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David Gates writes practically perfect American stories. Perfect, first of all, in their staid adherence to American short-story tradition. There will be no rioting in the cafés over his first collection, The Wonders of the Invisible World, with its glimpses of characters daunted by love. Here are creatures we know well: Manhattan quasi professionals taking their lumps; urbane fortysomethings trying out small-town life. It's all Updikean adultery, Cheeveresque drinking, some drugs, a life-altering accident or two. But Gates's stories step beyond being perfect examples of their form to become something fresh, compassionate, and witty. He has an astonishing handle on the way people talk, not just to each other, but to themselves. In the title story, a husband remembers the day his wife left him: "She appeared holding a tall glass in each hand as if she were--forget it, no stupid similes. She was a vision. A vision of herself." In "Beating," a Jewish woman is fed up with her Leftist, activist husband, who owns Pound's collected works. "I fantasize sometimes about making a big stink and demanding that he at least put Ezra Pound away where I won't have to see it every day of my life. I'd be like, Hey hey, ho ho, Ezra Pound has got to go."
This kind of attention to the goofy music of interior dialogue is normally found in comic fiction. But Gates is concerned, too, with the little failures of language, and so the failures of relationships. His territory is not comedy, it's the tragedy of failed optimism. In this way, too, he is a perfectly American writer. --Claire Dederer
From Library Journal
The hard lesson learned by the characters in these smart, sometimes harrowing stories is that intelligence and sophistication are no protection against making a mess of your life. Newsweek staffer Gates (Preston Falls, LJ 12/97) creates bright, self-aware protagonistsAtoo educated in many cases for the circumstances in which they find themselvesAwho battle their personal demons with little more than a finely honed sense of irony. The title story concerns a divorced college dean who risks losing his student lover as he has lost his family. "Star Baby" is about a gay New Yorker who discovers an unexpected side of himself when he returns home to care for his drug-addicted sister's young son. Gates deftly mixes compassion and sarcasm throughout. For all public libraries.ALawrence Rungren, Merrimack Valley Lib. Consortium, Andover, MA Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The New York Times Book Review, Gerald Marzorati
...acutely bleak and mordantly sharp...
From Kirkus Reviews
A strong first collection of ten stories about endangered or broken relationships, presented with impressive intensity by the Newsweek critic and novelist (Preston Falls, 1998, etc.). Taut dialogue and inflamed emotion (usually recollected in anything but tranquility) are the common features of Gates's otherwise richly varied looks at young and old urban and exurban couples and singles caught at both painful crisis points and rueful defining moments. His male protagonists include the borderline-lugubrious narrator of A Wronged Husband'' (the volume's only dud); the divorced father of the title story whos struggling to stay close to his college-age daughter while finding partial fulfillment as an amateur jazz musician (``A late bloomer, you could call me, if I were blooming''); and the retiree of ``Vigil,'' whose efforts to reunite his shattered family are inadequate to the magnitude of their sorrows. Gates offers equally convincing portrayals of such troubled women as the wife of a former ``left-wing romantic'' converted (in ``Beating'') into an embittered racist; a Manhattanite unhappy in rural Vermont (in ``The Crazy Thought'') with her macho new husband; and the adulterous wife (``Saturn'') whose commitment to a ``self-improvement scheme . . . [that includes] learning about opera and getting serious about cooking'' doesn't save her from the condition of self-entrapment expressed in the story's stunning climactic image. Even better are ``The Intruder,'' about a gay documentary filmmaker's essentially captive relationship with a much younger man; the moving ``Star Baby,'' whose likable protagonist is a gay man burdened and ennobled by caring for his drug-addicted sister's young son; and the remarkable ``The Mail Lady,'' which skillfully reproduces the halting speech and tortuous thought processes of a stroke victim ironically ``born again''as a virtual infant dependent on his well-meaning, half-uncomprehending wife. Gripping studies of contemporary malaise executed with clinical precision and understated compassion. Gates's best so far. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Review
"Nimbly crafted ...rendered with meticulous emotional detail and an astringent sense of the absurdities and self-indulgences of contemporary life." -The New York Times
"[Gate's stories] have something for which many fiction writers would be willing to make a pact with any sort of devil-utter authenticity." -The Boston Globe
"A ture heir to both Raymond Carver and John Cheever." -New York
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Review
"Nimbly crafted ...rendered with meticulous emotional detail and an astringent sense of the absurdities and self-indulgences of contemporary life." -The New York Times
"[Gate's stories] have something for which many fiction writers would be willing to make a pact with any sort of devil-utter authenticity." -The Boston Globe
"A ture heir to both Raymond Carver and John Cheever." -New York
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Book Description
In these stories, the author of Jernigan (runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize) and Preston Falls (finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award) illuminates with unflinching vision and hard-earned compassion a great variety of lives: men and women, young and old, in thrall to--or in flight from--jobs less creative than the echoing past had promised, as their parents, siblings or children die, implode or (perhaps just as bad) flourish. Gates's people know their Hopper, Huysmans and Haggard,
their Beckett, Bartoli and Billie Holiday, more confidently than they know their families, friends and lovers.Yet they're terrifyingly self-aware, and refuse to go gently--even when they're going nowhere fast. The author the New York Times calls "a novelist of the very first order" now stakes a similar claim as a writer
of short fiction.My first thought of the day is: And we are supposedly good people. (from "Beating")Moral support: a weird expression. Was the assumption that people's morals needed shoring up in time of stress? Or was it moral of you to lend support? ("The Crazy Thought")But it's not his baby, of course, nor mine. The baby is its own baby. I think of it as a girl, because the idea of a tiny man inside me is, is, is what? Repulsive, I was going to say . . . ("The Bad Thing")If anything is strange, it's her husband's refusing to get rid of his dead mother's wheelchair. ("Saturn")What you don't do is get into porn on the Internet. You don't get a cat. You could possibly get a dog, but not a small dog. ("Star Baby")Out Main Street we flew and onto Massachusetts Avenue, and the people on the sidewalks seemed to pass each other in comradely fashion, like the angels in Jacob's dream--a thing I hadn't thought about since I was a
boy in Sunday school--moving up and down the ladder that reached from earth to heaven. They began to be surrounded by a pulsing radiance, and I thought I saw some of them passing right through others. It didn't
strike me as out of the ordinary. ("The Mail Lady")
From the Publisher
A conversation with David Gates, author of The Wonders of the Invisible World
Q: According to a recent story about you in Publishers Weekly, there is now a "typical Gatesian narrator." Can you tell us about this person?
A: I could pretend not to know what you're talking about, but I assume you mean those middle-aged, ironic, borderline-nasty white men who seem to keep cropping up, though not all of them are narrators and not all my narrators are middle-aged ironic white men. I'd like to think that "this person" is actually a bunch of separate people -- you know, one plays the guitar, the other doesn't -- but sure, there's a similarity. Since they theorize so much about themselves (their favorite subject), they don't really need me explaining them. As the guy in the title story says, "You know, what don't I know?" I guess I could add one more layer of ironic distance to the ironic distance they already feel from themselves, but why not give 'em a break?
Q: Many of your characters seem to be their own worst enemies. Do you think that is true of most of us? Is that true of you?
A: That's probably true of them, but I don't know about most of us. In a lot of the world, my characters' neurotic self-subversion would be a decadent luxury. The Kosovars' worst enemies are the Serbs. Abner Louima's worst enemy -- allegedly, as we journalists say -- was that cop. Then we've got cancer and TB and AIDS and that whole dispiriting range of human experience. Starvation. Global warming. Forty zillion nuclear, chemical and biological weapons that some psychopath is bound to use sooner or later. Am I cheering you up? For right now, at least, I seem to be one of the lucky few who's got no other enemy but the creep within. Unless somebody -- maybe some writer I've reviewed -- is sitting someplace muttering and sticking pins a doll. I don't mean to belittle neurotic self-subversion, by the way. It makes great literary material. You can even pretty it up by calling it spiritual struggle. But I wouldn't expect people whose troubles aren't of their own making to read about this stuff with fascination and sympathy.
Q: The Wonders of the Invisible World is your first short story collection. How is writing short stories different from writing novels?
A: Novels take longer? In my case, not always. Some of my stories kicked around for ten years or so before I got them right, assuming I got them right.
Q: Do you prefer one form over the other?
A: I suppose -- or I suppose I suppose -- the novel is more heroic. Maybe this is a guy thing. Size matters. But you can see and control -- well, theoretically -- every bit of a story, work on it until it approaches an ideal density, an ideal intensity. Except maybe for the Beckett trilogy, no novel has hit me as hard as, say, Cheever's Goodbye, My Brother or Carver's Vitamins or Hemingway's The Light of the World or Barthelme's The Death of Edward Lear: things you can read at a sitting, with no break in your attention.
On the other hand, you can't inhabit a short story the way you can inhabit Our Mutual Friend or Mansfield Park or Lolita. I love both forms, and in my own work I prefer the one I'm doing at the time I'm doing it. True, if I've got nothing but a story in the works, I feel as if I'm not quite a real writer. But I don't subject other writers to such a silly judgement -- in fact, it wouldn't have broken my heart if Cheever, Hemingway and Barthelme had never written their novels. And Carver, of course, never did. This feeling of mine is partly a desire to be immersed in the big, enveloping world of a novel, and partly just Napoleonic crap.
Q: In this collection, you write from many different perspectives, from a married woman to a young homosexual man, to a grandfather, to a stroke victim. How are you able to write so convincingly from such different points of view?
A: Which one of me are you asking?
Q: Many of your characters are either divorced, about to be divorced, or trapped in an unhappy marriage. What are you trying to tell us?
A: I don't know where I'd get off telling people anything. I mean besides telling them stories. And stories need tension. Two people getting along really, really well might make for a satisfying life, but who could stay awake reading about it? What would you put in between the sex scenes? Bulletins about how well their investments were doing?
Q: Getting back to that "typical Gatesian narrator," can you imagine writing a novel with a happy ending?
A: You mean me writing such a thing? If I could imagine another novel right now, I wouldn't care if it ended with three simultaneous marriages, a Mideast peace accord and the discovery of benevolent life on a nearby planet. Let the critics call me a sellout.
A happy ending -- like any other ending -- is a literary convention. It certainly corresponds to nothing in life; it's merely the point at which the writer decides to stop inventing. Jane Austen might have followed the characters in Pride and Prejudice all the way up until Mr. Darcy dies of cancer at 75 and Elizabeth, with failing eyesight and deaf as a post, is left at the mercy of corrupt, lazy and hostile servants in a crumbling Pemberley. But this would have been esthetically out of keeping. If the endings to my books are esthetically satisfying, they're happy enough for me.
Q: America's suburbs have provided you with a wealth of material. What is it about the suburbs that interests you?
A: I've never lived in the suburbs myself, though I visit there often enough. Suburbia is a kind of wonderland to me. Small, manageable lots, driveways and garages to park in, sidewalks (that nobody walks on), trees, grass. A mix of total privacy and total exposure. Old-world manorial-bucolic life, but distributed democratically: a little bit of it for everybody. It would scare the hell out of me to live there: I don't know the rules and the folkways, and I assume I'd never meet my neighbors until one of their kids vandalized my car or shot my dog. The promise of suburbia is so entrancing that I find it impossible not to see it ironically. But I don't really know anything about it. It's an imaginary place for me, like Middle Earth or Narnia.
What it offers me as a writer is typicality and ubiquity. Most Americans live in the suburbs, and suburban life (at least as I imagine it) varies less from place to place than country life or city life. I'm still pretty much a regionalist writer: I work New York City and the Northeast, mostly, between the Hudson River and Connecticut. In this collection, characters get as far as Boston to the east and Albany to the west, with a flashback set in Pennsylvania; for me, that's pretty exotic. Maybe putting characters in the suburbs makes my stuff feel less provincial. And I love that promise of clean air, quiet, privacy, space, greenery and decent schools. What beautiful things to watch people get ambivalent about, if not downright disillusioned with.
Q: Before joining Newsweek, you were a phone operator for Western Union, a stock clerk, a cab driver, a square dance musician (still for hire, I understand), and almost a furniture mover. How does this background influence your writing?
A: Well, it certainly makes me prefer writing. Square-dance musician, though. . . If I could've made that pay, we might not be having this conversation.
Q: What are you working on now?
A:Same to you, buddy. Actually I've got several thick notebooks full of blurtings, fragmentary scenes, half-glimpsed characters, enigmatic conversations, conflicting plot outlines, complaints that I can't write anymore and suchlike. You know, the usual. I'd been hoping I'd wake up some morning and the elves would have turned it all into a novel. I'm giving them until July, when I take another leave of absence from Newsweek and can tend to it myself.
From the Inside Flap
In these stories, the author of Jernigan (runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize) and Preston Falls (finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award) illuminates with unflinching vision and hard-earned compassion a great variety of lives: men and women, young and old, in thrall to--or in flight from--jobs less creative than the echoing past had promised, as their parents, siblings or children die, implode or (perhaps just as bad) flourish. Gates's people know their Hopper, Huysmans and Haggard, their Beckett, Bartoli and Billie Holiday, more confidently than they know their families, friends and lovers.
Yet they're terrifyingly self-aware, and refuse to go gently--even when they're going nowhere fast. The author the New York Times calls "a novelist of the very first order" now stakes a similar claim as a writer of short fiction.
My first thought of the day is: And we are supposedly good people. (from "Beating")
Moral support: a weird expression. Was the assumption that people's morals needed shoring up in time of stress? Or was it moral of you to lend support? ("The Crazy Thought")
But it's not his baby, of course, nor mine. The baby is its own baby. I think of it as a girl, because the idea of a tiny man inside me is, is, is what? Repulsive, I was going to say . . . ("The Bad Thing")
If anything is strange, it's her husband's refusing to get rid of his dead mother's wheelchair. ("Saturn")
What you don't do is get into porn on the Internet. You don't get a cat. You could possibly get a dog, but not a small dog. ("Star Baby")
Out Main Street we flew and onto Massachusetts Avenue, and the people on the sidewalks seemed to pass each other in comradely fashion, like the angels in Jacob's dream--a thing I hadn't thought about since I was a boy in Sunday school--moving up and down the ladder that reached from earth to heaven. They began to be surrounded by a pulsing radiance, and I thought I saw some of them passing right through others. It didn't strike me as out of the ordinary. ("The Mail Lady")