The Undertaker’s
Wife
by Len Gasparini
Guernica, 2007
Reviewed by Matthew Firth
Len Gasparini is an under-appreciated
Canadian writer. After approximately thirty-five years of writing and
publishing, he should be held up as a national literary treasure but he
is not. Gasparini remains on the margins, too salty for mainstream
success and acceptance. Take these lines from his short story "The
Undertaker’s Wife" in his collection of the same name as an
example:
And then she was sitting on the
edge of the narrow bed. And soon they were kissing. He hiked her
dress above her hips and was happily surprised to see she had no
panties on. With his middle finger he fondled her cunt. She was as
slick and wet as a peeled plum.
This could be Carver. Or Bukowski. Or
maybe Leonard Cohen, an estranged Canadian and the only big-name Canuck
I can think of who would write something similarly powerful. But this
sample is also pure Gasparini through-and-through. The excerpt shows how
he mixes blunt-edged prose ("he fondled her cunt") with poetry
("as slick and wet as a peeled plum") seamlessly. Gasparini’s
new collection is chock full this type of high-grade writing.
I can think of no other Canadian writer
who evokes a broader emotional range than Gasparini. Across the sixteen
stories in The Undertaker’s Wife Gasparini hits on lust,
racism, rage, drugs, poverty, ugly ethnic stereotyping, deceit, despair
and depression but also compassion, care, humour, down-to-earth
friendship, empathy and consideration. This range is often explored
within a single story. "The Rememberers", for example, centres
on a bunch of thirty-something mates who happen upon each other in a
social club in Windsor. Old rivalries and jealousies are bandied about,
which sometimes turn distasteful as more beer is swallowed. But at the
same time, the roots that connect the characters force them to
acknowledge what they share: similar moments of remembered joy, such as
playing on the same baseball team or having shagged the same girl in
high school. On the surface, such recollections might seem juvenile but
that is precisely the era Gasparini explores in this perspicacious story
about memory and bonds.
Gasparini is also technically
proficient. Consider this opening paragraph from the book’s first
story:
I turned twenty-one the day I
graduated from boot camp at the naval training centre in San Diego,
California. It was a sunny July day. My recruit company and others
took part in a full parade, with a band, colour guard, and a special
company carrying the flags of all fifty states. The usual U.S.
military hoopla à la John Philip Sousa. Instead of a
"skinhead" recruit, I was a seaman apprentice. The first
distinguishing mark I had consisted of two diagonal navy blue
stripes on the left sleeve of my service dress whites. But more
important, on completion of training and before transfer to a duty
station, I was granted a leave of two weeks. Of course I went home.
Every sentence flows smoothly into the
next. Sentence structure varies. Detail is revealed. Context is set.
Character is established and intrigue is summoned in the final short
sentence. Gasparini has the reader in his clutches after just a few
lines. Intrigue is also called up because the story begins on an
American naval base. Readers might wonder at this seemingly strange
pushing off point for a story by a Canadian writer. But reading the
entire collection reveals that Gasparini – a native of Windsor,
Ontario – writes about well-travelled characters open to a wide
variety of experiences, something the conclusion of this first story –
"Frank and Millie" – re-enforces. Furthermore, Windsor is
relevant to this story. It’s a border-town, a blurry blend of
Canadian, American and immigrant cultures. Gasparini draws on these
sources many times in the half-dozen or so stories set in and around
Windsor. His working class background also helps clear his vision,
arming him with a voice that tells it like it is and avoids bullshit. He
is a writer of courage. If Gasparini wants to call a cunt a cunt, he
will. But he is not artless – recall the softening imagery of the
inside of fresh fruit.
If you have not read Gasparini before,
grab this book and celebrate its craftsmanship, diversity and muscle.
Matthew Firth is co-editor of Front&Centre.
His most recent book is Suburban Pornography and Other Stories
(Anvil Press). He lives in Ottawa. |