by Clint Burnham
Arsenal Pulp Press, 2005
Reviewed by Roger Davidson
There isn’t a great deal to criticize about Clint Burnham’s first
novel, because there isn’t, in terms of text, a great deal there in
the first place. Does this mean that there isn’t a great deal to the
book? That’s debatable, and Burnham obviously has his backers. My
personal inclination is to detract, though a little reluctantly,
while simultaneously acknowledging that something interesting does occur
in the reading of the book. However, I can’t accept that this is
creatively rounded, sustained, or quite innovative enough, to merit
novelistic kudos.
Firstly, the use of the term ‘novel’ is problematic for me. If we
estimate that Smoke Show’s average number of words per page is
around one hundred and fifty, and the book is one hundred and
eighty-pages long, then in terms of words, it bears less than half the
text of the average novella. Some pages are blank save for a single word
(‘Like’); some have two words (‘You know’), many have a single
sentence at the top (‘And so in the end, you just have to say, you
know what’s the point.’), and most have two or three. With all due
respect to Burnham’s experimental endeavor, when I lay $20 down for a
novel ($18.95 plus tax, to be exact), I expect in return a certain
number of words; I expect to spend a certain amount of time with the
book (the solution to this might be to read and ponder on it several
times, but I have no inclination to do it).
So what does the book achieve? Like Isaiah Berlin’s fox, Smoke
Show knows one thing. Or rather, it does one thing, and as it
goes, it does that thing quite meticulously and cleverly, and
ultimately, once the repetitive effects have built upon the mind,
movingly to an extent – that is, the sense of hopelessness the novel
exudes leads one to sigh a great deal while reading.
What Smoke Show does is to lead us not into, but rather across
the surfaces of, the lives of a small social set of young-ish
Vancouverites, who spend their days in inane half-conversation and a
cloud of cannabis smoke – for surfaces are all there is. They
communicate in mindblowing vagaries – ‘Yeah, no, like great. You?’
– language we all hear across North America daily. Burnham gives sad
glimpses of the vacuousness of these young stoners’ lives using a
technique that might be considered to have its origin in the Hemingwayan
Iceberg (nine tenths of which, you will remember, lays beneath the
surface), although here it is suggested that there is no depth to
perceive between the lines. We do not get to know them. There is nothing
memorable about any of them, so that they tend to merge into each other,
so that picking out separate strands of the lives therein becomes an
irritation only a few pages in. Is there is just very little to say
about these people? Are they worth depicting at all? Or is the reader
intended to form imaginative sympathies with the depressingly distant
‘protagonists’? Or is the book just an irritable complaint about how
young people in super-consumer society have given up on thought,
language, personal challenge, individuality and commitment? Certainly,
Burnham has nothing good to say about them; not that any of it seems to
be their fault, particularly – it’s just the way things have gone.
They have abandoned any notion of a richer existence, and life, or the
system, has abandoned them. It’s mutual, and there’s apparently
nothing to be done about it, and little to be said. Their inanity speaks
for itself. They are tragic; they just exist, that’s all, and they do
so in a vacuum, passing time, and getting stoned, buying goods from
Walmart to destroy them for entertainment, and then returning them and
laughing hollowly about it. Smoke Show is a complaint about
contemporary inauthenticity, in the existentialist sense. But unlike the
existentialist movement of the first half of the 20th
century, it doesn’t make any attempt to round out a route to a
preferable authenticity, and this is why the book gets nowhere – if
you believe it’s better to stand up and fail nobly than to lie back
and sigh, then don’t read this book.
Ultimately I felt that Burnham’s novel may be subject to the same
misery, the same stunted mentality it seeks to reveal; it makes no
commitment, offers no sustenance, holds up only minimal effort. If you
can’t change things, moan about them. The effect is unequivocally
depressing, so that one feels no inclination to muse on the book after
reading it. Upon reading the last line, I immediately brewed some strong
coffee and went straight to my couch to read a chapter of Ulysses
(the Hades section – one of the most nourishing chapters in any book
anywhere). I felt starved. Call me old-fashioned, but I still believe in
Joyce’s credo that the purpose of literature is ‘the eternal
affirmation of the spirit of man.’
Finally, are young Canadians really as vacuous as Burnham presents
them? Even the stoned and disaffected among them? Is the book fair? How
would Burnham like to see young Canadians acting and talking? I for one
know a lot of young Canadians who are political activists and artists,
who attend poetry groups, who paint and sculpt, who make intelligent
criticisms of America and the world, and know their Chomsky from their
Negri. I also know less intellectual young Canadians who talk in a
similar way to Burnham’s characters, and yet aren’t the vacuous,
vague nonentities he renders.
If I might apply Philip Sidney’s notion to the equation, Smoke
Show neither delights nor instructs. Yes, that’s an old-fashioned
idea now, but today, a piece of writing should at least attempt the
former.
Roger Davidson is a Scottish writer and
journalist currently living in Québec and working on a novel on
contemporary socialism set in Detroit and Cuba.