Fave Rave: Ellroy, Nunn and O’Connell

 

People are always asking me who my favorite writer is. I usually tell them something safe like Josephine Tey, Raymond Chandler or James Lee Burke. And I do love those writers and think them great, but they’re just not my absolute favorites. No, I don’t tell the truth because, to paraphrase Jack Nicholson, most people can’t handle the truth. They don’t really care what I like, they’re trying to find something that they will like, and as a dedicated book clerk I have to leave my ego behind (and believe me there’s nothing like working retail to rid you of that pesky ego) and guide them to something that will bring them reading pleasure, even if it’s something I’d never read myself.

Sometimes I go out on a limb and say what I really think – that James Ellroy is the world’s greatest living writer. That usually leaves them pop eyed. He’s pretty strong stuff and not for everybody, but noone in American lit since the Beats has been as relentlessly experimental and audacious. Ellroy’s the only one who seems to be able to channel the old pulpy noir spirit of Goodis and Thompson without seeming mannered. I’ve met him a couple of times and he’s one of the few people I’ve encountered whose mere presence seems to short circuit the mighty UBU brain. Unfortunately, despite all the books he claimed five years ago were about to come out in quick succession, his return to LA seems, like so many other writers, to have enervated him and he’s only published collections of his GQ columns since then, and although there’s the rumor of another novel to be published in 2008, there’s no publication date. Hopefully the success of the movie of LA Confidential won’t mark the highwater mark of his career. Maybe he should move back to Kansas City.

While the stares I get when I mention Ellroy may be horrified, at least they’re not blank. I also number Kem Nunn among my very favorite writers, but the few customers I have who are familiar with him have read him only because I’ve judged them hip enough to hand them one of his books. Either you don’t get Nunn or you become a fanatic. I consider it the highpoint of my admittedly pathetic literary career to have a quote from a review I wrote in the Agenda used as a blurb (the eighth one, true, but at least I’m above the guy from GQ) for Nunn’s masterpiece The Dogs of Winter. For a moment Nunn’s fortunes appeared to be rising above cult status, but the HBO series he collaborated on, John From Cincinnati, wiped out quickly. He never responded to the mash note I wrote him (the only guy whose ever gotten one, thank you) with my enclosed review when Dogs was published in hardback, but his agent did call me, and got the review into Scribner’s hands and into the paperback edition. I’m not as worried as I used to be that he’ll disappear under the waves, and although there’s nothing on the horizon, I’m sure somebody will publish his next novel when the time comes.

The guy I really worry about is Jack O’Connell. He had a good start, winning the Mysterious Press first book contest for his amazing Box 9, a work about designer drugs, linguistics, the post office and a million other things. In it he introduced the reader to the decaying, thoroughly corrupt, rusting New England mill town of Quinsigamond, O’Connell’s own personal Yoknapatawpha County, an unappealing slab of the post-industrial whose dark soul was further explored in his next two books, Wireless and The Skin Palace. Although these works were entertaining and also built around provocative themes, they weren’t quite up to the Box 9 standard, reflecting, much like William Gibson’s follow ups to Neuromancer, an author ill at ease with the demands of the traditional genre series. But they were certainly a whole lot better than the silence that followed, and I feared the curse of the three book contract, following which many a good writer has disappeared from view. So imagine my joy when Word Made Flesh appeared from another publisher, and not only was it a Quinsigamond novel, it was a great one, a meditation on crime and memory and the word, all wrapped up in a noir package.

But it’s out of print now too, and the silence extended even longer. Then I got that old thrill again to see an O’Connell book called The Resurrectionist with a publication date of April in the Ingram catalogue. But even better than that, the wonderful people at Algonquin Books sent me a uncorrected proof, which I tore into.

It’s hard to describe how these favorite authors affect me. To be in the middle of their work is like being under the influence of a very fine drug or a very real dream. While it has some noir elements, The Resurrectionist is not really a mystery, and only tangentially enters the Quinsigamond universe. It’s rather driven forward by the unraveling of various mysteries, most of them concerning Sweeney, a hapless pharmacist, who has come to the vaguely sinister Peck Clinic to seek care for his son Danny, who is in a persistent coma. Sweeney is a bitter, unstable character, whose guilt and wounds concerning his departed wife and damaged son are still very close to the surface. Besides Dr. Peck, the director of the clinic (who I can’t help but visualize as Dr. Finklestein from The Nightmare Before Christmas), and Alice, his beautiful daughter, who are into some a little too cutting edge therapies, Sweeney and Danny find themselves of interest to a brutal but metaphysical biker gang, The Abominations. Parallel to the main narrative and intersecting it at odd points is another story, ostensibly from a comic book beloved by Danny called Limbo, the tale of a group of saintly circus freaks and their travails.

The real hero here is consciousness itself, and the action circles its central mysteries like a whirlpool, revealing the answers to many questions even as it raises many more. As reaching the center of the maelstrom and finding final knowledge is, of course, the same thing as annihilation, the common narrative strategy used by authors from Melville to Nunn when approaching this place of no contradiction is to have an observer exit the ship just before the final moment, an Ishmael who survives but is still able to witness Ahab’s destruction. In our debased age, word processors like Steven King dare to present their myopic vision of the realm beyond the looking glass, full of rubber monsters and special effects, leaving nothing to the imagination and at the same time obscenely trivializing the unspeakable. O’Connell, however, takes another, less traveled path, one used by Poe in such works as The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym and MS. Found in a Bottle – we leave the central character suspended, on shipboard at the moment when everything will become clear and the world as he knows it will cease to exist. Bliss.

 

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