In her debut collection of razor-edged short fiction, Vancouver's Charlotte Gill explores the seamy side of sex in the city. The ladykiller of the title story gets his kicks from rubbing up against strange women in malls and parking garages. Other protagonists include a washed-up diving instructor who can't stop fantasizing about his 16-year-old student, a confused young woman who drifts into a disastrous affair with her middle-aged professor, and barracuda-like twin sisters on the prowl for men on a Thai beach. In "Hush," the most disturbing of these seven tales of contemporary urban life, a desperate couple fixates on the crying baby in the apartment below in a vain attempt to repair their frying relationship. "Hush" was a finalist for the Journey Prize, but an even more artful piece of fiction is the opening story, "You Drive." In alternating flashbacks, a pot dealer and his casual girlfriend recall the sequence of seemingly disconnected moments that brought them to a nearly fatal smash-up on a snowy cliff. This story twists and turns like the lonely strip of highway the two are speeding down, revealing character in fleeting drive-by glimpses.
Gill's language is richly sensual, raked through with strangely vivid images ("a snotty evening rain," "the buds of our earphones"). Although her metaphors occasionally twine out of control ("The sky is a big grey pancake with pink light sizzling at its distant images") and her characters are somewhat limited, Ladykiller is an intriguing first offering in much the same vein as the fiction of Lisa Moore and Elise Levine. --Lisa Alward
I have a fancy that characters in short stories really want to be in novels. After all, the novel is a larger canvas and everyone wants a big life, fictional people as well as real. I suppose this is another way of saying that if characters and their stories are engaging the reader wants to read on to the next chapter and the next-wants a whole novel. If they are not engaging the story was a failure; either way it is hard for a short story to be enough in itself, and it takes a real master to give it a conclusive, satisfying totality.
It is not enough to peep through a window on characters engaged in a random series of actions, before they happen to shut the curtain or wander out of view. A short story is not a fragment or a snapshot. Short means told economically, not cut off, and story suggests an unfolding, a process, requiring the time-honoured structure of conflict, climax and denouement. The short story, like its ancestors the fable and the parable, uses the same devices as a long story-a novel-but without the luxury of discursively sprawling into all sorts of beckoning highways and byways. Choosing to write the short rather than long form of fiction means choosing precision over expansiveness.
A rant is not a story, a slice of life is not a story, and a nervy excited effusion of random thought-lets is not a story. This collection contains various slices and effusions. Charlotte Gills Ladykiller is a confident collection, but essentially she lays out the same scenario six times: a doomed temporary couple, less lovers than opponents, separate due to disaster, violence, or sheer battle fatigue (in the seventh story-the only one told in the first person-all three of these occur but the couple are twin sisters not lovers), and we are as depressed by their personalities as they are by each other. We dont enjoy our time with them, although Gill presents them deftly and accurately. In each case the man bails out of the relationship because she was so insufferable, or because he was so insufferable. And we have had to suffer them all.
Nobody seems likeable in Gills collection, and she has no forgiving tolerance for her characters. There is Dale, the pear-shaped accountant with a short body and a long ego, and Kitsilano Pam, owner of a vitamin store who takes out big photo ads of her chiseled self in the centre of the wellness directory. Patty the hypochondriac insomniac expresses her mood in some snippy chopping and peeling of vegetables. Tan arrives for an assignation in a filthy, grumbling mood, and Roz in the title story Ladykiller, slays (her partner) with a look thats like an icicle jabbed into his chest. There is a surfeit of joylessness here.
In the first story a bleak couple crashes the mans pot-filled truck on a snowy highway on the way to his dealer, and the story tells-in chronologically backward steps-how the two of them came to be in that particular wrong place at that time, despite their meticulous indifference to each other. The backward progression to the inauspicious beginning isnt comfortable as a narrative method, but maybe thats exactly why the author chose it to tell the story of this jarringly uncomfortable relationship. With men, things went so predictably, cataclysmically wrong, says the female character. She could be speaking for all the females in Gills stories. After realizing that she was at the stage of being ditched by this particular disastrously chosen partner, she also considers that she nudged herself into these endings, as if they were pre-written, and in a peculiar way it satisfied. This mechanical predestined misery is pretty much the program for all the stories in this collection, but I am not sure that it satisfies the reader.
There is verisimilitude, certainly, and also a talent for bringing places alive so that even the reader who hasnt been there somehow recognizes them. An island beach in Thailand, where I havent been, seemed as real to me as a snowy highway outside Vancouver or a tacky mall in Port Alberni on Vancouver Island, where I have been. So, reading these stories, we are there. But why? Certainly not for the pleasure of it.
Gills last story ends with one participant in an abortive adulterous coupling making an undignified stumbling exit by elevator. Wheres tragedy when you need it? asks the other, watching him. Not here. Tragedy requires heroes, and Gills stories are about either low-level villains, neurotics or buffoons. The fact that we recognize them, thanks to Gills observant discriminating eye and telling phrases, doesnt make us care for them. Maybe it even hardens us, when we see these characters unattractive counterparts (and who isnt sometimes like them?) in the real world.
It is fashionable today to judge a short story by its language rather than its shape. Thus we ask for less from the form than readers once did. A short story need no longer be a small perfect gem, merely to contain gem-like phrases within a whole which may in fact be a fragment rather than a narrative unit. By this contemporary standard this collection succeeds. It rewards the reader trolling for zesty phrases or wanting to watch an author throw darts at irritating types and trends, and scoring an easy bulls eye. The stories in this collection display verve and skill, but the author has not yet harnessed these qualities to any substantial literary purpose.
Barbara Julian (Books in Canada)