Archive for June, 2008

Dermaphoria (2007)

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Dermaphoria (2007)

Written in 2007 by Craig Clevenger, Dermaphoria is the second novel from this talented and challenging US author. Having structured his first novel, The Contortionist’s Handbook, around a narrator whose memory was that of a savant, Clevenger chose ‘amnesia’ as his primary condition for this text.

                Eric Ashworth wakes to find trouble in the form of a police officer named Ansliger but without any recollection aside from the name “Desiree”.  At this point he is faced with the prospect of a prison sentence for being the architect of an increasingly popular new drug which is spreading virulently through the streets of Los Angeles.  

                In a frantic attempt to reconstruct the fragments and shards of his shattered memory, Ashworth begins using the hallucinogen he has created. As a consequence of this usage, he suffers a disorientation of his perceptions and awareness of the different realities generated by his impaired mind which causes a paranoid sensibility and addiction to achieve permanence in his consciousness.   

Clevenger’s written style has an unerring congruence with this novel’s subject matter, thematic concerns and structure. The deliberate layering and disordering of different narratives, scenarios, sequences and events contributes to the reader’s difficulty in establishing the actualities of the plot, producing an elegant, sophisticated and complex novel that remains compelling to the last. Boundaries of psyche, the liminal spaces of the mind and body, the ‘exactogen’ at the centre of this text synthesises human feelings and then forces and aggravates the transgression of boundaries both physical and mental through the hallucinations and the after-effects.

                In terms of influences, that this is reviewed favourably by both Irvine Welsh and Chuck Palahniuk offers some idea of the direction the author has taken yet this is only a précis of the menu from which he has undoubtedly dined. With an LA location and pages peppered with underworld slang and vernacular, this is the stuff noir is made of, the seamy and seedy criminalities at the forefront with a wily female on the lookout for her next make. Mark Z. Danielewski’s House of Leaves is offered as a seminal comparison and influence by Clevenger and I would point to the work of Ken Kesey as another fundament for this wonderful and highly ambitious novel that is executed with panache.

 

 

Sphere: Related Content

Naomi Woddis’s Poetry Mosaic

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

If you have not yet seen Naomi Woddis’s new project, Poetry Mosaic, go take a look now. Every month she posts a set of questions and then uses excerpts from emailed answers, along with passages from her own work to piece together poems. This process straddles the threshold between collaboration and individually produced work, as the input of many is still filtered through a single individual’s selections. By directly stating her process and by including the original answers, as well as the names of their contributors, she exposes this liminality.

Indeed, in exposing this liminality, she suggests its existence in more traditional poetry (and other forms of written art). Whenever we write, we depend on language developed by others not only when they were speaking with an awareness of language but also when they were going about their daily lives and answering (or asking) questions of various kinds (as Naomi Woddis puts it, “[a] mosaic is made of many tiles, even found tiles, cobalt blue will be found alongside grannies tea-set.”) This is true whether we borrow at the level of passage, sentence, phrase, word, phoneme, or letter.

Sphere: Related Content

Umbrella Summer 2008: Orsorum

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Hiroshima Umbrellas by manthatcooksOrsorum means a beginning, a start, an undertaking, or the first few words. Thus, it comes as no surprise that the section of Umbrella’s Summer 2008 issue that takes this term as its title proves a treasure trove of transitional poems and themes.

In “The Velvet Dun”, Jackson Lassiter mocks those who “wax poetic of morn” for ignoring the true terrifying potential and power of a shifting time.

Have they never been unnerved
by the impaling dawn, hid
cowering in dread beneath
a yellow blanket’s vain shield?

However, he fails to give those of us who have not hidden (in dread– I assume we have all hidden from morning in irritation) reason to share or at least understand the fear before moving on to his love of “smoky nightfall”, turning what could have been a revelation about the dangers hidden even in rosy-eyed times of transition into just another night-owl-taking-on-early-birds poem, though admittedly an enjoyable one.

By contrast, his “What Do You Do With The Old Stuff?” begins with an attempt to create a transition, through a “purge” of unneeded material possessions. An inability to unload less physical rem(a)inders of the past gets in the way of change. The reasons for this change, displayed in the third paragraph, give this description of stasis its power and relevance.

Patricia Fargnoli’s “‘There is a radiance in each of us—could we but see it.’” uses a line from a poster not only as its title but also to communicate a transition that stands in shimmering counterpoint to the less present transitions of aging: the slow falling into pain and dysfunction of the body, the loss of loved-ones to death. “Yes oh yes, it sizzles in the cleft of my long dormant / sex”.

In “French Movie”, Robert E. Wood valorizes liminal and ambiguous space in film:

…pauses dominate if the goal is Cannes.
Sometimes it’s best if one character speaks no French
and the subtitles are white on white

More significantly, he concludes on a figure frozen in a transition: “someone has paused on a bridge at night”. A bridge works as an extended threshold between two riverbanks or two states; here, remaining on the bridge represents a valuable silence.

The speaker of Enriqueta Carrington’s “Suites for Cello Solo” attempts to use synesthetic music (”sunlit G in major mode”) to reawaken the recently dead. However, even an art that dwells in liminality cannot undo the transition of death once complete.

Rick Mullin’s “Montclair Father, 46″ highlights the ability of the media in general, and photography in particular, to freeze a moment of transition– in this case, a horrific and brutal moment of transition– in time and thus make it possible to be shared again and again. The effect of this is left to the reader to determine, even as the speaker puts down the paper and attends to his daughters in the second stanza.

Taste, Smell and Sight - COFFEE by Scribbling of LightJoan Merriam enacts a transition by resetting Neruda’s “Ode to Enchanted Light” in an office setting. The world become “a cup overflowing / with coffee” rather than “a glass overflowing /
with water”. Liquid is transformed and wealth redefined as that which speeds up life rather than that which is necessary to life.

David Graham, in “Statewide Razing”, narrates how a wrecking company name may inspire visions of the transitional act of a building’s destruction spread throughout a far broader locale. A phrase perhaps representative of the ambition of a company’s owner becomes a sign for decomposition with machinery equated to “burying beetles and carrion crows”. “The Honey of the Earth” takes snow as that most liminal of spaces, the blank page and offers that up, not as the intimidating specter so many writers fear, but as a valentine.

Finally, Clay Stockton’s essay follows the turns and transitions of Michael Donaghy’s “Upon a Claude Glass”.

Sphere: Related Content