Better Living Through Plastic
Explosives. By Zsuzsi Gartner. Pintail. $16.
When all you have to
offer is style, you had better have a lot
of it. Zsuzsi Gartner does. Style to
burn, style to toss willy-nilly about in the service of anything or nothing,
style that oozes from the pores of her short stories like attenuated treacle,
capturing readers as smoothly and assuredly as amber envelops insects and
eventually strangles them.
Indeed, that last
sentence is a slightly sarcastic parody of Gartner’s style. Seems overdone, you think? Here is an actual example, from a story called “Investment Results May Vary”:
“She is a thirty-eight-year-old woman lumbering around Granville Island Public
Market dressed like a roly-poly Vancouver Island marmot, an animal that in real
life is about to tip into the abyss, but who crookedly grins from all the
banners spanning the city’s bridges, and whose smaller but no less roly-poly
Beanie BabyTM version is clutched by American and British
and German and Japanese children passing through upgraded security at the
Vancouver International Airport, children who (kids will be kids) Olympics
organizers are counting on to relentlessly badger their parents to bring them
back four years from now for the Games (cue visual of Eternal Flame).”
Think that is an aberration? From later in the same story: “How many cubic
tonnes of topsoil and almost impenetrable glacial till and granitic bedrock
must be removed without recovering a single wall stud, newel post, or fragment
of ceramic tile, how far into the substrata must workers delve without a trace
of the chef-quality Amana gas range or the collection of stubby beer bottles
(bought at auction), how many heavy-equipment operators must make limp jokes
about digging a hole all the way to China and shake their heads at the
homeowners’ evident derangement as they ask them to excavate just one metre
deeper, how many times must their daughter sob, But I don’t want a new
Costa-Rica-Survivor BarbieTM, I want my Costa-Rica-Survivor BarbieTM, before the bereft
owners – who cringe at anything that smacks of the supernatural, pretend to gag
at the words chakra and aura, roll their eyes skyward when
anyone speaks of faith – must accept the unfathomable?”
As these two examples among many, chosen pretty much at
random, make clear, Gartner pours words forth in floods of connectedness that
hint at but ultimately prove to be largely devoid of meaning. She is perfectly
capable of writing pithy declarative sentences, and sometimes does – just to be
fair, here is one from that same story: “Dan and Patricia are everywhere,
spreading like toxic mould.” But Gartner
is so in love with her prose abilities that she puts them incontrovertibly at
the service of the prosaic. Cleverness
trumps meaning, involvement, personality, viewpoints and communication in
general in every one of the 10 stories in Better Living Through Plastic Explosives, whose title is the title
of the final tale in the book. The
stories are about – well, they are about nothing much once you strip away the
stylistic glitter, which is difficult with all those rhinestone words sticking
to the body suit of plot. Largely
undifferentiated and uninteresting people do largely unmeaningful things to
themselves and each other for reasons that constantly hint at profundity but
never quite get there, because Gartner is too busy enjoying her own
cleverness. Make no mistake: that
cleverness is substantial, and will be more than enough reason for many people
to read this book. It is hard not to admire an entire story called “Once, We
Were Swedes” that is built around the use of phrases that double as the names
of IKEA products – and that comes with a glossary at the end, translating each
phrase into its IKEA equivalent. But
after reading the story, a reader trying to remember what it was about will come up empty, because it is
ultimately about nothing at all.
Gartner is so clever, and so aware of her cleverness.
Take “We Come in Peace,” which begins
instead of ending with an explanatory page, this one labeled “Dramatis Personæ.”
This is an angels-visiting-humans story in which five youths, preteens and
teenagers, are “inhabited” by angels variously described as “empathetic,”
“practical & vengeful,” “learned,” “cheerful” and “merciful.” It is not a reassuring story, but neither is
it a downbeat one; it is, in terms of emotional affect, entirely empty. But it is enormously well-written: “‘I wanted
to disabuse them of their ill-conceived notions of martyrdom right then and
there,’ Zachriel would later claim, almost five years to the day we left
Arcadia Court, when a defaced For Sale sign went up on the Khan family’s front
lawn and the street was a jumble of yellow police tape, ‘but I just couldn’t
stop thinking about those Marys. Their lips. Their tongues.’” So much style in the service of so little
meaning.
Better Living Through Plastic Explosives is a book that,
stylistically speaking, is as salutary as a dip in the frigid ocean off the
coast of Vancouver, where Gartner lives. It is intellectually refreshing, a
wake-up tonic for those used to dull, plodding descriptive passages and pacing
that benumbs. But also like a leap into
freezing water, it is not something that signifies much of anything beyond the
Polar Bear swim itself. It is
experientially bracing but ultimately empty of anything with resonance, either intellectual
or emotional, a book to admire with “who cares?” at its core.
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