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The Stones of Summer
Dow Mossman
Fifteen years ago, Errol Morriss
documentary The
Thin Blue Line famously resulted in freeing an innocent man from prison. Last
year, in what is arguably a comparable turn of events, Mark Moskowitzs documentary Stone Reader rescued a forgotten
American writer from obscurity. Moskowitzs scruffy and warmly personal film recounts
his obsessive search for Dow Mossman, the author of a long out-of-print 1972 novel, The
Stones of Summer. For the last three decades, it turns out, Mossman has been living
where he was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and working the kinds of blue collar
jobswelding, bundling newspapersthat writers are supposed to have before
they publish their big novel, not after. And make no mistake, at nearly six hundred pages The
Stones of Summer is a big novel. Its ambition and scale are matched only by the
monumental mystery of why no one seems to have ever heard of it.
Hermetically sealed for thirty years, Mossmans weird lyricism
("the lawn was a wet bowl stirred and thickened, a lilacs throat") is
startlingly fresh and pungent. If not a lost masterpiece, its clearly the work of an
enormously talented writer. The novels three sections follow a classic coming-of-age
trajectory from idealized youth, to troubled adolescence, to an adulthood blindsided by
drugs and instability. Virtually without plot, the narrative is constructed of richly
textured anecdotes and set pieces, many of which Mossman has said are autobiographical.
The protagonist is named Dawes Williams, the state is Iowa, and the hometown is coyly
rechristened Rapid Cedar.
The early chapters are chockablock with vivid characters. Dawess
profane grade-school chum Ronnie Crown is expelled for assailing their teacher, Miss Wilma
Spent, with crude sexual epithets. The eight-year-old Crown later confesses that he has no
idea what the f-word means. "I still cant figure out," says Dawes,
sounding not unlike a wry Peanuts character, "how they could expel you for a
word if you didnt know what it meant." Mossmans novel is a flurry of
words, a logorrheic avalanche. His intoxicating voice is ideal for conveying the
enchantment and sensuality of a recollected childhood: "The thick, white moon ran
like a round, naked rain through the dry spines of the trees." Languid Augusts are
whiled away on a farm where Dawess quick-to-rage uncle Arthur raises greyhounds. The
finest writing in the novel is a rollicking ten-page depiction of an epic croquet match
between Dawes and his uncle that turns deadly earnest.
But as the pages pile up with precious little momentum or suspense
propelling them forward, the law of diminishing returns settles in somewhere around the
middle of the book. The scenes of teenage pranks feel protracted and repetitive.
Theres an interminably unpleasant chapter in which Dawes and his pals set about
humiliating one of "the doggy girls of Waterloo" living in a nearby town.
Mossmans galvanic prose struggles mightily but fails to elevate the predictability
that overtakes the material: Dawess growing rebelliousness, his lost weekends with a
beer-guzzling carload of boastful buddies, and his fumbling toward romance with the aptly
but improbably named Summer Letch ("her hair was thick and rich as heaven"). The
spectacular automobile crash that closes section two doesnt touch as deeply as it
might because the occupants of the car have been too thinly developed and differentiated
as characters.
The final third of the novel, chronicling Dawess dissipation in
Mexico, is both a tour-de-force and something of a slog. Instead of the timeless quality
of the novels opening section, the concluding pages reflect the nadir of 1970s
literary pretentiousness. There are poems and epigrammatic excerpts from Dawess
notebooks ("family understanding, indeed all of the great middle-class virtues, are
not what they are cracked up to be"), and long passages from a novel-in-progress, and
letters from a buddy in Vietnam. Much marijuana and Mexican beer are consumed. Dawes
intimates that hes suffering from schizophrenia, but its presented less as an
illness than the sort of oracular "divine madness" espoused by R. D. Laing
during the era. According to Moskowitzs documentary, Mossman was briefly
hospitalized for a nervous breakdown while completing The Stones of Summer. Ten
years in the writing, the book may have in the end depleted the authors psychic
reserves. Despite its flaws, its an impressive debut novel. The significant
achievement is Mossmans voice. And the good news is that he is writing once again.
- Bob
Wake