GARGOYLES
By Bill Gaston
Character in short fiction, it has been said often enough, is a
quality to be discovered or revealed rather than developed. And so the image of
the gargoyle is an apt one to preside over the twelve stories in this compelling
and highly original collection by Giller-nominated author Bill Gaston. The stony
fixity of the gargoyle is alluded to in figures buried in sand and cement, as
well as in the stubborn, emotionally determined voices that tell their stories
even in the face of an audience that often seems determined not to listen.
What we have here is a failure to communicate. And it’s not
always a failure of expression. Gaston’s world is full of people with
something to say, but without anyone to say it to. In the story "Honouring
Honey," a schoolteacher tries to tell his wife how he plans to commemorate
the death of the family dog. She doesn't want to hear - and given the planned
ceremony's macabre perversity, few readers will blame her. But this leads only
to the teacher's frustration, rendered in a wheedling repetition that captures
the insistence of natural speech: "Please just listen to me. You never
listen to me. Just listen, okay?"
The reluctant audience is a recurring motif. There are a lot of
things that people don't want to listen to, don't want to hear. In "The
Gods Take Off Their Shirts" the narrator attempts various delaying tactics
to avoid hearing the "sort of a proposition" his old friend is about
to make. In the surreal and self-reflexive "A Work-in-Progress" an
audience rebels in the face of a particularly egregious reading by a visiting
author. The French youth in "Freedom" can’t get anyone to understand
his earnest pidgin-American, with tragic results. And Philip's poor Uncle Phil,
dying by degrees as he disappears into the beach, well, he "wasn’t
talking to anyone but himself anymore and Philip wished he would stop."
Is there something of the plight of the author in all of this?
How could there not be? But this is by the way. In well-crafted stories that
demonstrate a remarkable range of subject matter and tone Gaston shows a keen
appreciation of the universal need not only to express ourselves, but to be
understood.
Notes:
Review first published in Quill & Quire, September 2006.
BACK