I first
encountered the stories of George
Saunders stories when I read “The 400-pound CEO” in Harper’s Magazine in 1993. Saunders soon published other stories,
which I read avidly, and then, in 1997, published his first collection of
stories, CivilWarLand in Bad Decline. Not
only did I immediately buy the book, I also did something very rare for me: After
reading it, I sent him my copy with a fan letter. Saunders returned the book
with a nice inscription and added a warm letter of thanks.
I’ve kept up
with his career since then, reading his stories (mainly in The New Yorker) and buying his books. His latest is Tenth of December, which is another
collection of odd tales of life—either contemporary or in the near future—in
suburban America. As usual, Saunders’ eye is keen, whether he is describing the
inner fantasies of people who have failed at life or the interactions between
people who can barely stand each other’s company. And, also as usual, many of
these stories are wickedly funny.
Some of the
stories, such as "Puppy," however, are unbelievably sad. Told from
two points of view—an upper-class mother who takes her children to look at the
puppy offered by sale by a lower-class mother of a mentally handicapped child—this
story suggests that any communication between people of different social status
isn't possible, which leads to a puppy not being adopted by a family that could
have cared properly for it. Instead of the upper-class children having a puppy
to make them happy and the lower-class family having $20 to help them eat, no
one has anything. I'm not sure if this is pessimism or realism, but it's damn
bleak.
Also bleak is
"The Semplica Girl Diaries," written in the form of a journal, which
tells the story of a father trying to please his teenaged daughter, who has
befriended a rich girl, by giving her a birthday party for the ages.
Predictably, things go wrong (even after the father miraculously wins $10,000
in the lottery), and daughter and father wind up thoroughly humiliated.
Saunders usually understates the tragedy in his stories, and he does in this
one, too, as it becomes clear later in the story that something truly horrific,
which I won't describe here, has become a new status symbol in suburbia.
Suffice to say, once the true horror of the story sets in, you feel a sudden
shock of recognition.
A longer story
in this collection, "Spiderhead," is familiar ground for fans of
Saunders, for it describes the dystopian experiences of an average sort of guy
in the not too distant future. In this story, the protagonist, Jeff, is a
prisoner who is a guinea pig for experiments in neuroscience that involve
flooding his body with artificial stimulants or depressants to gauge how he
responds. Can he, for instance, be made to feel deep desire for a woman for whom
he finds unattractive? Or, conversely, can he be made to feel emotionally
detached as he watches a young woman become so anxious that she kills herself?
The point of the experiments, it seems, is to see how commercially viable these
new chemical compounds could be. "Spiderhead" is a genuinely scathing
indictment, not so much at what American society is now but of what it might
become in the next few years.
In some stories,
such as "Exhortation," Saunders returns to a theme that he's explored
often in his fiction: the miseries of being trapped in a soul-sapping mindless
job. In "Exhortation," written in the guise of a cheerful memo, a
mid-level manager tries to buck up the spirits of his sales staff, who have
been missing their quotas, but his language is really just an implied threat to
fire them all if they don't immediately meet their sales. It's reminiscent of
the sales competition in Mamet's Glengarry
Glen Ross: top salesman gets a Cadillac; second best, a set of steak
knives; everyone else, a pink slip. Similarly, in “My Chivalric Fiasco,” a man
working at a Renaissance theme park find himself promoted (from the janitorial
staff to faux palace guard) in exchange for his silence after he witnesses his
supervisor sexually assault a co-worker. Anyone who's ever been stuck in the
drudgery of the working life can surely appreciate Saunders' irony as he
skewers that dog eat dog world in these two stories.
Critics have
rightly hailed Tenth of December as
one of the best works of fiction of 2013, so I'm not alone in thinking it's a
collection of stories that resonates deeply as you read it. Check it out!
No comments:
Post a Comment