LIFERS
By Jeff Somers
"Ah, what shall I be at fifty
Should Nature keep me alive,
If I find the world so bitter
When I am but twenty-five?" - Tennyson
At fifty? Rather consider what you will be at thirty. By then you will
have graduated from apathy to full bitterness, on your way to becoming a real bastard:
Daniel Quinn was a rarity: a truly nice guy, albeit going slightly brown
around the edges in his mid-twenties. Fill a guy with beer and coat him with
rejection often enough, and even the nicest guys will wither into something more
resembling a bastard. Dan had enough mothers-milk niceness in him to go another
ten years before becoming a real bastard, but he was beginning to show bastard
tendencies, and everyone who knew him simultaneously rejoiced and despaired at
the thought.
Daniel Quinn is one of three young men in Lifers desperate for change. The
other two are Trim, a poet who works at a video store, and Dub, the narrator,
who has a decent job at a publishing house. (Exactly what Dub does at the
publishing house isn't clear, but whatever it is he's sick of it.) Despair over
their lot in life leads the three to come up with a plan to
steal a load of office equipment from Dub's employer.
It's a petty score, but
these are not big men.
In most new contemporary fiction the plot is of less interest than the
presentation. This is in part because the current generation of writers are such
engaging stylists, but it is also due to the fact that few people seem to care
about such things as structure anymore. The present literary age is one of
wit, and while we may be tempted to disparage wit as so much empty
entertainment (as I admit to doing in my review of Douglas Coupland's Miss
Wyoming), it may be that writers like Coupland and Ellis
will be with us long after Rushdie and Ondaatje are forgotten. At least we can say they are succeeding on
some level.
Lifers is a fun, honest book - the kind that makes criticism seem
almost beside the point. Its minor failings are almost predictable for a first
novel, like the
conventional positioning of the narrator as an unhappy but attractive medium
between two failed extremes. Reading Somers I was reminded of how the loser is
perhaps the most difficult character for any author to create. The loser is the
anti-anti-hero, the outcast who doesn't even succeed at being cool, the failure
who can never be redeemed. Despite his feelings of inadequacy, Dub is always recognizably
a hero: intelligent, sensitive, decisive, desirable.
One reason the genuine loser may be so hard to find in today's fiction is because the social and
cultural environment is now seen as so degraded anything remotely human
automatically rises above it. It may be significant that the morality of the
crime in Lifers isn't even a passing consideration. The only thing the
hero is concerned about is what effect it might have on his life. Whatever
revenge one can take against this corrupt, fallen world is just since it is also inevitably
trivial, as Dub is finally brought to understand.
But back to superfluous criticism. Somers is a talented writer, but not always a careful one. There are, for
example, a lot of inconsistencies in his narrative. (For more on problems with
consistency in the contemporary novel, see my review of Chuck Palahniuk's Choke.)
At one point Dub compares his limited wardrobe to that of the office workers he
sees downtown, saying that he only owns "a pair of Chucks, and a pair of
soft leather loafers." Yet thirty pages earlier he told us he had "six
pairs of Converse Chucks" under his desk. Did he throw them out?
This may be quite a minor thing, but there is a whopper of an inconsistency relating to
Chick's knowledge of the plan. (Chick being the chick. The nicknames are all a
little much, and don't help when some of the characters slip into stereotypes.)
Throughout much of the book there is a lot made of the fact that Chick is in the
dark about what the boys are up to. Yet in Chapter 3 Dub makes it clear
that the conspirators have "told her everything." She is said to be an
"unknowing confidant." Why then does she spend the rest of the book
wondering what's going on? If she's been told, how can she be unknowing?
None of this will affect anyone's enjoyment of the book, or their
appreciation of the lives it represents. One hesitates to call Somers a
distinctive voice, at least yet, but he is entertaining and his vision is
important.
Notes:
Review first published online August 1, 2001.
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