receive the New York City Horror Film Festival’s Best Director award the year the movie was released. And none too soon for her career after the ruin of Boxing Helena (1993) — Lynch made her first movie at only 19 — about a wunderkind surgeon (Julian Sands) who turns the object of his affection (Sherilyn Fenn) into a quadruple amputee to prevent her from leaving him. The film wasn’t only hacked up by reviewers; the National Organization of Women said of it: “Nothing has come out in the past two years that reaches this level of misogyny. If Jennifer Lynch thinks this is what love is all about, I sincerely hope no one ever falls in love with her.’’ Some reviewers, however, had warmer opinions — of all reviewers, Janet Maslin, who wrote: “Ultimately, Ms. Lynch has nowhere to take her erotic parable except to a dead end, but she makes the unfolding of the story a spooky, engrossing process. There’s a lot more emotion to Ms. Lynch’s work than there is to her father’s… ‘Boxing Helena,’ while not the work of a Girl Scout, could also not be mistaken for a film made by a man.” So you can see why 15 years elapsed before she tried again, this time with a tale of two serial killers on a brutal rampage across rural Nebraska. The killers are pursued by Feds (Bill Pullman and Julia Ormond), who are keen to unravel their most recent killing through the shaky accounts of that killing’s survivors — a cop, a girl, a tweaker woman. How the film gets its title? The video feed that shows the survivors recalling their trauma, which Pullman and Ormond are watching off-stage in their government suits with an eerie detachment. Much like Flynn’s Sharp Objects, Surveillance also borrows heavily from the trope-cache of the serial killer thriller, albeit in a different setting — Surveillance pastoral, Sharp Objects domestic. The former’s a whodunit, too. Lynch’s villains, thrill-killers in burn-victim masks, are not who you don’t think they are. The violence they wreak at the start of the film is queasy-making and compelling while the origins of it — the trauma that drives it — are hidden by the killers’ masks. Sharp Objects, conversely, showcases the trauma, the violence born out of that trauma suppressed. Of Surveillance’s killers and their masks director Lynch had this to say: “People who hurt people more often than not have been hurt themselves… [The masks that the killers wear] sort of represented the monsters that hurt each of these characters when they were younger… I wanted to have [the masks] be something distorted and [look] as though two people might have applied [them] to each other in an erotic and lost state.” The pessimistic verdict of Sharp Objects and Surveillance:violence is our natural state,as foreordained as your next breath.

4th Creature

TOP HALF: American Psycho dir. Mary Harron (2000)

American Psycho

There’s a special schadenfreude in pointing out just how much better Mary Harron’s adaptation of Brett Easton Ellis’ novel is than the source material, primarily because of how much it would likely piss him off. Where Easton Ellis’ 1991 book is a paean to literary excess — too violent, too graphic, too long, too much — Harron’s adaptation of the life of Patrick Bateman, stock-trader by day, mass-killer by night, from a screenplay co-written by Harron herself and Guinevere Turner (who acts in the film) is a masterpiece of subtlety and narrative restraint. Take this stellar early scene: Bateman, played by Christian Bale with a faintly bewildered barely-thereness, takes a turn of his gorgeous Manhattan apartment while narrating in voice-over: “I believe in taking care of myself, and a balanced diet, and a rigorous exercise routine. In the morning, if my face is a little puffy, I’ll put on an icepack while doing my stomach crunches…” Follows then a scene of Bateman’s backside in the shower, the water streaming off of him as he soaps up his gluts and his shimmering flanks, hinting at the female gaze in a story that’s routinely horrid to women. “Then I apply an herb-mint facial mask,” Bateman tells us, “which I leave on for ten minutes while I prepare the rest of my routine. I always use an after-shave lotion with little or no alcohol because alcohol dries your face out and makes you look older…” And so do the cosmetic exertions continue until, finally, wiping stream from the mirror, Bale removes the gel-mask slowly. “There is an idea of a Patrick Bateman, some kind of abstraction, but there is no real me, only an entity, something illusory. And though I can hide my cold gaze and you can shake my hand and feel flesh gripping yours and maybe you can even sense our lifestyle are probably comparable, I simply am not there.” This scene sets the tone for the rest of the film as Bateman’s mask of sanity progressively slips. When Bateman kills a finance rival (Jared Leto) in an axe-murder scene that is loud-out-loud funny, his numerous blood-crimes begin to catch up in the form of a poker-faced private detective (Willem Dafoe). But Bateman can’t control himself. As he confesses to his fiance (Reese Witherspoon) during a lunch-date whose objective reality Harron later calls into question: “My need to engage in homicidal behavior on a massive scale cannot be corrected but I have no other way to fulfill my needs.” Those “needs” that Bateman talks about aren’t limited to those he hates. He kills homeless men, doormen, policemen and women — a great many women, we’re led to believe, many of whom he abuses pre-mortem. Herein lies a subtle yet crucial distinction that recommends the movie in relation to the book: while Bateman’s sex-crimes in the novel are such that they part with critique of misogynist systems and enter the realm of those systems themselves — he feeds his fiancé a urinal cake, he funnels a rat up a woman’s vagina — Mary Harron’s femicides are subtler and more frightening. Horror 101? Perhaps. And yet you can’t deny the chops of a scene in which Bateman abuses two call girls, largely because you don’t see the abuse, just the shaken call-girls as they leave his apartment; the way one of them rips down the money he offers on her way out the door with an obvious limp is worse than any torture scene that Easton Ellis slavered over. The same could be said for a subsequent scene, which is probably the movie’s most graphically violent: running naked with a chainsaw and covered in blood, Bateman chases a girl down a dark hallway, howling. It’s a pointed contrast to that first naked scene where Bateman does crunches, laves off in the shower, in perfect proportion, in perfect control, an object of the female gaze. Here, he’s stripped of everything but what drives him to hunt and make meat of his quarry. She lands a kick in self-defense. “Not the face,” he screams. “Not the fucking face you piece of bitch trash!” Harron succeeds in American Psycho where many men have tried and failed: to reckon with misogyny without voyeurism; not to preach or indict but to show us: this is. And you’re a person, too. So, feel.

BOTTOM HALF: Tampa by Alissa Nutting (2013)

Tampa, Alissa Nutting

Alissa Nutting’s novel Tampa fulfills the promise of Harron’s film by letting the female gaze run amuck in a woman akin to Patrick Batemen. Yet the book is devoid of ra-ra vindication; Nutting’s portrait is vivid and highly disturbing. The offender in question is called Celeste Price — or anyway she goes by name. She’s as much of an “entity,” finally, as Bateman, this time in the guise of a svelte 8th grade teacher (of English, of course) in the suburbs of Tampa. Yet instead of abusing and murdering women, Celeste seduces pre-teen boys — but not just any boy will do; Celeste requires one “at the very last link of androgyny that puberty would permit him: undeniably male but not man… [not yet wrestled] into a fixed shape.” Enter Jack Patrick, the hapless love object, whom Celeste wastes no time requisitioning wholly. A lot of uncomfortable trysting ensues, and emotional Russian roulette, and dark scheming, all of it done so Celeste can pursue her attraction to underage schoolboys unheeded. So where does the horror come in, you might ask? And that is partially the point. By immersing the reader sans hope of escape in the mind of boy-hungry sociopath — at one point, she dreams of a super-size boy band crushing her with their genitalia — Nutting makes us come to terms with a lot of our ass-backwards cultural values; older man + younger girl = sex offense, while older woman + younger boy = rite of passage. A social pathology starts to emerge, a tacit hebephillia (see the recent alt lit scandal) , and we are forced to reckon with what turns us on in startling ways. Yet that isn’t what most links Tampa with horror. Celeste Price, a mixture of Nosferatu, the Countess of Bathory and Patrick Bateman’s long lost sister, slathers on the facial creams (like virgin’s blood) to foil old age, and seems to draw vigor from those she corrupts. She also drugs her husband, Ford, from a stash of crushed-up Ambien to keep him submissive — and all this time you thought Gone Girl was the ultimate story of marital horror? Indeed, Tampa might find better company among straight-ahead horror novels such as Stephen King’s Doctor Sleep (2013)or Joe Hill’s NOS4A2 (2013)than Nabokov’s Lolita, to which it has been unbecomingly likened. More than Patrick Bateman, even, Nutting’s Price seems supernatural, in spite of being rooted in a hyper-mundane world. This might be because of the signature fact that Bateman in some sense can see that he’s mad, while in Celeste the need for tweens has crowded out pretty much everything else. Tampa, as well, has its own naked scene when Celeste’s inmost self is revealed to the reader. It’s as shocking as Bateman manhandling his chainsaw, chasing that girl down a dimly lit hall. What both portrayals share in common are darkly existential endings — though calling them “endings” might be to belie both Harron and Nutting’s artistic intent. In Harron’s take on Easton Ellis, Bateman’s privilege shields him from a moral accounting; in the film’s final sequence, he breaks it down for us: “My pain is constant and sharp and I do not hope for a better world for anyone. In fact, I want my pain to be inflicted on others. I want no one to escape. But even after admitting this, there is no catharsis. My punishment continues to elude me, and I gain no deeper knowledge of myself… This confession has meant nothing.” Celeste, too, is a prisoner inside her own skin, though she comes to the knowledge less cleanly than Bateman. The title of the book speaks volumes; though Celeste may not know where she’s going, we do. Tampa, the town where the novel takes place, is one among a legion like it. When Celeste Price has sapped it, she’ll move to the next, the “entity” of her — her punishing need — adopting new, infernal shapes. Harron’s and Nutting’s are stories of horror — or terror, more rightly — because they don’t end. The monster never gets its due, forever to wander the whorls of its maze.

5th Creature

TOP HALF: Reflections in a Golden Eye by Carson McCullers (1941)

Reflections in a Golden Eye

Carson McCullers’ novel Reflections in a Golden Eye has got to have one of the best beginnings in literature: “There is a fort in the south where a few years ago a murder was committed. The participants in this tragedy were: two officers, a soldier, two women, a Filipino, and a horse.” And in a way that’s all you need to understand the book’s M.O. Facts are presented, affect is repressed — the prose is sharply uninflected — and Reflections, like all of our best horror stories, is a story of repression and destruction at its heart. McCullers’ fiction had always been dark — along with O’Connor, Capote and Welty she got lumped in as Southern Gothic — but Reflections is so unremittingly dark that it tips her, I think, into horror’s dominion. On the surface, the novel tells the tale of two marriages crumbling in on each other: the Pendertons — Weldon, a cuckolded Captain, and his gorgeous and castrating wife Leonora, who McCullers describes as a bit “feeble-minded”; and the Langdons — shattered Alison and happy-go-lucky Major Langdon with whom, as McCullers’ novel begins, Leonora is having a prolonged affair. The soldier is Private Elgee Williams — spooky, abstracted, obsessed with Leonora — the Filipino Anacleto, Alison Langdon’s domestic companion, and the horse Firebird, who belongs to Leonora. In among these charged relations — a soap opera cast, if there ever was one — are disorders, perversions, pathologies sundry, and attendant upon them the grotesque set-pieces that shocked the book’s readers when it was released; bestial sadomasochism, morbid exhibitionism, autogenous obsession and self-mutilation — enough grown-people issues with bad consequences to overflow the DSM. The Private covets Leonora and the Captain develops a thing for the Private while Leonora and the Major carry on with their affair with little thought to what it does to Alison Langdon, holed up by the fire, a garden shears held to her tenderest organs. And yet for all its luridness, the book is smoky and obscure. The Filipino Anacleto — one of Gothic’s most jaunty and memorable oddballs — illuminates the book’s obliqueness in the weird watercolors he makes for his mistress: “ ‘Look!’ Anacleto said suddenly. He crumpled up the paper he had been painting on and threw it aside. Then he sat in a meditative gesture with his chin in his hands, staring at the embers of the fire. ‘A peacock of a sort of ghastly green. With one immense golden eye. And in it these reflections of something tiny and — ‘ In his effort to find just the right word he held up his hand with the thumb and forefinger touched together. His hand made a great shadow on the wall behind him. ‘Tiny and — ‘ ‘Grotesque,’ [Alison] finished for him. He nodded shortly. ‘Exactly.’” The book is so disquieting because so much of it lies hidden. In her essay “The Grotesque in Southern Fiction,” Flannery O’Connor — who cared little for McCullers — explains this inclination in the following way: “…if the writer believes that our life is and will remain essentially mysterious, if he looks upon us as beings existing in a created order to whose laws we freely respond, then what he sees on the surface will be of interest to him only as he can go through it into an experience of mystery itself… Such a writer will be interested in what we don’t understand rather than in what we do… He will be interested in characters who are forced out to meet evil and grace and who act on a trust beyond themselves — whether they know very clearly what it is they act upon or not.” Reflections’ morbid subject matter renders it grotesque, of course, but also, too, O’Connor’s “mystery,” what drives the novel’s characters to “meet evil and grace and [act on trust] beyond themselves.” In Reflections, that “evil and grace” leads to murder. That, and nipple mutilation. Oh yeah, and riding horses naked. Too much dirty linen to ever get clean. And that, for the people involved, is a problem. The secrets they keep and that drive them to ill are secrets they can never tell.

BOTTOM HALF: Pet Sematary dir. Mary Lambert (1989)

Pet Sematary

Talk about repression — sheesh. The book that Lambert would adapt by horror maestro Stephen King was, according to him, the only one that King at first refused to publish. “If I had my way about it, I still would not have published Pet Sematary,” commented King. “I don’t like it. It’s a terrible book — not in terms of the writing, but it just spirals down into darkness. It seems to be saying that nothing works and nothing is worth it, and I don’t really believe that.” Stephen King has been known to exaggerate some — indeed-y-do, as King might say, he rakes in nine figures for doing just that — but given what the book contains, moreover what Lambert would do with the movie, the story is without a doubt the most heinous nightmare he ever dredged up. It follows the hugely unlucky Creed family, who move to a new town in (you guessed it) Maine so that Louis, the dad and a medical doctor (played by Dale Midkiff with glassy-eyed stiffness) can work saving lives at the college in town. The Creeds’ misfortunes first begin when the family maid hangs herself in their basement. After having a half-assed death talk with their kids — apropos of which Rachel, the good doctor’s wife (Denise Crosby), recounts her sister’s dwindling from spinal meningitis in a scene in the film that reduced me to tears of abject primal terror the first time I watched it — the Creeds assume that all is well until the family cat goes missing. Louis finds him later on, pancaked by a passing truck. But because he was crappy at giving the death talk (not wanting an even worse reprise, I guess) buries him not as a pet should be buried, in holy ground for hounds and goldfish, but in a sacred place “beyond” which a neighbor reveals to the doctor, ere long, was a mystical hotspot for Micmac interment. (Always count on Stephen King for political/cultural/racial tone-deafness) But the cat comes back/ the very next day/ yeah, the cat comes back/ they thought he was a goner — etc. Needless to say, he is no longer cuddly. And so begins the film’s descent into supernatural hard knocks never-ending for the Creeds, the more so when the viewer learns that the burial ground, in fact, is “evil” and is drawing the family one by one into its orbit of decay. This sounds like fairly silly stuff, but Mary Lambert manages to make it resoundingly, viscerally scary. To certain horror geeks like me, Lambert’s an intriguing figure; she directed this movie, its terrible sequel and from there made it onto the B-list full-time (Urban Legends: Bloody Mary and Mega-Python vs. Gatoroid are two of her newest artistic forays) Which strikes me as an honest shame. There’s a funhouse overripe-ness, an uncanny fuzz, to the way that the movie was shot and directed. Nothing could be worse to watch in my twelve-year-old mind than that dwindling sister, and the scenes with the foul, resurrected tot Gage (Miko Hughes) are enough to make anyone never have kids — not to mention the gory dream-revenant Pascow, and the satanic cat, and the shin-slicing scene. To someone who understands how hard it is to chill the blood of someone else, Lambert’s film succeeds in spades. The film is a companion piece to Carson McCullers’ subtler creation in the sense that the latter makes good on the former. The travails of the Creeds are the Pendertons’ and Langdons’ liberated from the prison of tasteful restraint. Zombification, family trauma, the death instinct and, worst of all, the act of harming those you love are buried deep down in McCullers’ novel; in Pet Sematary, Lambert resurrects them, parades them around, gives them teeth and a scalpel. If Freud’s das Unheimlich is partly defined by a long-dormant yet nascent belief in the “old, animistic conception of the universe,” which includes “the omnipotence of thoughts, instantaneous wish fulfillments, secret power to do harm and the return of the dead,” then Pet Sematary could be defined, too, as the latent content that Reflections represses. If McCullers wrote the eulogy, then Lambert says the incantation.

A Social Media Horror Film

“The tweets are coming from inside the house!” The above is a short horror film about one of the most frighteningly pervasive terrors of modern life: social media. Give it a watch and if you like it, Tweet about it! Then Facebook it! Then Ello, Pinterest, Tumblr, Snapchat, Instagram (oh, God, it never ends!)

Credits:

Directed by Grier Dill
Written by Lincoln Michel
Featuring Cale Hughes, Jarrod Zayas, and Tessa Greenberg
Sound by Joseph Colmenero
Filmed and edited by Grier Dill

Twelve Haunting American Short Stories to Read This Halloween

by Rebecca Meacham

What makes a ghost story “American”? Let’s ask a ghost: “An American ghost does something quite different, because the people of the present are very mobile, the executives are constantly thrown from city to city, dragging their families with them.” In other words, says the narrator of Anne Sexton’s “The Ghost,” American ghosts belong to people, not places.

It’s a theory, anyway. It’s hard to argue with a ghost.

What’s certain is the power of these short stories, which fret the strings of human connection. Some tales are terrifying, others absurd. And like good (American?) ghosts, this devil’s dozen will stay with you long after you’ve turned the page.

Our Spirits, Ourselves. “We are here to prepare for not being here.”

“Po’ Sandy” by Charles Chesnutt (from The Conjure Woman and Other Conjure Tales)

Sandy and Tenie yearn to stay together like any married couple. But they’re slaves, and Master Marrabo “lends” Sandy to other plantations and sells off his family. So, Conjure Woman Tenie turns Sandy into a tree. Then Master Marrabo wants lumber. Sandy is chopped and built into a kitchen, where the grief-wracked Tenie dies. Harrowing, yes — but this story is subversive, too: Uncle Julius, a former slave, is telling Sandy’s story to a Northern couple who’ve bought the crumbling plantation. And while “Po’ Sandy” looks like an “Uncle Remus” story, its message is chilling: no one can dwell in a house that slavery has built.

“The Farm. The Gold. The Lily-White Hands” by Dan Chaon (from Stay Awake)

Chaon is the master of modern unease. His characters chafe against domestic duty until they detach, lash out, or vanish. In this story, even words disappear from the page as three sisters wonder about the night their father tried to kill them. Are they ghosts? Are they dreaming their future as they wait for the gunshot? “Reader, do not ask me who at this very moment is dreaming you,” Chaon writes, tightening the clench.

“The Country” by Joy Williams (from Tin House Volume 15, No. 3, “Memory”)

Why Are We Here? This is the topic of the group meetings Williams’ lonely, irritable narrator attends, but comprehension lies beyond him. He returns to his young son, Colson, who channels the voices of the narrator’s dead parents. The streets overspill with garbage; at home, Colson is unwashed, the stove is dusty. This world needs looking after.Is the narrator here or not here? Like the narrator, all we want, most urgently, is to know.

The Dead Wives Club. “He saw me — at last, at last, he saw me!”

“The Moonlit Road” by Ambrose Bierce (from The Complete Short Stories of Ambrose Bierce)

Three testimonies converge in this suspenseful murder-mystery-ghost-story: a college-aged son, a murderer, and a dead woman whose statement is made through a medium. Strangled by an intruder, the woman tells of a night when she finally reunites with her husband and son — and they flee her ghostly arms. Why? Who killed her? Bierce lets us play detective, judge, and jury.

“Pomegranate Seed” by Edith Wharton (from The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton)

You’ve removed the portrait of your new husband’s (dead) first wife. Now, he’s receiving letters penned in a feminine hand — and he won’t show them to you. What can you do? If you’re Charlotte, a middle-class woman who frets formalities, you pretend not to worry — even when your husband disappears. Wharton claimed ghosts lurk in “the silent hours” of daily life; what silence is richer than unspoken fear?

“The Great Divorce” by Kelly Link (from Magic For Beginners)

“There once was a man whose wife was dead. She was dead when he fell in love with her, and dead for the twelve years they all lived together, during which time she bore him three children, all of them dead as well…” So begins Link’s hilarious take on a “mixed” marriage now as “dead as a doorknob.”

Harrowing Returns. You ever been in the grave? It sucks so bad!”

“Sometimes They Come Back” by Stephen King (from Night Shift)

This is the ultimate teacher-anxiety nightmare. As a child, Jim Norman watched a gang of bullies murder his brother. Twenty years later, students in Jim’s high school class are dying, and the empty seats fill with…the ghosts of his brothers’ killers. Like Jim, we’ve all felt defenseless; we recognize his desperation as he takes gruesome measures. As King says, fear is shaped like a body under a sheet, and that body is our own.

“The Ghost” by Anne Sexton (from The Literary Ghost, edited by Larry Dark)

“I bother the living,” says the ghost of a Victorian lady who haunts her unfortunate descendent by breaking her hip, giving her fevers, sabotaging her birth control — and humming a little song into her head during sex. But the story turns sinister when the ghost lays claim to her descendant’s writing: “How the song of the mistletoe rips through the metal of death and plays on, singing from two mouths, making me a loyal ghost.”

“Sea Oak” by George Saunders (from Pastoralia)

We begin in a male strip club called Joysticks, where our narrator worries about his Cute Rating. The family he supports lazes around eating beenie-weenies and watching How My Child Died Violently. Then sweet Aunt Bernie dies, and the real absurdity begins. “We gotta eat right to look our best,” the rotting corpse of Bernie says, declaring her plans. “Because I am getting me so many lovers.”

Freaky Kids. “He might try to help you, in his way. And that could be horrible.”

“It’s a Good Life” by Jerome Bixby (from Masters of Science Fiction, Vol. 2: Jerome Bixby)

What if a three year-old ruled the world? Little Anthony does in this classic short story, which you may remember it as an iconic episode of The Twilight Zone. When Little Anthony plays with a rat, he makes it eat itself. When Little Anthony “hears” your bad thoughts, he puts you in the graveyard — although once in a while, he brings you back. Everything and everyone around Little Anthony must be good and wonderful — or else.

“The Cold Boy” by Benjamin Percy (from Gulf Coast 23.1, Winter/Spring 2011)

Ray doesn’t know much about the boy he’s babysitting — is he 6? 7? — except that he’s just fallen into an icy pond. Thankfully, the boy’s body floats up — and the he spits out water, awakes. But something is wrong. The boy wants to eat nothing but ice cream. His footprints are puddles. He won’t speak. And all the while, crows watch from the trees, waiting for the next cold snap.

“Haunting Olivia” by Karen Russell (from St. Lucy’s Home For Girls Raised By Wolves)

Stuck with loss, Russell’s young characters often try to get themselves haunted. In this sad but charming story, two brothers try to find the body of their little sister, who disappeared into the ocean two years before. Timothy would settle for a glimpse of her ghost. Goaded by his brother, weary of searching, he finds himself in a glowing cave, ready to drown in its grief and wonder.

Halloween Fiction Prompts Culled from the News

Each month we gather some news headlines that are strange enough to be fiction. Here’s a horrific batch of Halloween headlines to get your creative juices bubbling:

Family flees 6,000 deadly spiders “bleeding out of the walls” of home

Woman buried alive, funeral goers hear screams from the grave

Teenage girl cuts off her playmate’s fingers with an axe for sacrifice to Satan

Man finds free dead mouse in his McDonald’s coffee

Nurse accused of killing 38 patients she found annoying, taking selfies with the bodies

Illinois driver finds coyote stuck in car’s bumper once arriving to work

Man crawls up from subway hatch to throw smoke bomb at New York diners

Grieving parents find supposedly dead son at door

Thieves toss chainsaws at cops

Man grows gigantic, likely evil, pumpkins in backyard

Woman finds three-inch leech living inside her nose

Gigantic crabzilla monster gets ready to attack Britain

Scary clowns plague California towns

Clown frown