Not Even Immortality Lasts Forever
Mostly True Stories
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
December 16, 2019
McClanahan (The Natural Man) spins out slight but entertaining autobiographical tales based on his experience growing up in the South after WWII and coming of age artistically on the West Coast with Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters in the 1960s. In “A Work of Genius,” 14-year-old Ed is transfixed by the extravagant stunts of an itinerant bicyclist who visits his small Kentucky hometown, while the eight-part “Hatching of the Chicksaw” tracks the trials of Ed’s adolescence, from derailing his early promise in basketball by refusing to stop smoking, to rebelling at the idea of being made over into a Southern gentleman in college. Throughout, Ed exhibits the early stirrings of wanting to become a writer. He also reminisces about attending a high school production of One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest with Kesey, contemplates the mystery behind a trompe l’oeil dog guarding an abandoned building, and memorializes a ne’er-do-well great uncle who had a perverse, for a Kentucky citizen, dedication to the Cincinnati Reds. While some entries in the scattershot collection are not as fully realized, McClanahan’s rich material, ready wit, and unique turns of phrase hold interest. This will satisfy his fans.
December 15, 2019
Autofictional tales about the author's Kentucky childhood, friendship with Ken Kesey, and relationship with his memories. In "A Work of Genius," the opening piece in this shaggy but moving collection, McClanahan (I Just Hitched in From the Coast, 2011, etc.) tells the story of the day, in 1947, when an aging bicycle performer named Kramer visited Brooksville, Kentucky, and more or less wowed the pants off young McClanahan (then age 14) with his "uncanny kinetic miracles of equilibrium and grace and strength." In the seven intervening decades, McClanahan then says, he "recounted Kramer's wondrous exploits times beyond number, to family, friends, and all manner of other captive audiences," and, "over the course of all those tellings and re-tellings, the story took on something of a life of its own...and gathered unto itself certain adjustments, embellishments, flourishes, and adornments, to the point that eventually I wasn't quite sure I still recognized it myself." McClanahan's project here, though--in both "A Work of Genius" and, the reader must assume, the tales that follow--is to shed these "fanciful trappings" and, using a mixture of "quasi-reliable details" and limited creative license, fix some core version of his story "permanently...in writing." Disclaimer aside, McClanahan then lures the reader--with his trademark jocularity and bountiful prose--through the wistful banalities of a midcentury, middle-American boyhood. His anecdotes wind together, flowing almost associatively, and cover topics such as his infatuation with cigarettes; his fraught relationship with his entrepreneur father ("we were a well-oiled perpetual animosity machine"); a mismatched freshman year at a "Southern Gentleman's college," here called "Eustace J. Spoonbred University"; his friendship with Ken Kesey; and his lifelong appreciation for the Cincinnati Reds. If a couple of McClanahan's stories seem fundamentally inessential--case in point: "Me and Gurney Goes Out on the Town," in which the author recalls seeing (or says he does) a go-go dancer violently eject a verbally abusive patron from a seedy bar--the book, taken as a whole, performs a genuinely beautiful act of post hoc portraiture, eventually building into a protracted study of McClanahan's relationship with the erosive nature of time and the happy-sad miracles of memory.
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