Heads You Lose
by Martin S. Cohen
Ekstasis Editions, 2002
Reviewed by Joanne Haskin
There are two reasons to read this book: First of all, Heads You Lose, by
Martin S. Cohen is funny all the way through. Second, its mysteries grow
and multiply like bacteria on past the last page. Heads You Lose begins as
a benign road trip story, but grows pleasantly malignant as the plot
progresses. A mental
teaser, Cohen's novel begs reflection long after the book has been consumed.
Saul, the novel's narrator, is a wry wit. A rejected husband - after his
wife
replaced him with the gardener - Saul heads out on a road trip with no
particular
destination in mind. Tired, glum, indignant, Saul's voice is soaked through
with
self-pity, but his voice is also an unending source of humour. Saul's hatred
toward
his ex-wife is healing and malignant at the same time; in this way the novel
reads like a letting of pus. Saul expresses his pared-down sentiments when
he describes the breakdown of his marriage:
...but the truth, the real, plain, honest truth, is that I was so
absolutely enraged at Helene for being such a lying, entirely duplicitous
bitch that I just couldn't imagine living under the same roof as her one
day longer, much less sleeping with her in the same bed.
On the open road, Saul picks up the boy hitchhiker: a beautiful, silent
teenage boy. Eventually, his name will be revealed, but mostly the
boy maintains silent. Saul tries to muster companionship with the boy by
telling Bible stories. The more Saul tries to open the boy up, the hollower
Saul becomes. The boy loves Saul's Bible stories because they are abundant
with tales of decapitation. More importantly, Saul and the hitchhiker pulse
off with raw
attraction. The discourse between Cohen's characters becomes languorous. Cohen
describes
the boy in erotic tones:
...naked on a stool in the hallway waiting his turn like a naughty
schoolboy waiting on a bench in front of the principal's office...
Cohen sustains this fever throughout the novel. The relationship between
Saul and the boy becomes a psychotic, chiaroscuro painting, open to endless
interpretation. Heads You Lose is an intricate ride through broken
relationships,
the potential for difference in relationships, and is a telling expression
of the
power of storytelling.
Joanne Haskin lives in Aurora.
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