Flat
by Mark Macdonald.
Arsenal Pulp Press, Vancouver
Reviewed by Lori Hahnel
Flat is Vancouver writer Mark Macdonald's first novel. Having
lately slogged through a couple of weighty tomes by a couple of the
biggest stars in the CanLit firmament, reading this book was a change of
pace, I must say . It's a story that reaches out and grabs your
attention right on page one, like this:
Lit by this impossibly golden glow is the body of J. He is lying like
a porn star on the living room futon, legs spread, genitals exposed to
the voyeurs across the street. They would think he is asleep until their
sticky binoculars passed over the table beside him, picking out the
details of spilled pills, and journals and pads filled with frantic
notes, sketches an d diagrams.
Well, <that> got my attention. Right then, I wanted to know
what was going on.
Set in the apartment buildings of Vancouver's West
End, Flat is the story of how a casual acquaintance of J's finds
himself having to go through the effects of this man he hardly knows,
and in the process finds himself becoming an unwilling voyeur of sorts.
Piece by piece, he discovers J's strange life and obsession with West
End architecture, then finds himself becoming drawn into it.
The story
unfolds through multiple narrators in multiple apartment buildings.
While this technique certainly enhances the collage theme, small pieces
forming a picture of J, it also serves to chop up the narrative flow of
this short work rather badly. Unfortunately, the novel too quickly loses
it's steam because of it.
Another problem was the narrators not always
seeming distinct from one another, possibly because most of them added
little to what we find out about J. The brief excerpts from his diary
are the most illuminating and interesting sections; I would have liked
more of them. In spite of these flaws, Macdonald's wit kept me reading.
His descriptions of partying and its after-effects are right on the
mark:
I'm not a puker, and that's something to be
proud of in certain circles, but there's always a price. On a scale of
one to ten this hangover is definitely an eight. I only reached ten
once, and that was a near-death experience in Mexico.
One narrator recalls a lover who had a collection of books by
"some really good writers"; it turns out he only had them to
masturbate over the author photographs. "Wow. Doris Lessing, Angela
Carter, Maeve Binchy, Iris Murdoch , Anne Tyler, even Simone de Beauvoir
and Margaret Laurence. 'Everyone but Atwood', he used to say."
In
the end, I wanted to like this novel, I really did. I was ready to read
something different, witty, engaging, and the first chapter did not
disappoint. I laughed out loud in quite a few places in this novel, and
fro m the first I wanted to find out more about J. But I donšt think
the multiple narrator thing really worked as well as it might have in a
longer piece of fiction.
Flat was an uneven effort, though not
without its moments. Having said that, I'll be interested in what this
author produces in the future.
Lori Hahnel lives in Alberta.