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The Contortionist's Handbook
Craig Clevenger
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The protagonist of The Contortionist's Handbook,
John Dolan Vincent, Jr., began life as an abnormally gifted child, in a chaotic and
violent blue-collar household. His puny size and his remarkable, fully-formed sixth digit
on one hand have contributed to Vincents warped sense of himself as a marginalized
outsider. Mistakenly placed in Special Ed classes, Vincent has an overriding fear of
coming to the attention of any authoritythe police, lawyers, doctors, but above all,
psychiatric doctors. He is willing to go to any length to avoid them.
Vincent draws upon his idiot-savant-like talents to avoid detection by
the authoritieshe becomes a master of sideshow sleight-of-hand tricks, of
hand-forging documents, of the chemistry which will bear out the illusion his forgeries
are real. Unfortunately, he also has a pronounced migraine disorder, the pain from which
is so great that he medicates himself into oblivion. It is unclear whether such
self-medication is, in fact, a way for Vincent to cloak from himself the knowledge of his
suicide attempts.
Thus begins his entrance into the noir maze of contemporary Los
Angeles. Vincent prowls the underground streets as an invisible maninvisible
primarily to himself. Underground LA is haunted, and the reader is ambushed by the ghosts
of Dashiell Hammet, William Burroughs, Charles Bukowski, Hunter S. Thompson, and others as
we follow Vincent through his self-created maze.
Vincent, the contortionist, has made a career of changing his identity
after each migraine attack leaves him in the hands of the authorities. Unlike a Kafka
protagonist, Vincent is a master of manipulating bureaucracies, exploiting the weaknesses
in their systems, slipping through the cracks. He is also a masterful reader of the
character of authority figures, which allows him to shift roles seamlessly and play to the
personal foibles of any given authority figureagain, to allow himself to slip
invisibly from their control. Locked into this peculiar folie à deux, Vincent perfectly
mirrors the world of power, reflecting back only what he knows they wish to see.
Vincents blindness to himself is mirrored in Rasputin, the cat a
girlfriend of his had rescued after it was hit and left deeply damaged. Rasputins
large, unseeing eyes, the preternatural charisma of the cats insane namesake, the
cats distress when too many people are present create but one of the doubling
effects laced throughout this novel.
Craig Clevenger reveals himself through his first novel, The
Contortionists Handbook, to be an abnormally gifted writerwith an
remarkable power to spin narrative. He has an inordinate ability to create suspense out of
accruing details. Clevengers rich vision of being down-and-out reverberates with
Michael Chabons vision of 1930s New York in The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.
Clevengers knowledge of literary terrain is breath-taking and
helps make The Contortionists Handbook a very satisfying read. The good news
is Clevenger is busy working on a second novel. And, who knows, maybe John Dolan
Vincent will appear again somewhere down the road.
- Les Wright