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Despite the odd fact that Raymond Carver and Ernest Hemingway have
both been tagged with the term "realistic writer," both write as if
they are more concerned with style and form than any kind of fidelity
to experience as actually lived by living, breathing people. The fact
that they foregrounded technique in this way essentially precluded
them from being successful at fooling the reader into believing the
reality of their stories. Where Sherwood Anderson often concealed his
writing in the voices of his characters, Hemingway's story structure
and the sentences he used often competed for attention with his
characters. His stories are as much about how he tells them as what he
tells the reader. And while Raymond Carver certainly isn't the
only writer to carry on Hemingway's mode of telling stories, his name
remains a popular byword for a certain kind of fiction.
I suspect both writers would squirm away from the majority of writing
passed off under their names, with its formulaic adherence to The
House Rules of the American Short Story. The kind of writing they're
often associated with usually has pleasant characters and mostly
smooth writing that only makes itself present in the odd lyrical
passage. This writing harkens back to Hemingway or Carver the way the
Olive Garden harkens back to an authentic Italian bistro. These books
are well written and words like "gorgeous" and "essential" have been
used to describe them. Dull as ditch water, I suppose, would not make
great dust jacket copy.
There has suddenly resurfaced, I suspect in reaction to this kind of
writing, the wild and jagged fiction of the 1970s, without the
academic luggage of meta anything or any evidence of the Stetson
pointed shadow of Donald Barthleme. While unrealistic fiction
continued to exist in the 1980s, realism was king. Lydia Davis and
Diane Williams both published books in the same decade that saw Ethan
Canin's The Emperor of the Air. But now there seems to be something
going on. Hardly a literary movement, but something unified enough
that it warrants Vince Pissaro in Harper's declaring yet another short
story renaissance. These writers don't seem to hang out together
much, last summer's issue of Conjunctions, "The State of the
Art: Fiction," not withstanding. They seem mostly united by a distaste
for the clean, well-wrought realistic story.
Which finally brings me to Kevin Canty. While his books bare the
tell-tale jacket flap names of Raymond Carver and Flannery
O'Conner, Honeymoon and other stories opens, inexplicably, with
a monologue from the point of view of Godzilla, written, first person,
from the point of view of a giant, bipedal lizard. This book only
superficially resembles his first one, A Stranger in this World, a
collection of realistic stories in the Hemingway mode. The stories are
often uncomfortable in the way that overhearing intimate details about
strangers is uncomfortable and everything that happens in this book
could actually happen, maybe actually did happen.
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