Financial Times Europe - 02.11.2019 - 03.11.2019

(Grace) #1
2 November/3 November 2019 ★ FT Weekend 11

Cal. Markovits shows the ripple effect
that a break-up has on other relation-
ships, as family members feel their loy-
alty to Paul challenged by their symp-
athy towards Dana.
A Weekend in New York xplored mul-e
tiple characters’ perspectives but it was
ultimately Paul’s novel, in part because
the reader rooted for him on the court.
Its sequel is a broader family portrait.
Bill, the patriarch, spends most of it
in upstate New York at his ailing sister’s
hospital bedside, re-immersed in his
Jewish roots while his wife, children
and grandchildren celebrate Christmas
in Texas. The elder daughter Susie is
moving to Oxford with her English hus-
band but their marriage is wobbly,
while Nathan, the oldest brother, has a
potentially life-threatening illness and
faces moral dilemmas in his legal
career. Jean, the youngest of the sib-
lings, is living with an older man who’s
left his wife and children.
The novel dramatises the chaos and
claustrophobia ofprolonged family
gatherings where, as Paul puts it, “You
never have the conversations you want
to have... Something always comes up,
other people get in the way.” The reader
is like a peripheral guest, taking sides in
squabbles and feeling frustrated at how

Books


I


n Ben Lerner’s third novel,The
Topeka School, we encounter Adam
Gordon, a budding poet and crack
competitive debater in his final
year at high school in Kansas,
where his parents are psychologists at
“the Foundation”.
It is 1997, and Adam’s mother Jane is
the author of a best-selling book that
brings her the unwelcome attention of
the Christian fundamentalists of the
Westboro Baptist Church, as well as
threatening phone calls from the kind of
men who today would be misogynistic
internet trolls.
His quieter, ostensibly less accom-
plished father Jonathan works at the
Foundation with troubled young men
he calls the “lost Boys”. These include
Darren Eberheart, an elementary
school friend of Adam’s who, by late
adolescence, smoulders in inarticulate
and solitary rage on the outer limits of
his social circle.
Some readers will recognise Adam as
the narrator of Lerner’s first novel,Leav-

ing the Atocha Station 2011). As in that(
book — and indeed in his second novel
10:04 2014), which is narrated by a(
writer named Ben who, like Lerner, lives
in Brooklyn and writes poetry as well as
fiction — here he combines the autofic-
tional (Lerner’s parents werepsycholo-
gists at the Menningerclinic in Topeka,
where he grew up) and the metafic-
tional with exceptional dexterity.
In the earlier book, the 24-year-old
Adam is consumed by doubts about the
authenticity of his vocation as a poet (“I
tended to find lines of poetry beautiful
only when I encountered them quoted
in prose”) and about the ability of liter-
ary language to catch reality in its net.
At one point here, Lerner puts a simi-
lar kind of self-interrogation in the
words not of the adolescent Adam but in
those of his father, who recalls that
when he would read a book in graduate
school, he would be “acutely aware of
other people watching me, of how I per-
formed absorption, which of course dis-
tracted me from the page”.
But unlike its predecessors, which
were both narrated in the first
person,The Topeka School ccupies mul-o
tiple points of view: Adam’s, Jane’s,
Jonathan’s and Darren’s. This gives it an
expansiveness that, for all their quali-
ties, the earlier books lacked.
The Topeka School s ai Bildungsroman,
therefore, a portrait of the poet as a
young man — albeit one couched in an
idiom that is distinctively Lerner’s. So
alongside an exploration of fraught fam-
ily dynamics (for which the setting in
the Foundation provides a rich psycho-
therapeutic framework), there are set
pieces that allow the author to explore
what he recently described in an inter-
view with the New Yorker as “litera-
ture’s ability or inability to capture...
barely perceptible sensations that can
be difficult to verbalise”.
Early in the novel Adam wonders if
other people see the phosphenes, or
retinal charges, he sees when he closes
his eyes. Are these patterns unique to

him or are they universal? He presses
his thumb against his girlfriend’s closed
eyelids and asks if she perceives the
same red sparks that he does.
Adam’s preoccupation with the lin-
guistic dimension of the problem of
other minds, the recognition that lan-
guage is the “fundamental medium of
sociality”, is an enduring motif of the
novel. Much later, he visits his grandfa-
ther in a nursing home. The old man is
nearly mute, capable only of emitting
occasional noises that, Adam thinks,
“might have been attempts at pho-
nemes, at sense, at language. Little lin-
guistic phosphenes.”
When they leave the nursing home he
asks his mother whether she thinks his
grandfather can listen but not respond.
She says she does. “That seems like the
worst to me,” Adam says. “A nightmare.
Not being able to talk back.”
Being able to talk back, of course, is
the key to Adam’s success as a competi-
tive debater. It is also the source of his
standing in the Hobbesian hierarchy of
high school.
Adam’s prowess at “freestyling” earns
him an entrée to circles from which
he, a prizewinner with a growing love
of poetry, might otherwise have
been barred. Most children have to
learn to “pass” at school, but he is
particularly adept at navigating the
distance that separates the hyper-
articulacy of talk around the dinner
table at home from the Midwestern

simulacrum of hip-hop at school.
Darren’s social failures, by contrast,
are rooted in a “deep incomprehension
of the language game in which he was
attempting to feign fluency” — in this
instance, tough-guy trash-talking that
mimics the cadences of gangsta rap. His
terminal inability to properly master
the codes is exemplified when he insists
on accessorising the baggy black jeans
favoured by his peers with an incongru-
ous beige belt.
It falls to Adam’s mother to worry
about the downsides of her son’s way
with words, about what one might call
the politics of speech, which turns out to
be one of the major preoccupations of
the novel. At a family meal, Jane winces
at the way her son constantly talks over
his girlfriend. She tries to rationalise his
behaviour — to think of “my bully of a
son as a vulnerable young man passing
through a complicated social and hor-
monal stage” — but can’t help also
thinking of the anonymous men who
want to silenceher.
And watching Adam debate she is
“both fascinated and unnerved”. His
speech coach advises him to “interrupt
[his] highbrow fluency with bland
soundbites of regional decency”. But
Jane clings to a fantasy of that fluency
“eventually being harnessed for impor-
tant social work”.
Lerner, I think, wants us to see that
this fantasy is not only Jane’s, but also
that of a certain idea of America itself.

Rhyme and reason


The narrator of ‘Leaving the Atocha Station’ returns as a yperarticulateh


schoolboy in a novel with multiple points of view.ByJonathan Derbyshire


Cat O’Neil

Siblings gone south


Max Liu onan absorbing
portrait of the tensions, chaos

and cabin fever of a prolonged
family gathering in Texas

F


ifty or so pages intoChristmas
in Austin —the second novel in
what Benjamin Markovits’s
publisher is calling his “family
saga” — I was feeling worried.
Last year’sA Weekend in New York asw
hardly plot-driven, but its tennis player
protagonist Paul Essinger’s prepar-
ations for the final US Open of his career
created suspense, and its structure was
as taut as the strings on his rackets. By
contrast, the beginning of the new book
features a lot of downtime.
Still, I needn’t have worried. The
drama ratchets up as the Essinger sib-
lings arrive at their family home in Aus-
tin, Texas, for a seasonal gathering. As
the novel continues, “the presence of
accumulated life”, as one character puts
it, proves utterly absorbing.
It picks up with the Essingers about a
year and a half after the ending ofA
Weekend in New York. Thirty-five-year-
old Paul has begun his long retirement
by walking out on his partner Dana and
their toddler Cal and moving from New
York to Austin, where he grew up and
where his parents, Bill and Liesel, still
live. “There’s got to be a kind of life pos-
sible that would seem to him worth liv-
ing,” writes Markovits, in an early
example of the free indirect style used to
convey the characters’ thoughts.
The other three Essinger siblings,
their partners and children all descend
on Austin for Christmas, as do Dana and

Exquisite
Cadavers
by Meena
Kandasamy
Atlantic £5.99
112 pages

Being able to talk back is


the key to Adam’s success as
a debater and the source of

his social standing at school


long it takes for the group to make plans.
Whenever somebody suggested an
afternoon stroll, or going to a bar for a
margarita after dinner, I was ushering
them out the door, so acutely did I sense
their cabin fever.
Susie, a lapsed academic, envisages
writing a book about “the idea of family
as anescapefrom history, or an insul-
ation from it, from political forces and
social pressures and cultural shifts”.
At first glance, this could be Marko-
vits’s project too — but even though the
Essingers are heterosexual, well-off and
white, social forces shape their lives,
with Nathan and Jean arguing about
politics, everybody observing Austin’s
transition into a hipster colony and the
scars of southern racial oppression visi-
ble to those who are looking. When
Nathan’s daughter learns about a black
man who worked for the house’s previ-
ous owner and lived in a garden shed,
the novel hints at the kind of territory
Markovits explored inYou Don’t Have to
Live Like This 2015) — one of this dec-(
ade’s subtler fictionalexplorations of
race, class and gentrification.
Markovits has been open about the
autobiographical elements to the Ess-
inger books (he was raised in Austin by
a German mother and American father,
and has siblings in Ivy League
academia), and yet he presents his char-
acters with a degree of objectivity that
lets the reader decide where their sym-
pathies lie. Early in his career, Marko-
vits published a trilogy of novels about
Lord Byron, but I sense that the Essing-
ers’ story could run to more than three
books. At least I hope so, because I’m
already missing them, looking forward
to the next instalment and wishing I
were going to Austin this Christmas.

of the LAPD when a stolen “murder
book” surfaces, detailing the death of an
ex-con decades ago. Also reappearing is
Connelly’s low-rent lawyer (and Bosch’s
half-brother) Mickey Haller. All three
are soon obliged to tread painfully on
police toes before it is revealed why the
murder book was stolen years before.
Juggling a characteristically crowded
storyline (halfway through the book,
Bosch is coping with five investigative
tracks), Connelly demonstrates once
again why he is held in such esteem.
If you’re the UK’s foremost writer of
classic ghost stories, why bother to ven-
ture into the overcrowded field of the
police procedural? Thankfully, Susan
Hill did just that with her novels featur-
ing saturnine copper Simon Serrailler,
of whichThe Benefit of Hindsight
(Chatto & Windus £18.99) is the latest —
and it’squite a return to form after last
year’s quotidianTheComfortsofHome.
Serrailler, coping with the loss of his
arm, has returned to police work at
Lafferton CID. He finds solace in making
drawings in the vaulted roof of the local
cathedral, but when a gay couple are
robbed by initially friendly young
motorists, Serrailler deduces that there
may be an organised crime strategy in
play. A press blackout that he orders has
unexpected consequences — a mistake
that could have benefited from the titu-
lar benefit of hindsight. Readers of Hill/
Serrailler will be used to the fact that she
crams her narratives with a host of per-
sonal character detail — very much the
case here.
American writer Rene Denfeld’sThe
Butterfly Girl Weidenfeld £14.99) is a(
follow-up to the excellentThe Child
Finder, with thirtysomething private eye
Naomi Cottle continuing to look for the
sister she has not seen since they were
both abducted as children. At the same
time, Naomi is dealing with 12-year-old
Celia (who has suffered sexual abuse at
the hands of her stepfather), and finds
herself investigating the murder of
street children. Denfeld expertly evokes
the lives of the vulnerable in society.
Antti Tuomainen’sLittle Siberia
(Orenda £8.99, translated by David
Hackston) is already a considerable suc-
cess in the author’s native Finland. A
priest called Joel is protecting a valuable
meteorite while trying to come to terms
with the pregnancy of his wife (the child
may not be his); violence erupts. By no
means Nordic noir of the familiar vari-
ety, this is eccentric, humorous fare,
reminiscent of nothing so much as a
Coen Brothers movie.
Finally, three expertly turned novels
from three reliable talents.The Shape of
Nightby Tess Gerritsen (Bantam £20)
has its troubled food writer heroine dis-
covering that she is not alone in an iso-
lated house on a hill; it’s a clever con-
temporary spin on the Gothic novel.
And bothNow You See Them y Ellyb
Griffiths (Quercus £14.99) andBryant
and May: England’s Finest y Christo-b
pher Fowler (Doubleday £16.99) are
infused with a rich and beguilingly
eccentric Englishness, full of character
and an idiosyncratic sense of place.

BarryForshaw’slatestbookis
‘CrimeFiction:AReader’sGuide’

Daggers come out


T


he film industry has the
Oscars; the world of crime
fiction has the Crime Writ-
ers’ Association Daggers —
and the imprimatur of the
latter can produce quite as much of a
sales fillip as those gold statuettes. At
this year’s awards dinner (which I have
beenMC-ing for years), those carrying
home the big baubles included MW
Craven forThe Puppet Show nd Dova
Alfon forA Long Night in Paris, and the
evening was a reminder of what a vin-
tage year it has been for the genre. How
many of the following will be up for
next year’s awards?
After several successful standalones,
the writing team who make up “Nicci
French” — Nicci Gerrard and Sean
French — inaugurated a new series with
a recurring character, a psychotherapist
called Frieda Klein. I was among the
admirers who lamented this publishing
imperative and were wistful for the days
of a new protagonist for each new Nicci
French novel — often a woman making
catastrophic mistakes that plunge her
life into chaos.
Well, we can rejoice — withThe Lying
Room Simon & Schuster £14.99), Nicci(
French is back to what she does best:
dispensing trenchant psychological sus-
pense in a one-off format, in which the
fate of the central character is up for
grabs. Neve Connolly dresses in sexy
underwear for an assignation with her
lover. But on arriving at his flat, she
finds him with his head staved in, a
bloody hammer nearby. Instead of
phoning the police (terrified of how rev-
elation of her affair will hit her family),
she cleans the death scene, removing
not only traces of herself (she thinks)
but of whoever committed the murder.
It’s an ill-advised action, but this is,
after all, a Nicci French heroine. She
is soon engulfed in a maelstrom of lies
and betrayal. Neve is a wonderfully
conflicted heroine with whom it’s easy
to identify. Readers will find themselves
manipulated in the most pleasurable
of fashions.
In a world in which absolute values
are increasingly amorphous, it’s com-
forting to be able to say that some things
are just the very best. Such as the work
of Michael Connelly, whoseThe Night
Fire Orion £20) is further proof of his(
undimmed creativity.
Old and new Connelly protagonists
interact here: Detective Harry Bosch is
drawn out of uneasy retirement into
another teaming-up with Renée Ballard

By Barry Forshaw


GENRE ROUND-UP


CRIME FICTION


couple,” she first writes in the margin.
Once she yields, this decision is injected
into the narrative: Maya becomes
mixed-race. (To cause tension, it’s
imperceptible, enough that Maya recog-
nises racist undertones directed towards
Karim but not her, that she can whizz
through border control but has to wait
for him.) When Kandasamy finds ithard
to empathise with Maya, she makes her
pregnant. (At the time of writing, Kan-
dasamy was too: “In the short term, my
concerns become her concerns.”) When
reality and fiction overlap, she tells us so.
Exquisite Cadavers s deeply lyrical,i
with space given for thoughts to build.
Written in the omniscient third person,
the main narrative flips between Maya
and Karim’s perspective. Kandasamy
zooms in, focusing on their dynamic
rather than action. Karim is too fixed,
Maya too malleable. Film tropes recur:
Karim seeing through a filmic lens,
Maya judging her life through films.
With the writer present on the page,
every choice feels driven. The result is
an exploration of how discrimination
can pull and pick at intimacy. Kan-
dasamy’s presence only enhances the
fiction; her sense of life and art intro-
ducing a never-ending conversation
between writer, text and reader.

Read between the lines


A bold foray into metafiction
explores the lives of a married

couple and delivers brilliance,
writesRebecca Watson

E


xquisite Cadavers started,
Meena Kandasamy writes in
its preface, as “a reaction to
the reception of my second
novel”. Shortlisted for the
2018 Women’s Prize, hen I Hit You: Or,W
A Portrait of the Writer as a Young Wife
plays defiantly with form and voice.
The novel drew on experience, and this
overlap, she writes, was used by some
critics as reason to call it “memoir”. Its
intended genre was disregarded. By
doing so, they were “sidestepping the
entire artistic edifice”.
InExquisite Cadavers, Kandasamy
locates herself on the page — literally
taking to the margins. Every page is
indented, a line drawn, leaving space on
the outer side for Kandasamy to write
in smaller font. Here, she writesas
writer,interacting with the text and the
reader as the story progresses. She
begins an experiment to document the
collision of fact and fiction.
The novel follows a couple: Maya,
who works for a newspaper, and Karim,
an aspiring Tunisian film-maker, pres-
sured nto making something about hisi
heritage. Their marriage is steeped in
tension,exacerbated by insecurities.
This is what their dynamic becomes,
anyway — but these are decisions Kan-
dasamy makes, often live for the reader
in her designated margin. “I resist, and
then yield, to the urge to reflect on the
interracial nature of the [... ] fictional

The reader must make a choice about
how to readExquisite Cadavers —but it
isn’t difficult. There is a natural step-
back, step-forward between the two
sides of the page, like letting yourself be
moved by waves. The margins aren’t
pedantic, but powerful ruminations on
Kandasamy’s role as artist, and the news
and research that dominate her mind as
she writes. At one point, her column in
the margin is taken up by search results;
at another, it is a list of atrocities.
Sometimes the two trails are separate,
sometimes what seems distinct is
nudged askew: rain in the fictional
world provokes a real memory that ends
with rain; the dangers of the UK govern-

ment’s Prevent programme set alight
the fiction, then spread to Kandasamy’s
margin. Sometimes, the author quiet-
ens. “I am good with creating fictional
fathers,” she writes, her own father too
difficult to pen in English.Maya and
Karim’s conversation about parental
conflict continues alone.
Exquisite Cadavers’ experiment deliv-
ers a book that is slyly funny and pro-
foundly thoughtful. It is common
for critics and readers to belittle women
by assuming they write out of catharsis
rather than to create.Exquisite Cadavers
is not just a fierce rebuttal.It’s a work
of brilliance.

The reviewer’s debut novel, ‘little scratch’,
is published by Faber & Faber next year

Christmas
in Austin
by Benjamin
Markovits
Faber £16.99
432 pages

The Topeka School
by Ben Lerner
Granta £16.99/Farrar, Straus and
Giroux $27, 304 pages

With the author present


on the page, the result is


a conversation between


writer, text and reader


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