How Did You Sleep?
by Paul Glennon
Porcupine's Quill, 2000
Reviewed by Dimitri Nasrallah
It is comforting to know that writers like Paul Glennon can exist in
Canada. In a country that has built the bulk of its reputation on rather
traditional realism, Glennon's debut collection, How Did You Sleep,
garners about the same level of attention a prepubescent boy would
receive running unannounced into a girl's washroom [an
interview with Glennon appears in The Danforth Review]. The reader is at
first caught off guard by the author's inventiveness and playful nature,
but quickly realizes his quirky, at times odd sense of humour is
essential to these nineteen stories.
The stories in this collection can be roughly divided into two
categories. The first kind involve the stripping down of
"realistic" situations to their emotional or psychological
core, then using those same ingredients to reconstruct a wholly
fictional world that best represents them. The lead story, "The
Museum of the Decay of Our Love," for example, revolves around a
protagonist on vacation who visits a museum housing the artifacts and
memories of a past relationship. Another story has its protagonist being
turned into a bear (this resulting from a corporate takeover - don't
ask...), a bear that goes on to make a living managing models in Europe.
In fact, several stories deal with abrupt and unexpected
transformations. In "Chrome", a man awakens to find that he
can only see the world as chrome. In "The Manikin," a
newly-wed has to deal with the fact that his wife has turned into a
wooden being. The first person is used frequently. Many of these
characters remain nameless. The presentation of their worlds is vague,
and the reader is pushed into interpreting them. The nature of these
stories is expressionistic; they seem to be probing very personal
territory. One is reminded, naturally, of Kafka with his dung beetles
and burrowing creatures. However, unlike Kafka, one senses Glennon's
worlds and characters haven't been fully envisioned, and the reader
hasn't been transposed into the story. The effect at times can seem
quite like trying to cross a bridge on the verge of collapse.
Perhaps this gap between author and reader relates to the blatant
artificiality proposed by the second kind of story in this collection.
These stories are the more fragmented of the bunch; they tend to deal
with found texts. In the hilarious "One Hand," we are given
scraps of notes left behind by the narrator's friend, who has committed
suicide. In "Via Crucis: A Retrospective," a curator discusses
the works of a fictionalized group of painters. With these pieces
Glennon is experimenting with the artifice as the story, a construction
built to be deconstructed in which the reward is anecdotal. Indeed many
of these pieces come off as high-brow humour; the purpose of the work
does not reveal itself until the last few lines. This has its
advantages, as well as its disadvantages.
The reader admires Glennon's
keen sense of playfulness at a time when so much of our literature
explores television-grade Freudianisms, still after the quiet laugh has
passed the stories don't quite resonate. However, this sense of
hollowness has long been a characteristic of this type of writing.
Glennon seems to have an interest in French post-war fiction and
thought, which is something you don't often see in Canadian
writing.
Consider yourself warned: this collection is not for everyone. The
merits of this collection rely heavily on how long you can suspend your
sense of disbelief, and in many places this collection can be trying.
The stories do seem somewhat repetitive in their nature. But for all its
weaknesses, Glennon's first collection should be noted for its
freshness, for its originality.