[New-Poetry] Book title du jour (& review)
Halvard Johnson
halvard at earthlink.net
Mon Sep 10 09:45:34 EDT 2007
NYT
September 10, 2007
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Burn Down a Poet’s House, and the Mail Just Pours In
By JANET MASLIN
AN ARSONIST'S GUIDE TO WRITERS' HOMES IN NEW ENGLAND
By Brock Clarke.
303 pp. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. $23.95.
The narrator of “An Arsonist’s Guide to Writers’ Homes in New
England” is an accidental firebug “with blood and soot on his hands.”
He committed the unspeakable crime of burning down Emily Dickinson’s
house. Thus he threw Amherst, Mass., into turmoil, not only because
he violated the legacy of the college town’s cherished literary Belle
but also because he killed “two of its loafered citizens” in the
process.
His name, Sam Pulsifer, is redolent of both pusillanimousness and
Lucifer. But the actual Sam is too mousy and naïve for either. He
would have fared better in life had he been less dimwitted, “like a
child, only bigger” in the opinion of one of his smarter
acquaintances. But he wouldn’t have been as wildly, unpredictably
funny. And the hilarity of Sam’s narrative voice is fine compensation
for its apparent idiocy.
“An Arsonist’s Guide to Writers’ Homes in New England” is as
cheerfully oddball as its title. Its cover art includes a tiny
cartoon sketch of a green-frocked literary lioness garlanded in
flames, and that captures the irreverence of the author, Brock
Clarke’s, enterprise. Although it is his fourth book, it feels like
the bright debut of an ingeniously arch humorist, one whose hallmark
is a calm approach to insanely improbable behavior.
“I could think of no bigger betrayal than a wife’s changing the locks
on her husband,” thinks an aggrieved Sam, “just as long as I didn’t
think about my burning and killing and then lying about it.”
Mr. Clarke’s premise gives him an immediate problem to solve. If Sam
really torched a treasured landmark and killed people, then served 10
years in prison by the time this story begins, what kind of monster
is he? In order to treat this character as a lovable marshmallow, as
well as an occasionally inspired literary satirist, Mr. Clarke must
figure out how to sustain this novel’s sunny atmosphere without
having to justify heinous violence.
So it gradually develops that Sam didn’t exactly mean to incinerate
anything or hurt anyone. It happened to him as accidentally as
everything else in his life occurs, amid the cloud of bewilderment
that follows him everywhere.
Sam never meant to become a serial arsonist. It’s just that the
Dickinson fire brought forth a barrage of strange correspondence. Sam
predictably prompted the rage of scholars, even if their fury failed
to impress him. “There is something underwhelming,” he writes, “
about scholarly hate mail — the sad literary allusions, the refusal
to use contractions — so I didn’t pay much attention to those letters
at all.” But Sam also got dozens of letters from angry lunatics
requesting that he burn down more writers’ homes.
Here too Mr. Clarke must be careful. His book’s craziness must stay
jokey. It gets no crazier than the man who wants Ralph Waldo
Emerson’s house destroyed to avenge his parents’ naming him Waldo. So
Sam has no plans to fulfill his fans’ requests. He prefers a safer
course. After prison he went to college to major in packaging
science, which comes in handy whenever he wants to use a Ziploc bag
or a mayonnaise jar as a metaphor during this narrative.
He met a woman named Anne Marie. He invited her to have dinner. (“
‘With you?’ she asked.”) Then he married her and took up the life of
a suburban father. As the book begins, he lives on Hyannisport Drive
in a subdivision called Camelot, a place so quiet on weekdays that
“you couldn’t clip your toenails on your front porch without fear of
bothering someone with the noise.” Sam accurately surmises that
despite Camelot’s proximity to Amherst, the two are worlds apart, and
nobody cares about Emily Dickinson in a place like this.
Soon Mr. Clarke has indulged his slightly condescending screwball
tendencies to the point where this comic novel is in overdrive. Sam
has an angry stalker, the son of the loafered couple who perished in
the Dickinson fire. Sam becomes a suspect when other New England
writers’ homes begin to burn. And he is dogged by the overweening
ambition of his prison buddies, a bunch of bond analysts eager to
write best-selling memoirs even though they don’t have anything
interesting to remember.
When this leads Sam to open his wide, dewy eyes to the present-day
literary world, he finds that the memoir is “like the Soviet Union of
literature, having mostly gobbled up the smaller, obsolete states of
fiction and poetry.” He finds this truly baffling: “Who knew that
there were so many people with so many necessary things to say about
themselves?” He wonders how a newspaper reporter from upstate New
York can begin a book with the line “I was working as a newspaper
reporter in upstate New York.”
Even as Sam begins collecting insights for a book of his own, the
“Arsonist’s Guide” of Mr. Clarke’s title, he runs headlong into
practitioners of other literary genres. The parodies here are
priceless, particularly the grim, depressive, snowbound story of a
lonely and miserable man, one that instantly brings to mind Russell
Banks’s “Affliction.”
Mr. Clarke sets this part of the book in bleakest New Hampshire, so
that Sam can feel sorry for the houses for “having to be compared to
the white snow and failing so completely.” This frozen setting also
allows him to express a long-smoldering schoolboy hatred of Edith
Wharton’s “Ethan Frome.”
Eventually overplotted to the point of overkill, “An Arsonist’s Guide
to Writers’ Homes in New England” (Miriam Levine’s real guidebook has
the same title, absent the arson) still manages to remain sharp-edged
and unpredictable, punctuated by moments of choice absurdist humor.
At the home of Edward Bellamy, the author of “Looking Backward,” Sam
notes: “It was very, very pretty. You wouldn’t have noticed anything
was wrong with it except that it was ringed by yellow police tape,
and there were some faint black singe marks near the foundation.”
Jay Billington Bulworth for President
Halvard Johnson
================
halvard at earthlink.net
http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard/index.html
http://entropyandme.blogspot.com
http://imageswithoutwords.blogspot.com
http://www.hamiltonstone.org
http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard/vidalocabooks.html
More information about the New-Poetry
mailing list