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Some insights into American life as it is: Doctorows
Sweet Land Stories
By Sandy English
9 May 2006
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the author
E.L. Doctorow, Sweet Land Stories, New York, Random
House 2004, 147 pp.
But at the time there was no leisure for thought.
The five short stories by E.L. Doctorow in this collection
were initially published between 2001 and 2003, that is, more
or less in the contemporary moment, characterized by great political
stress in the United States and all of the intellectual confusion,
uncertainty and anger that has accompanied it.
That moment and those reactions by and large go unexamined
in American fiction, even when they are acknowledged. Doctorow
is an exception to this trend. Far more than in his subsequent
Civil War novel, The March, which we will review separately,
in these short pieces he has pierced somewhat the shadow that
official society has cast over life in America.
Although he sometimes weakens the aesthetic unity of a given
story by over-cleverness, Doctorow does not necessarily damage
its force of insight into how people in America are living, thinking
and feeling today.
The volume is not served well by its first story, however,
A House on the Plains. The narrator is a teenager,
Earle, who moves from Chicago to rural Illinois with his mother
during the early 1900s. The story begins promisingly enough: Mama
said I was henceforth to be her nephew, and call her Aunt Dora.
Mama undertakes an elaborate scheme, a variation on the theme
of city slickers duping farmers, which makes them good money.
Mama and Earle use people in the worst way. Doctorow keeps the
reader in the grip of suspense and horror, but I found little
more than that to the story. Doctorow often seems to posit a universal
human abuse in his fiction, sometimes ignited by a crime mystery.
Earle speaks with a well-constructed naiveté; Doctorow
handles his voice artfully and precisely with a sense of the place
and time. The writer has often chosen to say something about American
sensibilities by setting his work in the first half of the last
century, or even earlier. Often he obliges readers to reflect
on the differences or similarities of our epoch and the storys.
But not here. I did not find his setting A House on the
Plains at the beginning of the twentieth century effective.
Although details seem genuine enough, Earle handles ghastly events
with a nonchalance that, arguably, is typical later in the century.
At least it does not feel authentic here. There is an obvious,
deliberate tension between the horrible events and Earles
good manners and calm tone.
At the end of the story, he taunts an innocent man in prison
who will be hanged: I whispered these words to him: Now
you have seen it all ... now you have seen everything.
There were horrible acts committed in 1900 and no doubt sociopaths,
but the storys events seem contrived.
The other four stories are more successful. In a review of
Best American Short
Stories 2003, I wrote about Baby Wilson: This
story concerns a baby-snatching and the subsequent flight from
the law. The narrator, Lester, wants no part of it, but feels
impelled to help for good or poor reasons, and drives around the
western United States as a fugitive. There is relief in the end.
The motivation for the baby-snatching seems silly, like the one
in the film Raising Arizona, but this story presents some
important images.
Michiko Kakutani writing in the New York Times
complains that Doctorows pieces in Sweet Land Stories
are missing an indelible sense of time and place and
fail to disclose a larger social landscape. These
have been, as she recognizes, some of the strengths of his writing,
and perhaps, as Kakutani contends, this recent work might lack
something compared to his other fiction.
Yet in Best American Short Stories 2003, Baby
Wilson stands in glaring contrast to most of the other stories:
we are in America at the turn of the twenty-first century. On
the lam, Lester lives by gambling and stealing credit. A Nevada
town is a railroad yard, a string of car dealerships.
The story has a real feeling for the emptiness and loneliness
of much of American life today. The characters lack consciousness
of their own lives, of the larger situation.
If anything, Sweet Land Stories discloses a larger
social landscape than the vast majority of recent American
works of fiction.
Like Baby Wilson, the third story, Joline,
a Life, gives us something authentic and necessary. The
story takes a young woman from age 15 to her early twenties. Joline
marries young; her ambitions are modest. A man seduces her. He
is at the peak of success in her community, with a nice
ranch house with a garden out back and a picnic table and two
hammocks between the trees.
Family violence and the misery of courts and incarceration
take over. She does a little hooking to get out West and traps
herself again with a petty drug dealer and double-crosser who
is almost a gentleman. Again there are unhappy spouses
and the police.
On to Las Vegas, a strip club, and a rich older man, who is
not what he seems, to Joline, but perhaps exactly what he seems
to the reader. No one, in fact, in her life lives up to his promises.
Things get dirtier as she moves up the social scale again to a
fundamentalist Christian of wealth and good family. Life is banal
and empty until beatings and humiliations ensue. Then come the
lawyers and her child is stolen.
When it is over, she is in Los Angeles with more dreams, but
still of the token variety: to be a movie star, perhaps. She inks
in comic books, now called graphic novels, for a living. Joline
is still young and now has a life of her own. There is some relief,
but not much hope for the young woman in a society that does not
take good care of the young. Joline: a Life raises
feelings of anger and sympathy.
A barren intellectual and emotional world also challenges the
characters in Walter John Harmon, although they are
a different sort of people. An educated lawyer and his wife have
become members of a religious cult. They are ready to suspend
rational thought and treat natural events as divine acts, as so
many are in the US at present.
The language of this story and the thoughts of its characters
seem quite in line with everything we know or suspect about a
certain type of Christian cult. We never leave the illusions of
the narrator, Jim, his sincere beliefs, the patent faith in the
cults leader, the nearly divine Walter John Harmon, who
has in his effortless way drawn so many of us to his prophecy.
Peace and comfort, true brotherhood, even warm sunlight and the
countrysides stillness are such strong lures that they cannot
be disrupted by any crisis, at least for those determined to avoid
the world outside the community.
And the story begins with a crisis. Within the communitys
isolated compound, Walter John Harmon requires the sexual use
of Jims wife, Betty. Jealous impulses rise in Jim, but what
is normal outside is not allowed to be normal inside the cult.
So Jim overcomes the crisis. He is the stronger for it, he
imagines, bolstered by what he is experiencing in the Unfolding
Revelation, which is that Walter John Harmon will take all sin
upon himself and unlike Christ, he will not ascend. The Holy City
will descend not too far from the compound, but Walter John Harmon
will live in sin, have a Swiss bank account, drive a Hummer and
drink a lot.
The stakes are high. Everyone seems so happy, a
visitor tells Jim.
Do you find that odd?
Yes, sort of.
Walter John Harmon of course represents all that is filthy
and deceitfulin the grand old tradition of American religious
hucksteringin the world that the cult-members are escaping.
He eventually runs off with Betty, and another crisis, one of
faith, arises in the community. When he disappears, a community
elder leads a prayer.
And then, they reason: What further proof did we need
of the truth of his prophecy than his total immersion in sin and
disgrace? Jim rises in the organization. He becomes an elder
and a leader. The story ends not in another con, but in Waco-like
fear. Now the community huddles together and there
is an inference that guns will soon be present.
Doctorow takes a wrong turn here, I feel. The conclusion does
not flow smoothly from the earlier portions of the story. It surely
hints correctly at something in the social air, but it is still
unnecessary and handicapping. Without the suggestion of violence,
the story is dramatically and thematically sufficient to show
the illusions and irrationality in which many disoriented people
find themselves trapped.
The final story is called Child, Dead, in the Rose Garden.
The story is not an indictment of the present occupant of the
White House, although the title inevitably suggests that. Imputations
of criminality of all sorts stick to the Bush administration.
Because it is so deliberately shocking, the title appears a trifle
gimmicky, but the story, fortunately, lives up to its sensational
billing.
An FBI agent in Washington, DC, Molloy, near retirement, must
investigate the discovery of a childs corpse in the Rose
Garden after an official function. The story starts with the familiar
routine of protecting the crime scene, security measures, and
inquiries. There are numerous cover-ups, dead-ends and fingers
pointed in the wrong direction. Molloy has to deal with shady
White House officials and corporate heads and their lawyers. Overall,
it is an ugly experience.
In the end, Molloy learns that the child comes from an impoverished
immigrant family. He had died of an incurable disease and an invited
guest placed his body in the Rose Garden. The event is never made
public and no one is called to account.
But Doctorow does impute guilt. When, finally, Molloy is able
to interview the responsible party, who belongs to a high social
status, we pass from the sadness of the boys home, a bungalow
like any other on the street except for the little front
yardit was not burnt-out, it was green to a breezy
and lovely place, emanating strength and confidence.
When Molloy conducts his interview, he finds out that the boys
corpse was left there as a protest. It would be a kind of
shock treatment, the culprit says, if they felt the
connection, even for just a moment, that this had something to
do with them, the gentlemen that run things? Thats all I
wanted.
The individual in question asks Molloy, Are you not one
of the configured gentlemen?
Configured in what way?
Configured to win. And fuck all else.
One senses that by configured here Doctorow means
on the inside, connected, endowed with
the family upbringing, education and social insularity that condition
the sense of entitlement and self-satisfaction of the American
upper echelons and their top functionaries.
There are artistic problems in this story as well. It is has
too much of the clichéd tired-but-honest
detective, also perhaps a slightly too stereotypical image of
the ruling class itself. But from the title to the end,
through a series of simple devices it depicts the elite as venal
and murderous.
It seems fair to say that a tint of pessimism and a sense of
powerlessness haunt the author. Undoubtedly, like most contemporary
American short stories, those in Sweet Land Stories suffer
from a certain mannered approach. There is too much cleverness
and quirkiness, too much focus on the style and structure beyond
the artistically necessary or satisfying. Events and history and
social processes cry out for artistic treatment, and the artists,
even many of the most sincere, remain far too concerned with trying
to impress.
Yet on the whole, these stories feel vital and genuine. In
most of Sweet Land Stories Doctorow has produced dispatches
from life as it is in the United States, where muddy thinking
is almost everywhere, where the most limited ambitions are thwarted
and where people do not do well at avoiding abuse woven into the
fabric of society.
See Also:
Best short
stories of 2003 could do better
[6 September 2004]
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