DRIVING ON THE RIM
By Thomas McGuane
Thomas McGuane's ninth novel returns us to his home state of
Montana, taking us back to a kind of place and a type of fiction that seems
alien to the twenty-first century. The narrator is a small-town doctor named
Irving Berlin ("Berl") Pickett, a native of the area who has lived
there his entire life. If those two words "small town" immediately
bring to mind days spent fishing, bird-watching, or hunting with a favourite
hound, a community made up of long-resident eccentrics, a place where everyone
knows your name (and knows who is having an affair with whom), a time when
folksy doctors made house calls and all of nature seemed in tune with life's
passages, then you will feel right at home in McGuane's big sky country. And if
you miss the sort of traditional storytelling you're only likely to find today
in contemporaries of McGuane (John Irving and Richard Ford come to mind), then Driving
on the Rim will provide your fix.
It wasn't always like this. McGuane has mellowed as a writer
over the years, no longer the wild child of American literature he was in the
1970s. His writing can still be as pointed and biting as barb wire - his comic
dialogue delivers non sequitur punch lines with an exquisite touch, and he
always manages to fully occupy the fictional moment - but the story is harder to
get excited about.
Pickett is an aging social misfit well aware of his own
inadequacies who nevertheless gets to service most of the local townswomen (he
is a doctor, you see, and this is a novel). Women, however, also threaten to be
his downfall. His romantic attachments lead him into several possibly criminal
misadventures and dangerous situations. And yet given his laid-back nature he
never seems terribly concerned with anything that's going on. The story, as a
result, simply ambles along without a great deal of purpose through various
sketchily-related episodes, introducing type characters and admiring the lovely
local scenery. There's even a "What was I doing on 9/11" chapter (the
answer: enjoying a fishing getaway).
The invocation of 9/11 feels forced, one of the few false notes,
and yet also inevitable in such a book. The American novel outgrew twilight
sketches of little towns quite a while ago. McGuane is describing a contemporary
landscape with nostalgia.
Notes:
Review first published online January 2, 2012.
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