The New York Review of Books - 24.04.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

42 The New York Review


dancing. “The improvisational situa-
tion can produce a helluva lot of anx-
iety,” she said:


The anxiety also comes when I
don’t want to be there—here—
right now.... The funny thing is

that if I knew—right now—that
I don’t want to be here—right
now—then I could play with that
and possibly turn it into being
here right now. But unfortunately,
knowing that you don’t want to be
here right now usually comes too

late to do anyone any good, until
maybe next time.

But “next time” was already here.
She played the tape during an impro-
vised solo performance. There she
was, dancing, “here—right now,” and

there the voice was, elsewhere, reflect-
ing on what it was like to be onstage.
“Next time I am going to try some-
thing new,” the voice said as she con-
tinued dancing. “I am going to say ‘It
has never been this way before; ain’t it
grand.’” Q

Storm Warning


Giles Harvey


Weather
by Jenny Offill.
Knopf, 208 pp., $23.95


In August 1968 The New Yorker
published Donald Barthelme’s short
story “Eugénie Grandet,” a two-page
absurdist parody of Balzac’s 1833 novel
about a wealthy provincial miser’s only
child and her tragic efforts to defy him.
A bit like Borges in “Pierre Menard,
Author of the Quixote,” Barthelme
takes a hefty canonical text and runs
it through his particle accelerator of
an imagination. All that remains of
Balzac’s intricate psychological drama
is a series of faux-naïf fragments. One
of them is a quotation from The The-
saurus of Book Digests summarizing
the novel’s plot; another the single sen-
tence, “A great many people are inter-
ested in the question: Who will obtain
Eugénie Grandet’s hand?”; another
the word “butter” repeated 113 times.
By condensing Balzac’s opus to a few
paragraphs, Barthelme was having a
laugh not just at his predecessor’s gen-
teel circumlocution—his tendency to
describe buildings and manufacturing
procedures and family trees in lavish
detail—but also at the conventions of
novelistic mimesis itself. Dialogue,
character development, the illusion
of a frictionless causal continuity be-
tween one scene and the next: more
than a century after the zenith of real-
ism, Barthelme seemed to be asking,
Weren’t we all getting a little old for
this kind of thing?
Barthelme makes a brief appearance
in Jenny Offill’s widely beloved sec-
ond novel, Dept. of Speculation (2014),
when its narrator, a promising young
writer whose creative ambitions have
been interrupted by the exigencies
of motherhood, recalls the following
exchange:


A student asked Donald Bar-
thelme how he might become a
better writer. Barthelme advised
him to read through the whole
history of philosophy from the
pre- Socratics up through the
modern- day thinkers. The student
wondered how he could possibly
do this. “You’re probably wast-
ing time on things like eating and
sleeping,” Barthelme said. “Cease
that, and read all of philosophy
and all of literature.” Also art, he
amended. Also politics.

Like Barthelme, Offill is a writer who
has read widely and intelligently enough
to understand just how much the con-
temporary reader can do without (and
how little time he has to spare). At less
than 180 pages, Dept. of Speculation
is the result of an inspired demolition


job. After spending years on a longer,
more traditional novel that refused to
come together, Offill stopped trying to
force it; instead, she wrote out what she
considered the best bits on index cards,
then shuffled them around until she ar-
rived at something she was happy with.
The streamlined version, made up of
elliptical yet propulsive fragments,
many of them no more than a sentence
long, tells the story of a marital crisis
with the efficiency of a comic strip.
Suggestive snippets of dialogue and
description are juxtaposed with sur-
real factoids and literary quotes; Offill
trusts the reader will know how to put
these pieces together.
The index-card approach wasn’t sim-
ply a way out of a creative impasse,
however; it was also a response to the
particular demands of Offill’s material.
As a young woman, the book’s un-
named narrator had planned never to
get married. “I was going to be an art
monster instead,” she tells us. “Women

almost never become art monsters
because art monsters only concern
themselves with art, never mundane
things.” So it proves with the narra-
tor who, in mundane fashion, falls in
love, gets married, and has a child. It’s
here that her troubles begin. Not only
is motherhood antithetical to a life of
artistic production; its monotony and
relentlessness threaten to render it un-
narratable. Offill’s rapid-fire account of
the experience at once reflects the new
parent’s scatterbrained, emotionally
turbulent state of being and alleviates
the subject matter’s inherent tedium.
One moment, the narrator is reeling
from the thrill of saying the words “my
daughter” for the first time, her heart
“beating too fast, as if I might be ar-
rested.” The next, she is overcome
with rage when she hears a woman on
the subway using the hopelessly mis-
taken platitude “sleeping like a baby”:
“I wanted to lie down next to her and
scream for five hours in her ear.” Later,

when her husband, a competent, car-
ing man whom she’d trusted uncondi-
tionally, starts sleeping with a younger
colleague at his office (“You fucked
a child! She’s a fucking child!”), the
same fractured narrative style just as
fittingly captures the deranging psychic
intensity of betrayal.

Dept. of Speculation marked a radi-
cal departure from Offill’s first novel,
Last Things (1999), a more straight-
forwardly told tale of a disintegrating
marriage as seen through the eyes of
the couple’s young daughter. Her latest
book, Weather, by contrast, represents
an artistic staying of the course. Again
we have as our narrator a searching,
fretful, self-divided woman in early
middle age, though this time, instead of
a novelist, she is a librarian at the uni-
versity where she failed to complete her
Ph.D.; again the narrator is married to
an even-keeled, attentive man whose
role it is to calm and contain her anx-
iety, though this time it is the wife and
not the husband who is led into tempta-
tion; again the couple live in Brooklyn
with an only child, though this time it is
a boy; and again Offill builds her story
out of a series of clipped and cutting
fragments, though this time, alas, her
method lacks the element of surprise.
What’s new is an expanded sense of
scale, an attempt by Offill to place her
characters within a larger, more vividly
congested social world. To be fair, Dept.
of Speculation doesn’t play out in a vac-
uum, even if the prevailing mood is one
of domestic claustrophobia. Members of
the downwardly mobile creative class,
the central couple have to pinch pennies
and work multiple jobs, and this contrib-
utes to their marital discontent. In the
end, their problems—or at least the eco-
nomic ones—are solved when the nar-
rator’s wealthy sister provides her with
a rambling country house, where she
and her family have the chance to start
afresh. It’s a somewhat glib conclusion
to an otherwise bracingly clear-eyed
novel, but it reflects Offill’s preoccupa-
tion with social realities and the limits
they impose on women who want to be-
come “art monsters.”
In Weather, domesticity remains
front and center, the source both of
life’s deepest satisfactions and its deep-
est pain, but the social realities that
bear down on it have metastasized. Not
only does Lizzie, the narrator, worry
that the spark has gone out of her mar-
riage to Ben, who holds an advanced
degree in classics but earns his living
designing educational video games;
the planet is also getting perilously hot.
By 2047, she reads online, “New York
will begin to experience dramatic, life-
altering temperatures,” but the psy-

Jenny Offill
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