Books in Canada
Woods-their shadows, beauty, unfathomability and power to absorb and transform the unsuspecting traveler-also figure in Byatts fifth collection, Little Black Book of Stories, although in a much more pointedly allegorical fashion. Byatt is a writer who understands that the surreal, raw underpinnings of the fairy tale do not exist outside the realms of true life; they are, in fact, the very stuff of it. As Penny, in the collections opener, The Thing in the Forest, remarks, I think there are things that are real-more real than we are-but mostly we dont cross their paths, or they dont cross ours. Maybe at very bad times we get into their world, or notice what they are doing in ours. More Agent Mulder than Booker Prize Winner? Possibly. This quintet of stories is replete with the paranormal: doppelgangers, ghosts, monsters and odd transmogrifications-they all rear their ugly, unsettling heads. But what makes Byatts take on these supernatural phenomena compelling is the way she yokes them so completely to our very nature as human beings. In other words, they exist because we exist; the suspension of disbelief is a moot point. When Primrose, Pennys friend and fellow witness to the monster of the title, recalls a World War II childhood-She told herself stories at night about a girl-woman, an enchantress in a fairy wood, loved and protected by stuffed creatures, as the house in the blitz was banked in by inadequate sandbags.-we understand that she has only, and necessarily, cast the spells she requires in order to survive.
Byatt closes the collection with another story rooted in London, in the Second World War, The Pink Ribbon. In this heartrending tale, James-who is caring, with equal measures of compassion and despair, for his elderly, demented wife, Maddy Mad Mado-answers the door to a young, vibrant woman, a woman he later realizes to be Mados fetch, a symbol of all she once was, and someone James barely remembered and could not mourn. Like the opening story, the characters in The Pink Ribbon have been lacerated by the wreckage of the past, by war-time leave-takings and loneliness. These are losses, Byatt seems to be saying, that can only be expressed in fairy tale extremes and archetypes.
The Stone Woman, perhaps the most disturbing of the stories offered, details a womans gradual transformation from flesh to stone in language made lyrical by its geological specificity. Although I found the prose here exquisite, the endless cataloguing of stony change sometimes made for a claustrophobic narrative space, and I hankered for a happy ending that never quite, um, crystallized. Fortunately, Body Art, wherein a fierce, pierced installation artist falls into the arms of an unsuspecting doctor (a doctor whose respect for the sanctity of life and residue of religion eventually run smack up against the artists damaged body and complicated will) provides more joyful closure. In this story, an almost impossible stew of characters melt and finally merge into an undeniably hopeful flavour. It is a fairy tale finale tempered only by its grounding in the melodramatic way of real lives.
Similarly, in the spoofy (and ultimately spooky) Raw Materials, a creative writing teacher-the well-intentioned and ill-equipped Jack Smollett-instructs his students not to invent melodrama for the sake of it, and is later paralyzed in the face of an event that seems torn from the pages of the most torrid tabloid. Here then is one of the many revelations (each more thrilling and gratifying than any X-file) that spring from the pages of Byatts Little Black Book: life is not, in itself, art; yet art also cannot hide from the alternately uplifting and devastating soap opera that is real life.
Heather Birrell (Books in Canada)
From Publishers Weekly
From secret agonies to improper desires and the unthinkable, this slyly titled collection touches on more than a little bit of darkness. Booker Prize–winning author Byatt (
Possession) masterfully fuses fantasy with realism in several of these stories, packing a punch with her sometimes witty, sometimes horrifying examinations of faith, art and memory. In the stunning "The Thing in the Wood," two young girls, Penny and Primrose, sent to the countryside during the WWII London blitz, confront the unconscious come to life as a monster ("its expression was neither wrath nor greed, but pure misery.... It was made of rank meat, and decaying vegetation"). They return in middle age to face the Thing again, but Penny, a psychotherapist, doesn't fare as well as Primrose, a children's storyteller. A lapsed Catholic gynecologist tries to rescue a starving artist in "Body Art," enacting what Byatt casts as the very obstructiveness of the Church he left behind. It's a chilling story that shines with grace. Byatt's modern-day fairy tale, "A Stone Woman," details a woman's metamorphosis from flesh to stone, which is both terrible and redemptive ("Jagged flakes of silica and nodes of basalt pushed her breasts upward and flourished under the fall of flesh"). In "Raw Material," a creative writing teacher finds inspiration in the work of an elderly student who comes to a gruesome end, the student's life and death imitating bad art very unlike her own. The haunting final story of the collection, "The Pink Ribbon," about a man who is more troubled by remembering than by forgetting as he cares for his Alzheimer's-addled wife, turns on the appearance of the ghost of the wife's former self. With an accomplished balance of quotidian detail and eloquent flights of imagination, Byatt has crafted a powerful new collection.
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