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Fidelity
Michael Redhill
Canadian author Michael Redhill spent ten years writing his debut
novel, Martin
Sloane, published to wide acclaim in 2001. As if challenging himself to master the
whole of Henry Jamess The
Art of the Novel
in one fell swoop, Redhill fashioned a meticulous and structurally flawless narrative.
Told largely through the first-person voice of a female character recounting her love
affair with an enigmatic artist who later disappears under ambiguous circumstances, Martin
Sloane is that rare instance of an intelligent page-turner that permits readers to
respect themselves in the morning. And now, in a collection titled Fidelity,
Redhill exhibits a jewelers precision in crafting short stories. Not all of the ten
pieces here are equally strong, and a few are burdened with unnecessary or arbitrary
twists, but this is compelling work from a writer who is rapidly acquiring a
must-read reputation.
Invariably cast as middle-class denizens of dreary contemporary
cityscapes, Redhills characters are often disaffected and clueless to a fault. In
the story A Lark, a businessman on assignment in Calgary lapses into a casual
affair with a coworker. (It was possible, it came to him, to be perfectly content in
a marriage and still be capable of infidelity, and this surprised him.) The divorced
Upstate New York couple depicted in Mount Morris reunite once a year for a
drunken evening of escalating insults and desultory sex. Their annual ritual growing
stale, the ex-wife bitterly confesses to her ex-husband that she almost cheated on him
when they were married. I should have, she stingingly tells him, but my
optimism made me stupid. The authors background as a poet and playwright is
seen to good effect in his sharp dialogue, which crackles with undercurrents of hostility
and inarticulate yearnings. He even manages the impressive feat of building tension and
dread in a sixteen-page story (Split) comprised entirely of aimless chitchat
around a blackjack table at an Indian casino.
While the less
successful stories are diligent and workmanlike, admirers of Martin Sloane will
expect more of Redhill. Overtly provocative themes seem to undermine the integrity of his
oblique style. The Victim, Who Cannot Be Named, for example, concerns a
suburban couple who stumble across a sexually explicit video tape showing their teenage
daughter cavorting with two classmates. The storys execution never rises above
movie-of-the-week sensationalism. In The Flesh Collectors, middle-aged
thrice-married Nathan Roth is confronted with the frustrating predicament of his current
wifes allergy to latex condoms. He reluctantly consents to having a vasectomy.
Against the moral counsel of his rabbiwho is little more than a straight man for the
storys jokey premiseRoth considers a sperm bank donation to hedge his bets.
The protagonists name is no doubt a sly nod to Philip Roths torrentially randy
fiction. Redhill, however, lacks the prurient conviction and scabrous wit needed to
kick-start this kind of ribald material. Only at the end, in a breathtaking denouement
totally at odds with the sniggering tone that precedes it, does he find the astringent
blend of farce and anguish that should have informed The Flesh Collectors from
the beginning.
Worth the
price of the book is Human Elements, a beautifully modulated first-person
narrative of a depressed and love-scarred poet named Russell. Seeking Thoreauvian solitude
in the woods, he rents a summer cabin beside a lake. Its not long before his mopey
tranquility is disrupted by a pair of bickering marine biologists tracking frogs along the
waters edge. After a particularly scalding argument, the woman of the team decamps
to Russells front yard and they begin a wary but oddly healing friendship-cum-courtship.
Its fitting that this is the final story in the collection. As fine as some of the
books earlier pieces are, they read like apprentice work when compared to the
novelistic detail and bruised emotionality Redhill brings to Human Elements.
No twisty plot turns this time, just the deep pleasure of reading a story whose characters
behave in a believably unpredictable fashion. Contemplating a frogs life limited to
peripheral vision, Russell muses, Letting life come in from the side was a wise
thing
- Bob
Wake