I’m wary of authors using the Holocaust as a storytelling prompt, but Nathan Englander’s “Free Fruit For Young Widows,” published in the New Yorker, was a human, satisfying read.
Review: Little Big
John Crowley’s “Little, Big” is a sprawling, lyrical fantasy epic. It is a work of high style, one Crowley executes with skill rare for the genre. He teases his sentences into precise, beautiful forms, situating them the page like typeface origami. Even if his phrases are occasionally overdone, they often succeed in shaping fresh metaphors, new views onto a created world.
Crowley’s fantasy setting strays far from common touchstones of elves and named swords. It is fixed in myths and prophecies, a fairy world at the edge of sight. The story revolves around Edgewood, a mysterious house designed by an older architect as a beacon for his younger wife—and perhaps the fairies she communes with. It is isolated, anchoring a pastoral community at some distance from a big city.
A family—a tribe, really—has grown there. They stand in uncertain commune with the spirits surrounding them, unsure, it seems, whether they exist at all. Some can see these visitors better than others—the women and children, mostly—but no one can explain their visions. It’s all part of a larger Tale, they assure the bewildered outsiders who come to follow love and father children. No one will know the deeper meaning until it’s over.
Crowley succeeds in building a familiar, but unknowable, society, especially at the outset. His family feels organic; his house, lived in. He sketches a mystery, leaving you eager to find a solution.
But the book falters later. Like its characters, it ends up re-treading beautiful, circular paths of the imagination. The characters’ confidence in what is written—the larger Tale—grounds them in a frustrating passivity. They are acted upon, by human and unknown forces, but they rarely seem to act themselves. Crowley’s male protagonists are especially inert, hapless wonderers content to lapdog along. Toward the end, when the characters arrange themselves on their pre-set paths, it’s increasingly uncertain why they choose to acquiesce. Rationalizations are offered, touching upon passion and duty, but these are spoken rather than felt.
Crowley is at his best with beginnings, notably the piercing passion of early love. He writes with a sure eroticism, luxuriating in reckless idleness, time spent unheeded in beds and bars. His willingness to leave “the Tale” here is energizing, and some of the book’s biggest disappointments come when we’re forced back into the larger narrative.
“Little, Big” is suffused with blunt mysticism, the heavy strivings of Crowley’s attempts to establish an unknowable world. The book is dense and beautiful, offering the delights of realized ambition. But it is also a chore, losing its way at times as it meanders within itself. If you accept it as a journey, you’ll find many rewards. As a destination, its value is less certain.
Modern Drunkard’s No-Booze-Barred All-Star Drink-Off
It’s an older piece, but Modern Drunkard has a hilarious drink-off featuring some of the top tipplers in history. “Clash of the Tightest” offers a running commentary as Dylan Thomas, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Dean Martin, W.C. Fields and other carousers of note face off over martinis and more. The running commentary is sharp and well-rooted in the relevant works. Beyond that, it’s pretty damn funny too.
They Always Kill The Dogs
Radley Balko of the Agitator links to footage of a Missouri SWAT raid where the police raid a home, shoot the family dogs, found a small amount of marijuana and then charge the parents with child endangerment.
I’ll admit that I can’t watch the movie. But I think it underscores the futility of the “war on drugs” and the unvarnished danger of no-knock police raids.
Inside the Baby Mind
Paul Bloom has an excellent article in the New York Times detailing the moral life of babies. In it he relates a series of behavioral experiments showing infants natural tendencies to help, judge and even punish bad actors. It’s a great read.
As a follow-up, I’d like to learn whether kittens really “Think of Nothing but Murder All Day.”