I Can See You Being Invisible
by Andy Brown
DC Books, 2003
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
See
TDR's interview with Andy Brown
The avant garde, according to my Concise Oxford Dictionary,
is a noun or an adjective: "(of) pioneers or innovators in any art
in a particular period; hence ~ism (3), ~ist (2), ns.
[F,=vanguard]." Flip now to vanguard: "n. foremost part
of army or fleet advancing or ready to do so; (fig.) leaders of
movement, of opinion, etc." Hmm. Innovation and leadership: two
words one does not often hear applied to small press publishing in
Canada.
Not that there aren’t innovators. Christian Bök’s
Eunoia
is a convenient poster book for recent exemplary literary innovation,
one that even managed to catch hold of the popular imagination and
generate ca-ching, book sales. (Carmine
Starnino, however, has
accused Bök of repeating experiments already carried out by Europeans
deep in the previous century … but let’s not rehash that
argument.)
Andy Brown is avant garde. Brown is a leader in Canadian small
press publishing; he is the principal behind Montreal’s conundrum
press, a house known for working
outside the mainstream. On the evidence presented in Brown’s new short
story collection, I Can See You Being Invisible, he is also an
innovator. Flip to innovate: "v.i. bring in
novelties; make changes."
What novelties? I Can See You Being Invisible includes a
story presented as a photo essay: "How to Build a Wall."
Another story is accompanied with black ink illustrations. The drawings
are not quite anime, but they’re somewhat similar. These
stories are novel in approach, to a degree. What changes? Changes to
what? Brown’s collection is a change from the lyrical, small town,
nostalgic, über real McCanLit that Ray Robertson railed against in Mental
Hygiene. Brown writes against many of the dominant CanLit tropes.
But his work is also not significantly different from many other writers
writing "urban fiction" in Montreal, Vancouver, Winnipeg,
Windsor and Toronto (south of Bloor St.).
One of those writers, Hal
Niedzviecki, founding editor of Broken
Pencil, blurbs Brown’s book:
Brown's sentences are as crisp as his vision is opaque... Read this
for its tremulous intelligence, its bravado, its confident obscurity.
Confident obscurity? Vision is opaque? I don’t know. To me
those don’t sound like good things. Here’s the other cover blurb,
this one by Anne Stone:
Andy Brown’s first collection of stories converges on the
discarded: rooms are provisional, existing until a stranger comes to
the door and leaves with the balance of the fiction in tow. What
courses through his veins are imagined histories, parallel worlds into
which the reader might follow, pushing aside the curtain of a familiar
photo booth to enter a world of the inexplicable, where time is the
drug of choice.
This is a better summary … and better praise. Umberto Eco wrote
about travels in "hyper reality," and that’s sort of what
Andy Brown’s stories are, too. One character is a drug pusher, selling
"time." William Faulker, James
Joyce, and Mikhail Bahktin make
cameo appearances as labourers in contemporary Montreal. A long linked
series of stories takes the reader in and out of a number of different
lives, emphasizing both the randomness and the interconnectedness of
their relationships. Paul Auster’s New York Stories may be a
precursor here. Or maybe Brown’s work is
part of a new trend.
The February 19, 2004, issue of eye weekly,
for example, included a
story about a new website: theculturalgutter.
A collaboration between Jim Munroe, Guy Leshinski, and James
Schellenberg, the website focuses, according to Munroe, on "any
medium or genre that has traditionally been maligned or ignored or
thought of as trash. It’s more about how it’s perceived than how it’s
executed or what it’s about." Note the lack of language about
leading or innovating. Merely being ignored is symptomatic of being
"gutter." Brown's writing might fall into this category - but
I think I Can See You Being Invisible aspires to be something more than ignored....
Meanwhile, here’s what Roddy Doyle said recently at New York
University about James Joyce's Ulysses: "People are always
putting Ulysses in the Top 10 books ever written, but I doubt
that any of those people were really moved by it." Mr. Doyle
apparently added that Ulysses "could have done with a good
editor" and said that he’d "read three pages of Finnegans
Wake and it was a tragic waste of time."
The Commitments, one feels one must say, on the other hand, is
good craic.
Okay, well, and so what?
I Can See You Being Invisible is somewhere in between The
Commitments (a well written book that is by no means cutting edge) and Ulysses
(a book so cutting edge one wonders if it's well written). It’s a fine example of the kind of
"underground," or even "gutter" writing coming out
of Canada. It has a stories about tree planters. It has stories where
guns go off. It includes the word "depanneur." It’s a kind of generational portrait.
It's a little bit depressing. Brown's writing is not the
same old same old. His is a voice struggling to articulate uniqueness.
Most days, that's all we have any right to expect.
Michael Bryson is the
editor of The Danforth Review. |