The Dirty Milkman
by Jerrod Edson
Oberon Press, 2005
Reviewed by Paul Duder
The back-cover blurbiage for Jerrod Edson’s second novel, The Dirty
Milkman,
promises a bracing stroll down the dank and gritty mean streets of Saint
John, NB. (It also offers one of those tendentious McCanLit aperçus that
“most Canadian writing has to do with the concerns of the middle class”, but
let’s save that one for another time). And, certainly, in handing the
narrative reins over to a teenaged hooker and a 30-some-odd failed
writer/successful drinker, Edson has enlisted two of the more reliable and
efficient signifiers of the demimonde.
But those of a sensitive constitution need not be put off, as not for Edson
the back-alley gang rapes of Hubert Selby, say, nor the dead-end
self-picklings of Bukowski. While those worthies offer the ennobling squalor
of imposed circumstances, Milkman trades more in mild discomfiture as
semi-sincere lifestyle choice; Edson serves up a light new wine for the
fetid old bottles, and it has a lower alcohol content.
Charlie White published a well-received (though not well-purchased) novel
while still in college, spent time in Poland working on a follow-up which
didn’t materialize, and eventually slunk back homeward, to start what has
grown into a five year stretch delivering milk in and around his native
Saint John. (He’s “a milkman by trade, but not by choice”, the promo bumph
tells us, as if there might otherwise be some ambiguity). He despairs over
ever writing again, and drinks prodigiously, but otherwise is, all in all, a
pretty chirpy soul, able, and inclined, to appreciate a well-turned ankle or
a Saint John sunset. (For those who care about this sort of thing, Edson’s
bio is not entirely dissimilar.)
Prin, who hooks up with Charlie--she calls him “Charles”--in the novel’s
first scene, is 19, clear-headed, and wholly untraumatized by her career
choice. Like Jamie Lee Curtis in Trading Places, she lives nicely, is savvy
with her finances, and lays off the (other) vices. The feel-good capper is
her pimp/best pal, much given to tortured musings on Prin’s inner beauty and
unassailable dignity (just like, you know, pimps in real life).
One surmises that with “Prin”, and its Scarlet Letter overtones, Edson is
seeking to confer an air of tragic grandeur, or some such; but, while her
childhood was apparently no parade down Main Street, one hears of much worse
on an average afternoon of Oprahs and Springers, so that any mantle of
victimhood and moral absolution doesn’t lie comfortably on her shoulders.
Milkman unfolds on parallel tracks. The principal thread follows present-day
Prin and Charlie as they stumble their way towards a sort of high school
romance-manqué, the kind she never had and he likely can’t remember. Despite
a greater than usual complement of barriers and misunderstandings, an
endearing sense of normalcy prevails--picnics, haircuts, brunch--and,
dammit, we pull for these crazy kids.
A second, retrospective track takes us through Charlie’s sojourn in Poland.
From his current state, and his refusal to discuss it (despite frequent
urgings from the unhappily-parochial Prin), we infer that Poland ended
badly, and Edson’s managing of this creeping sense of disquiet is his most
effective work. (Although, in the event, the pay-off is less than we’ve
expected, and doesn’t seem enough to have so derailed him, or to have
spurred the weird act of bibliocide by which he sacrificed his
almost-finished second novel).
Charlie spends a lot of time thinking about the craft of writing, and he
would likely approve of Edson’s efforts here. Milkman’s narrative voice is
frugal and unobtrusive; not terse, a la Hemingway--freighted, heavy--but
just direct and unaccoutred, almost wholly free of writerly wankery, and so
immensely easy to read.
Edson is palpably jazzed about nature’s beauty and healing power--he’s
obviously been particularly moved by Krakow and Saint John--such that
something of an eco-theme emerges that may not have been entirely
volitional. Along with the doing-not-studying, streets-not-academe line that
his characters purvey at all opportunities, this overlays the proceedings
with a neo-Luddite, granola-munching patina that is unforced and (you’ll
forgive me) organic.
For added levity, Edson throws up some icky slapstick business--the
pernicious effects of Chinese food on the digestive tract, a priest whose
love for the Virgin Mary is demonstrably over-enthusiastic--that seems
half-realized, as if he’s embarrassed to peddle such obvious filler.
Milkman is small--150 pages--and small-bore: at bottom, we get a girl, a
milkman, some sunsets and cheap wine, and a couple of people huddling
together, bucking each other up; a temporally protracted, lower-caste Before
Sunrise. At the end of the day, Charlie is, perhaps, nudged out of his funk
through the simple expedient of unburdening himself to Prin of some
unpleasantness from his past.
As redemptions go, this seems a little too easily won, too
up-with-talk-therapy. Though, that said, when Edson shoehorns in a
pessimistic, capitulative coda--one of those unresolved, “hey, life’s like
that” non-endings that serve more to excuse the writer than instruct the
reader--it clangs a bit.
But better (and easy) to focus on Milkman’s small pleasures, and what can
you do anyway? Life’s like that.
Paul Duder is a lapsed Toronto lawyer who lives in a neighbourhood without
milk delivery.
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