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BIBLIOFILE
Under the Skin
by Michel Faber
(Harcourt, 110 pages, $23)
Michel
Faber's Under the Skin was shortlisted for Britain's prestigious
Whitbread Award in 1999 for Best First Novel, but until it recently
made Contentville's Best of 2000 list, it has received little attention
in this country. This is a pity, as it is one of the most innovative,
fresh, compelling novels to hit print in the last few years.
The book's narrator is the repellent and mysterious Isserley, a
cold, stunted, misshapen lass--breasts too large, glasses too thick,
a crooked spine--who possesses odd dietary restrictions, which become
clearer as the story progresses. Isserley combs the highways and
byways (mostly byways) of the Scottish highlands looking for disenfranchised,
beefy male specimens. For even though she's freakish in appearance,
Isserley exudes a bizarre erotic appeal that helps her snag victims
and return them to "The Farm" for processing--and let's just leave
it at that, because too many details will give the story away.
There are science-fiction elements--more along the lines of Steve
Erickson than Isaac Asimov--and you may be reminded of that classic
of dietary horror Soylent Green or some of the better episodes
of The Twilight Zone. But Under the Skin is not primarily
a work of science fiction. This bleak vision moves at a page-turner
pace and is an instructive, though never didactic, tale of the sometimes
unavoidable objectification of one species by another. With superb
control and light irony, Faber artfully explores topics ranging
from agribusiness to industrial outcasts to our own inherently predatory
nature. Steven Fidel
OFF
KECK ROAD
by Mona Simpson
(Knopf,
167 pages, $28.50)
Mona Simpson's third novel (after Anywhere but Here and
A Regular Guy) provides a very readable chick-lit ride through
Green Bay, Wisc., during the last half of the 20th century. The
story begins, appropriately enough, during the 1956 holiday season.
Bea Maxwell is home on break from the University of Wisconsin in
Madison. When she begins climbing the walls of her parents' well-appointed
home, she calls a classmate acquaintance, June Umberhum, who lives
in a new subdivision across town. From there the novel follows the
young women down through the years. Neither can stand the thought
of settling in boring old Green Bay, yet they both return after
a few years out in the real world.
Bea and June are stuck in that interminable era before the Women's
Movement when options were fewer and familial duty reigned supreme.
They also suffer from that Midwestern malady, provincial thinking--though
they are much more open-minded than their neighbors. As Green Bay
expands, both literally and figuratively, these women work hard
to carve out satisfying lives. Simpson moves through their worlds
effortlessly, including brief intersections with inconsequential
characters who add a little sharpness to Wisconsin's cheesy flavor.
Off Keck Road is about quiet lives that are interesting
simply because they are so mundane. Simpson proves that all people
are important, even if they do nothing exciting or dramatic. This
well-written, dignified novel seems almost pointless, which is exactly
the point. The perfect gift for moms everywhere. Susan Wickstrom
REVOLUTIONARY VOICES
Edited by Amy
Sonnie
(Alyson, 188 pages, $11.95)
This is the book the OCA doesn't want in your school library.
Editor Amy Sonnie has collected writings and drawings by 50 young
artists who defy mainstream ideas about sex, gender and sexuality
to create a passionate anthology that will infuriate some and delight
others, but never bore.
Creating her own brand of affirmative action, Sonnie deliberately
sought to include those viewpoints she sees as ignored and devalued:
"young women, transgender and bisexual youth, youth of color and
mixed-blood youth, differently abled youth, and youth from low-income
backgrounds." The result could have been superficial tokenism or
bloodless political correctness; instead it offers moving insights
into what it's like to be young, gifted and queer in our times.
Despite the inevitable themes of alienation, isolation and resistance,
the overall impression is hopeful. Each voice is fresh and distinct,
and what the visual art and photographs lack in image quality they
make up for in vitality, humor and intimacy.
Curious about how it feels to be the subject of an exorcism? Read
the pieces by Antigona and the Portland writer "sts." Wondering
what the Boy Scouts have to do with two men kissing? Check out Daryl
Vocat's etchings.
Politically radical and scathing in its assessments of the world,
these writers don't pull punches when it comes to the queer mainstream.
Rainbow flags and gay sitcoms won't end racism or give queer youth
a voice, says Margot Kelly Rodriguez. "The mainstream movement calls
us the 'future.' What the movement doesn't realize is that we are
the
present...we have something to say right now." Helen Silvis
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