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Can You Take Me There, Now?
by Matthew Firth
Boheme Press, 2001
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
The October 2001 issue of Harper's Magazine contains a
book review by Lee Siegel that begins with this paragraph:
Pragmatism is an American product with a simple heart.
Its animating principle is that truth is social and constructed rather
than transparent and objective. It holds that ideas prove their worth in
action, and that the results of an idea are the best criteria by which to
judge its merit. And since what works for me might not work for you,
pragmatism advocates a strenuous openness to all perspectives. With its
insistence on the fusion of being and doing, thought and action,
pragmatism has one foot in academe and the other in everyday life. It is
philosophy in running shoes.
Word for word, the same thing can be said of Matthew
Firth's second collection of short fiction, Can You Take Me There, Now?
More or less. This is one of those instances where the qualifications will
make all the difference.
In the first place, Siegel is reviewing a book called The
Metaphysical Club by Louis Menand, which Siegel calls
"essentially an argument for the value of American pragmatism folded
into a social history of its rise." Firth's book, by contrast, is a
collection of 17 short stories of working class guys and gals struggling
with their contemporary fixes of one sort or another. Menand's book is a
work on a grand scale; Firth's is focuses on particulars, and particulars
of a particular type - narrative variations on the working stiff.
What I want to suggest is that Firth's book appears to
be a "product with a simple heart," but it's not. It also often
appears to be a book that is anti-ideas, but I want to also suggest that
there is no such position. Even to take an anti-ideas positions, is to
take a position based on ideas. Siegel suggests the anti-ideas position is
called "pragmatism", and that it's based on the principle
"that truth is social and constructed rather than transparent and
objective."
Here's Firth:
I spent most of last night dodging cops and queers so
obviously I'm not at my very best. The cops harassed me down by the
harbour, glaring at me from their cruiser behind cheesy moustaches. One of
the fat thugs clambered out of their car and stood over me. "What's
your business here?"
There's more than a bit of William S. Burroughs in this.
Here's Burroughs from Naked Lunch:
I can feel the heat closing in, feel them out there
making their moves, setting up their devil doll stool pigeons, crooning
over my spoon and dropper I throw away at Washington Square, vault a
turnstile and two flights down the iron stairs, catch an uptown A train.
... Young, good looking, crew cut, Ivy League, advertising exec type fruit
holds the door back for me. I am evidently his idea of a character.
Firth's narrator is evidently Firth's cop's idea of a
character. The cop projects an assumption on the narrator; the narrator
projects an assumption on the cop. The story is off and running. Truth is
social and constructed rather than transparent and objective.
"Can you take me there, now?" the narrator
eventually asks a companion. (I'm not going to give away the story.) The
answer is YES, but the answer is also NO. I read this question
metaphorically as a desire for transcendence, i.e., Can you take me out of
here, now? Can you give me at least a momentary glimpse of the beyond?
Yes, but no, is the answer. Many of Firth's narrators struggle with
similar questions, though it is never as boldly stated as in the
collection's title story. Instead, the stories are celebrations of quiet
moments, near forgotten injustices, attempts to gain something more than
what we have right here right now.
It was John Lennon (already a multi-millionaire) who
said that a "working class hero is something to be". Firth
fulfills the role without Lennon's ego-claims. He has produced solid
stories about solid people working their piece of earth for all it's
worth, not expecting much, but at the same time expecting a great deal.
In his review of The
Metaphysical Club, Lee Siegel argues that Americans turned to
pragmatism after their Civil War because they no longer believed in grand
schemes. The grand schemes led to violence and destruction; claims of
utopian futures led to their opposites. In a similar fashion, it is quite
clear that the failure of the 1960s grand schemes to deliver on their
exaggerated promises (Lennon again: "All you need is love"), has
contributed to the cynicism of subsequent generations. Historians have
long argued that after the Civil War all Americans wanted to do was make
money. A look back at 1980s Yuppie-culture and the stock market hysteria
of the 1990s might say similar things about our society's underlying
influences.
Firth's narrators accept no easy answers. It also must
be said that Firth chooses narrators who refuse easy answers, or who have
no access to easy options. With Firth, we are often in Raymond Carver
country. The back cover calls Firth "Canada's Bukowski". These
are relevant comparisons (they point out Firth's continuity with a solid
American literary tradition). At the same time, Firth is Firth. His
characters are as big hearted as Carver's, and as eager to reach for the
bottle as Bukowski's, but they are also wholly original. Not kinder and
gentler in that pathetic Canadian tradition. Just different. And proud of
it.
Firth's first book, Fresh Meat, was published in
1997 by Rush Hour Revisions. The
Danforth Review interviewed him earlier this year. He is a troubadour
of the new Canadian literature. His work has appeared in a number of
anthologies, including Iced: The New Noir Anthology of Cold, Hard
Fiction (Insomniac Press, 2001). I don't think he'd agree that he has
"one foot in academe and one foot in everyday life," but I don't
think he'd put up too much of a fuss about being called a philosopher in
running shoes.
Can You Take Me There, Now? is fiction for
everyone who's been paid to clean toilets, mop floors, pick up garbage,
and who has suffered more than a few slings and arrows of outrageous
fortune. As Bukowski said in Bar Fly, "No one suffers like the
poor." The view isn't always pretty, but it's gritty; it's tough; and
it's occasionally desperate. Firth gives us lives on the front line of the
struggle for existence. He returns to the basic questions. How did I get
here? and how the hell and how fast can I get myself somewhere else?
Michael
Bryson is the publisher/editor of The Danforth Review. In the
interests of full disclosure, he acknowledges that his name appears in the
Acknowledgements of Matthew Firth's Can You Take Me There, Now? and
also that Firth reviewed (mostly positively) his last short story
collection, Only A Lower Paradise & Other Stories. Despite
various incentives, he still honestly (truly!) liked Firth's book.
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