Mary Jane by Jessica Anya Blau

Here is another book recommendation. I find myself drawn to three types of books during the pandemic, as I seek solace and escape. I am drawn to science fiction and fantasy novels that allow me to escape this world and show me that other worlds are possible. I am also drawn to mystery novels where an able detective navigates a dangerous and corrupt world, living up to his moral code and resolving the case in the end. And I am drawn to contemporary novels “where good people reliably find happiness in a somewhat amusing fashion,” to quote Elinor Lipman, one of the best practitioners of the genre. Favorite authors in this last genre include Lipman, Nick Hornsby, and Stephen McCauley. I just read a great new book in the genre, and I am ready to add that author to this list of favorites.

Mary Jane by Jessica Anya Blau is a delight. The narrator and lead character is a 14-year-old girl growing up in a very conservative house in a Baltimore suburb in the mid-1970s. Her mom lets her become a “summer nanny” for a young girl in the neighborhood because the father is a doctor. Little does the mother know he is a psychiatrist and a bit of a hippy. He may even be Jewish. Mary Jane is taken aback by the chaotic, informal, and warm Cone Household – so different from her own. And then the chaos and the warmth increase as a rock star and his movie star wife move into the house so Dr. Cone can treat the rock star for heroin addiction.

The joy of the novel is Mary Jane’s voice, as she encounters a way of life so different from how she has been raised and starts to rethink who she is and how she should live in the world. I also love the novel for how kind it is, even to the characters who should be unsympathetic.

I am so glad to discover Blau. If her other books are half as good as this one, I have a lot of good reading to do.

Opened Up by Sadness

July 5, 2020 – Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders (2017) Bloomsbury Publishing

Lincoln in the Bardo is the first novel by the acclaimed short story writer George Saunders. It won the Mann Booker Prize — I almost always love the novels that win the Mann Booker Prize. It is a great novel for our times — funny, quick to read, and uplifting. I liked Lincoln in the Bardo a lot.

The novel is the story of the days after the death of Willie Lincoln, President Lincoln’s son, who died during his presidency. Willie is in the Bardo, a transitionary state of being between death and what comes after death, much like the Christian idea of Limbo. The novel reads almost like a film script or play. It is a series of quotes from Willie and the other spirits in the Bardo alternating with a series of quotes from real and imagined historians and diarists telling what was happening in the physical world at this time. Apart from these quotes, there are no descriptions or stage directions. It takes a few pages to get used to this device and to learn who is speaking (the speaker is identified at the end of each quote, so when reading the longer quotes, you have to look ahead to understand who is speaking). Once you are used to it, the reading is quick and pleasurable.

I found Saunder’s vision of the afterlife to be comforting, though he offers only glimpses of what lies beyond the Bardo. The spirits that are trapped in The Bardo are unable to move on because of their attachment — or you could say obsession — with their past lives. These spirits fixate on the wrongs that were done to them, their desires that were never met, and the possessions, accomplishments, or people they are unable to leave behind. These attachments prevent them from transitioning to the world beyond.

The clearest glimpse of one afterlife we see is a particular hell: spirits that are trapped in vine-link tendrils that can swallow up spirits, particularly the spirits of children, that stay in the Bardo too long. These vines form a hard “carapace” or shell that encases these spirits.  These vines and carapaces are made up of spirits that committed wrongs while they were alive; they killed their lovers or babies, or they molested children, or they massacred an entire regiment of an opposing army. But it becomes clear that is not the destructive action alone that dooms these spirits to hell, but the failure to take responsibility for these actions and feel genuine remorse. As one spirit from the carapace says:

We were as we were! How could we have been otherwise? Or, being that way, have done otherwise? We were that way, at that time, and had been led to that place, not by any innate evil in ourselves, but by the state of our cognition and our experience up until that moment.”

A key dialogue starts with a spirit trapped in the Carapace who speaks in a bass voice with a list talking with other spirits who are not trapped in the Carapace. This spirit explains that he killed his baby because it would

remove the negative influence that was that baby (by dropping him into Furniss Creek), would free us up; to be more loving, and be more fully in the world, and would relieve him of the suffering entailed in being forevermore not quite right; would, that is, free him up from his suffering as well, and maximize the total happiness. It seemed that way to you, the Brit said. It did, it truly did, the bass lisper said. Does it seem that way to you now? the woman asked. Less so, the bass lisper said sadly. Then your punishment is having the desired effect, the woman said.

I was moved by the portrayal of Abraham Lincoln in the novel. Lincoln’s greatness comes not from his clear moral vision or his ideaological certainty — he after all was a late supporter of the abolition of slavery who looked for a compromise position. His greatness comes from his empathy, his willingness to listen to the experience of others and to change his views because of what he heard and learned. This approach is the opposite of today’s widespread attitude that dismisses anyone who holds a different view as racist (if you are on the Left) or “Marxists, anarchists, agitators, looters” (if you are on the right). It is worth a long quote from the novel to show how the sadness Lincoln experiences at the death of his son opens him up to understand the sadness of those enslaved. To set the scene: a number of spirits — some from whites and many from African Americans who had suffered the brutality of slavery — entered the body of President Lincoln who was visiting his son’s grave. Lincoln was not consciously aware of the presence of these spirits, and they all left or fell out of Lincoln’s body, except for one spirit of a former slave who stayed with Lincoln as he left the cemetery. This is that spirit talking.

And suddenly, I wanted him to know me. My life. To know us. Our lot. I don’t know why I felt that way but I did. He had no aversion to me, is how I might put it. Or rather, he had once had such an aversion, still bore traces of it, but, in examining that aversion, pushing it into the light, had somewhat, already, eroded it. He was an open book. An opening book. That had just been opened up somewhat wider. By sorrow. And—by us. By all of us, black and white, who had so recently mass-inhabited him. He had not, it seemed, gone unaffected by that event. Not at all. It had made him sad. Sadder. We had. All of us, white and black, had made him sadder, with our sadness. And now, though it sounds strange to say, he was making me sadder with his sadness, and I thought, Well, sir, if we are going to make a sadness party of it, I have some sadness about which I think someone as powerful as you might like to know. And I thought, then, as hard as I could, of Mrs. Hodge, and Elson, and Litzie, and of all I had heard during our long occupancy in that pit regarding their many troubles and degradations, and called to mind, as well, several others of our race I had known and loved (my Mother; my wife; our children, Paul, Timothy, Gloria; Rance P., his sister Bee; the four little Cushmans), and all the things that they had endured, thinking, Sir, if you are as powerful as I feel that you are, and as inclined toward us as you seem to be, endeavor to do something for us, so that we might do something for ourselves. We are ready, sir; are angry, are capable, our hopes are coiled up so tight as to be deadly, or holy: turn us loose, sir, let us at it, let us show what we can do.

May the sadness we experience open us up somewhat wider.

What Ever Happened to John Fowles?

May 27, 2020 – The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1981) Criterion Channel

Whatever happened to John Fowles? I read The French Lieutenant’s Woman and other novels by Fowles back in the 1980s and loved them. I loved the playful postmodernism of the novel: how Fowles could at once tell a gothic love story set in the past and comment on that story with a modern sensibility.

Fowles’ novels were widely read and respected at the time, but now seem almost completely forgotten. I never hear anyone talking about them now or read anyone writing about them. I am not sure why Fowles has been forgotten. Maybe there is something particular about his books or maybe something about postmodernism more generally. I don’t hear anyone talking about John Barth – another postmodern favorite of mine – today either. Please let me know in the comments if you too read John Fowles back in the day and if you have any theories about why he has been largely forgotten today.

I am due for a reread of his books. When some time has passed since I have read a novel, I remember the feeling I had reading the book and perhaps an image or two but almost none of the details of plot or character. I am not sure if this is a blessing or a curse – I would like to remember more, but on the positive side, I do get to read the novel again almost fresh. I plan to start my Fowles reread with The Magus, which I think was my favorite of his novels back in the day.

I am remembering John Fowles because Wendey and I watched the movie The French Lieutenant’s Woman. I remember this movie being well received at the time, getting several Academy Award nominations and winning a Golden Globe for Meryl Streep, though looking back now, it appears the reviews were more mixed than I remember. Wendey and I were mixed about the movie as well. The French Lieutenant’s Woman is beautifully shot and very well acted. I forgot Meryl Streep was ever this young, and she is very beautiful in the film. Both she and Jeremy Irons are excellent in their roles.

Playwright Harold Pinter wrote the script for The French Lieutenant’s Woman, and he faced a big challenge adapting a book whose appeal stems largely from the voice of the narrator, who comments on the story and the author’s choices as the story moves forward. Pinter responds to this challenge by writing two different stories into the movie: the love story of Sarah and Charles in nineteenth-century England and the love story of the actors playing Sarah and Charles in the contemporary filming of that nineteenth-century love story. The novel has three endings, while the movie manages to have two endings: one for the contemporary love story and one for the love story in the film within the film.

In the end, I liked but did not love The French Lieutenant’s Woman, the movie. While the film-within-the-film was a clever idea, it left me feeling distant from the happenings in the film without enough intellectual playfulness to compensate.

My Absolute Favorite Comfort Read in Stressful Times

May 17, 2020 – Network Effect by Martha Wells (2020) Tor Publishing

“I could have become a mass murderer after I hacked my governor module, but then I realized I could access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on the company satellites. It had been well over 35,000 hours or so since then, with still not much murdering, but probably, I don’t know, a little under 35,000 hours of movies, serials, books, plays, and music consumed. As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure.”

So begins All Systems Red, the first book in The Murderbot Diaries, a series of four prize-winning novellas and this novel. I can’t tell you how much I love, love, love these books. I must have read the novellas three times, just over the last couple of years. They are my absolute favorite comfort read in stressful times.

Let me tell you some of the things I love about The Murderbot Diaries.

First, the Murderbot character is funny, compelling and fascinating. Murderbot is a genderless, half-human, half-robot Security Unit or SecUnit with a sarcastic, self-deprecating sense of humor. Murderbot narrates the books, and I love their voice. Murderbot is experiencing autonomy for the first time – they just hacked their governor module, remember? They were treated like a tool, not a person, and now Murderbot has to figure out what it is to be their own person. They are learning to recognize their own wants and desires and to figure out how to act on them. They have to learn how to relate to others as equals or perhaps not relate to them at all – Murderbot isn’t sure if they want anything to do with humans. Like Lisbeth from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and Breq from Ancillary Justice, Murderbot is a wholy original and vividly memorable character. The reader is fully on their side as Murderbot struggles to become an autonomous person.

Second, the books are full of classic space-opera fun. Murderbot may prefer watching streaming video over fighting, but they are not going to let something bad happen to “my humans.” And something bad is always threatening Murderbot’s humans. When it is necessary to fight, Murderbot is quite a fighter.

Finally, these books take on some real political questions, though these questions are never in the forefront of the books. There is a consistent anti-corporate thread running through the Murderbot Diaries – Murderbot is not the only one the corporations try to control. And the series deals with interesting questions of gender, since after all Murderbot does not have gender. These political themes and questions are not dealt with in a didactic way – they are not at the center of the books. But they are there in real way to reflect upon, if you choose.

Network Effect is a worthy addition to the series, bringing back some favorite characters from earlier books and continuing Murderbot’s development. You could probably pick up Network Effect even if you have not read the earlier books, but I recommend starting with the first book, All Systems Red, if you are a Murderbot newbie. You will enjoy the new book more if you know the characters’ histories.

Restless

May 2, 2020 – The Correspondents by Tim Murphy (2019) Grove Press

I was restless today. I must have started four or five different excellent movies and gave up on each of them within the first 15 minutes. Some days I get tired of it all: the quarantine, working too much, the threat of illness, not being able to keep up with everything and not being able to escape. I did finally escape though, into the novel The Correspondents by Tim Murphy (2019). It is the story of two families in Massachusetts’ Merrimack Valley – one an Irish Catholic family and the other a Lebanese-American family – and the half Irish, half-Lebanese foreign correspondent descended from these two families. The characters in The Correspondents are well-drawn and charming – you want to spend time with them. My only gripe with the novel is when it switches between characters, and sometimes between decades and continents. I don’t want to leave any of the characters to switch to other ones. I am only a quarter of the way through the book, but I can already recommend it. Thanks to Brett Benner for recommending it to me.