A Finely Tuned Apathy Machine
by Mark Paterson
Exile Editions, 2007
Evidence
by Ian Colford
The Porcupine’s Quill, 2008
In the Quiet After Slaughter
by Don McLellan
libros liberated, 2008
Reviewed by Matthew Firth
I was slightly familiar with all of
these writers before reading their recent short story collections. I
have published a single story each by Ian Colford and Don McLellan in
past issues of Front&Centre, the litmag that I edit/publish.
Mark Paterson sent me a story a few years back but I rejected it. That
story – "Worker’s Compensation" – comprises one of the
fifteen in his new book A Finely Tuned Apathy Machine.
Despite the fact that Paterson holds
the mild distinction of being the lone Front&Centre rejectee
of this threesome, it is by no means a knock against him, as Paterson is
a solid writer of variable and humorous fiction. The allure of Paterson’s
short fiction is that no two stories read alike. The collection opens
with a story 63 words long, which, given the length, is more the telling
of a joke than a short story. But it still works fine, especially for an
opener. And the book ends with an impressive speculative tale that
weighs in at 21 pages. In between standout stories include the hilarious
"The IGA Kissing Bandit" about a dimwitted sting to nab a
grocery store bag-boy Casanova and "Lost Dog" a somewhat
tender story of waning friendship and sincere humanity. The best story
is "Dysfunction Junction" wherein Paterson blends 1980s pop
culture, poverty and child neglect in a captivating narrative that ends
with a jolt. But there are low points. The aforementioned "Worker’s
Compensation" is saccharine and the premise of an injured worker
trying to cheat the system is cliché. "Cream Corn Finale"
also flops. In it Paterson is unable to successfully merge the two
narrative streams: an amateur filmmaker trying to film an absurdly
horrific scene, while, at the same time tend to his whining girlfriend,
named, of all things, Jordache. Vomit is supposed to be the bonding
agent for the story but it’s not enough to hold this muddled piece
together.
The bumps aside, Paterson’s second
collection from Exile Editions is entertaining, at times weird and
wacky, funny, and well-written.
Moving from Paterson to Ian Colford was
a pronounced swing into completely different territory. Where Paterson
gives readers humour – Colford’s fiction is visceral, cerebral and
at times cold, like a stab with a blunt shank directly to the reader’s
guts.
First; to explain the set-up of Evidence.
Colford has taken a different approach. None of the stories in the book
have titles. There is no Table of Contents. It does not say
"Stories" on the book jacket or title page; only at the end in
the Acknowledgements, which are less cryptic than the remainder of the
collection. The title – Evidence – is all the reader needs to
know, for even the back jacket blurbs are not terribly revealing. But
while the book’s adornments are understated, Colford’s fiction is
anything but – these stories explode in vivid detail, amazing breadth
of characterization and geography, and stunning displays of conflict and
emotional upheaval. Colford has a remarkable ability to depict dissonant
characters out of step with their surroundings: a college professor who
witnesses an assault and is helpless to do anything about it; a
perpetrator of violence who, during counselling, grimly meets a woman
drawn to his violence, the very thing he is supposed to be purging from
his being; an American student lured back to his northern Albanian
homeland to seek evidence of the death of his parents at the hands of
ethnic cleansing; a naïve hotel worker duped in a horribly inhumane way
by an unassuming older woman, plus a wild array of other characters,
both major and minor. Even the secondary characters, such as the two
children of a less-than-honest but despairing Romanian woman, strike
with force. In this story, Colford reveals poverty and hopelessness via
a pair of children, without resorting to cliché or dull sentiment –
and by doing so evokes chilling realism. Often there is a creeping,
subdued malice at work in these stories mingled with an artful but
slightly deadpan delivery that reminds me of Michel Houellebecq.
Many of Colford’s first sentences
grab the reader immediately:
One of the conditions of my release was
that I undergo regular psychiatric counselling.
I had been placed in the home of a
family named Schtetler.
I noticed the boy in the wheelchair
before I noticed his mother.
These are opening sentences laced with
promise and possibility, delivered simply and succinctly. Any reader
would be drawn to read on, to wonder why the need for counselling? Or
how is it the narrator was "placed" with a family? And what is
the allure of the boy in the wheelchair?
Colford also closes his stories
beautifully. Consider this ending:
I looked around. From this spot, where
I had almost died, I saw nothing that I could recall ever having seen
before. None of the people walking by looked familiar. Even the air I
was breathing seemed strange. Elizabeth, with her long dark hair
trailing down her back, her sweet oval face that reminded me of the
peasant girls back home – even she was a stranger. I didn’t know
anything about her.
We turned and walked back to the car.
A man almost dies in this story but
none of the details add up to much for him. His near dying remains
strange, out of sorts. This is just how it must be and he is fine with
carrying on – walking back to the car – surrounded by mystery. This
hits at the crux of Colford’s brilliant stories; they open with
promise, wander and muse on human emotion and experience, but then end
without comfortable resolution. It sounds like real lives lived to me,
depicted here in stellar form by a superb Canadian short story writer.
Now, this leaves Don McLellan in a
tough spot. He must come on stage after Colford and Colford has
absolutely knocked the audience on its ass. But McLellan still has a job
to do. Fortunately for him, he’s a tough nut and does not back down
from the challenge.
More understated than Colford, less
humorous than Paterson; McLellan’s collection is best summarized as
surprisingly changeable, while at the same time centred on a specific
location: the Renfrew Heights neighbourhood of Vancouver, originally
established, McLellan explains, as a housing project for soldiers
returning from World War II. Some of the stories are set directly in the
neighbourhood others concern characters from Renfrew Heights who have
pushed off into different pockets of the globe. And still other stories
examine how the neighbourhood has changed since it was first
established, by, for example, becoming home to new Canadians from Asia
struggling to find their footing. It all makes for an informative blend
of history and fiction, rolled together by McLellan’s efficient story
telling.
"Horse" brings together two
residents of Renfrew Heights who are down on their luck. Former
childhood chums, they re-unite as impromptu business partners when a
heavy dump of snow falls on Vancouver. The story examines sharp
socio-economic boundaries that divide the haves from the have-nots.
"Fugitive" centres on the
misadventures of a mentally-challenged Renfrew Heights youth nicknamed
Fender back in the days when "retarded" was the descriptor for
such kids. I remember a kid from my own childhood who was similarly
afflicted – the labels used for him were often much crueller but at
the same time, Joseph (the Anglicized version of his Polish name) was
accepted as part of the crowd of boys who ran the streets in my
neighbourhood. McLellan’s story, likewise, shows a boy out of step but
at the same time very much part of the fabric of Renfrew Heights, so
much so that his disappearance for a few days takes on near-mythical
status. McLellan relates it all well, without resorting to nostalgia.
"Scram" is an excellent story
as well, focussing on a late teen who sets out by thumb from Renfrew
Heights to see North America. Again – as a hitchhiking veteran of
several thousand kilometres across Canada myself 20 odd years ago –
this story really struck home. This passage from "Scram"
beautifully summarizes the allure of meeting strangers:
People loved talking about
themselves. Particularly those who say they aren’t comfortable talking
about themselves. Especially to strangers they know they’ll never have
to face again. I heard the life stories of miners, actors, salesmen,
nurses, policemen, communists and members of the Ku Klux Klan. I had
people cry on me, curse me, threaten me and wet their pants in my
presence. They were the unemployed and the unsatisfied, the unbalanced
and the unbearable, the understanding and the unheralded.
Here, in this one paragraph, McLellan
shows readers the remarkable variety of humanity open to those
courageous enough to go out and seek it.
In the Quiet After Slaughter
is full of unforeseen and amusing moments served up well in McLellan’s
strong narratives. |