March Releases by Akbar, Bosker, García Márquez, and Wrenn

I’m catching up after a busy end to last month. Today I have an uneven debut novel from a poet whose work I’ve enjoyed before, a journalist’s jaunty submersion in the world of modern art, a posthumous novella from a famous Colombian author I’d not previously read, and a (literally) trippy memoir about C-PTSD, coral, climate breakdown, queerness and more. I can pinpoint a couple of elements that some or all of them have in common: beauty (whether in art or in nature) and dead mothers.

 

Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar

I’d read the Iranian American poet’s two full-length collections and particularly admired Pilgrim Bell, one of my favourite books of 2021. That was enough for me to put this on my Most Anticipated list for 2024, even though based on the synopsis I wrote: “His debut novel sounds kind of unhinged, but I figure it’s worth a try.” Here’s an excerpt from the publisher’s blurb: “When Cyrus’s obsession with the lives of the martyrs – Bobby Sands, Joan of Arc – leads him to a chance encounter with a dying artist, he finds himself drawn towards the mysteries of an uncle who rode through Iranian battlefields dressed as the Angel of Death; and toward his [late] mother, who may not have been who or what she seemed.”

Cyrus Shams is an Iranian American aspiring poet who grew up in Indiana with a single father, his mother Roya having died in a passenger aircraft mistakenly shot down by a U.S. Navy missile cruiser (this really happened: Iran Air Flight 655, on 3 July 1988). He continues to lurk around the Keady University campus, working as a medical actor at the hospital, but his ambition is to write. During his shaky recovery from drug and alcohol abuse, he undertakes a project that seems divinely inspired: “Tired of interventionist pyrotechnics like burning bushes and locust plagues, maybe God now worked through the tired eyes of drunk Iranians in the American Midwest”. By seeking the meaning in others’ deaths, he hopes his modern “Book of Martyrs” will teach him how to cherish his own life.

This document, which we see in fragments, sets up hypothetical dialogues between figures real and imaginary, dead and living, and intersperses them with poems and short musings. But when a friend tells Cyrus about the Brooklyn Museum installation “DEATH-SPEAK,” which has terminally ill Iranian artist Orkideh living out her last days in public, he spies an opportunity to move the work beyond theory and into the physical realm. So he flies to New York City with his best friend (and occasional f**kbuddy), bartender Zee Novak, and visits Orkideh every day until the installation’s/artist’s end.

This is a wildly original but unruly novel with a few problems. One: Akbar has clung too obviously to his own story and manner of speaking with Cyrus (e.g., “I honestly actually do worry about that, no joke. Being a young Iranian man making a book about martyrdom, going around talking to people about becoming a martyr. It’s not inert, you know?”). Another is that the poems, and poetic descriptions, are much the best material. The only exception might be a zany scene where Zee and Cyrus chop wood while high. But the main issue I had is that the plot turns on a twist 50 pages from the end, a huge coincidence that feels unearned. I admire the ambition Akbar had for this – a seething, open-hearted enquiry into addiction, love, suicide and queerness – but look forward to him getting back to poetry.

With thanks to Picador for the proof copy for review.

 

Get the Picture: A Mind-Bending Journey among the Inspired Artists and Obsessive Art Fiends Who Taught Me How to See by Bianca Bosker

I was a big fan of Bosker’s Cork Dork (2017), her deep dive into the world of fine wine. Her second book is similarly constructed and equally fun: more personal than authoritative, light yet substantial, and accessible to the uninitiated as well as those with an existing interest in the subject. She begins as a complete novice, wondering if she’ll ever know what art is, let alone what it means and whether it’s any good (“the familiar feeling that everyone got the punch line except me”). By the end, she has discovered that, like the love of wine, art appreciation can be a way of expanding and savouring one’s life.

The aim was to get the broadest experience possible, generally through voluntary placements. She started out as an assistant at Jack Barrett’s 315 Gallery, where one of her tasks was to paint a wall white; she failed miserably to meet his expectations even for this simple task. He never lost his fundamental distrust of her, a writer and outsider, as one of “the enemy.” It was expected that she would attend as many art shows and openings as possible per week. “Talking shit was essentially a job requirement.” Bosker might not have known what to make of the art, but others were gossipy, snobbish and opinionated enough to make up for it. When she was tasked with writing a press release for an exhibit, a gallerist taught her the clichéd shorthand: “Every f**king artist allegedly transforms the familiar into the unfamiliar, or vice versa.”

In the course of the book, the New York City-based author also:

  • attends the Art Basel Miami Beach contemporary art fair and sells photographs on behalf of Denny Dimin Gallery;
  • befriends performance artist and “ass influencer” Mandy AllFIRE, who – ahem – sits on Bosker’s face as part of a temporary installment;
  • serves as a studio assistant for French painter Julie Curtiss, whose work is selling for alarmingly high amounts at auction (not actually what a painter wants, as it tends to signal bad things for a career);
  • meets a pair of North Dakota collectors known as “the Icy Gays”; and
  • works as a Guggenheim Museum guard.

This last was my favourite episode. Forty-minute placements on particular ramps gave her time to focus on one chosen artwork – for instance, an abstract sculpture. She challenged herself to stay with it for that whole time, doing as one artist advised and simply noticing five things about the work. Before, her “default approach to art had just been to plant myself in front of a piece and wait for the epiphany to wash over me.” Now, she worked at it. In fact, she counsels newcomers to not read a caption because many people take a title at face value and an interpretation as gospel, and so don’t experience the art for themselves.

At times I found the book slightly scattered in the way that it zigzags from one challenge to another. There’s differing attention to various experiences; a week-long art school merits just one paragraph. And there’s no getting past the fact that some art she encounters sounds outlandish or just plain silly. (Is it any surprise that she mistakes part of a wall, and a mousetrap, for art pieces?) Ultimately, I think it’s best if you have at least a modicum of appreciation for modern art, which I don’t; whereas I do enjoy drinking wine even if I don’t have a trained palate.

Even so, Bosker’s writing has such verve (“artists were coyly evasive about their work and treated my questions like I was a cactus running after their balloon”; “a hazy daydream of an idea solidified into a yappy, un-shut-uppable chihuahua of want”) that you’ll be glad you went along for the ride. She concludes that taste is subjective, but “Beauty … pulls you close.” Art is valuable because it “knocks us off our well-worn pathways” into something uncharted, a tantalizing prospect.

With thanks to Allen & Unwin (Grove Press) for the free copy for review.

  

{SPOILERS IN THIS NEXT ONE}

Until August by Gabriel García Márquez

[Translated from the Spanish by Anne McLean]

A posthumous ‘lost’ novella was not a good place for me to have started with this celebrated author. García Márquez okayed the fifth draft of the text in 2004, 10 years before his death. By this time he was already suffering with memory loss that interfered with his creativity. His sons got the message that he didn’t think the book worked and should be destroyed. But they didn’t do his bidding and, revisiting the book nearly a decade on from his death, decided it wasn’t that bad, if not up to the standard of his best work, and that it should see the light of day after all.

Every August 16th, Ana Magdalena Bach travels to the island where her mother is buried to visit the grave and lay gladioli on it. (My review book came with a bag of three gladioli bulbs and a mini Colombian chocolate bar.) Each year she takes a different lover for the one night at a hotel. The first time, the man leaves her a $20 bill and she feels ashamed, but it doesn’t stop her doing the same thing again for the next four years in a row. Once it’s a long-ago school friend whom she runs into on the ferry. Another time, by golly, it’s a bishop.

It’s refreshing to have a woman in middle age as protagonist and for her to claim sexual freedom. However, the setup is formulaic and repetitive, the sex scenes are somewhat excruciating, and the hypocrisy of her gleefully having one-night stands while fretting over her husband’s potential infidelity is grating. I did like the ending – Ana hears that an anonymous elderly gentleman has been paying to have gladioli laid on her mother’s grave year-round and she wonders if she is in a sense following in her mother’s footsteps all along without knowing it; and decides she’s had enough and exhumes her mother’s remains, returning to her husband with a bag of bones (gruesome!).

But nothing about the plot or the writing – fluid enough bar one awkward sentence (“She listened to him worried that he meant it, but she had the strength not to appear as easy a woman as he might think”) – suggested to me a master at work. At best, this might be reminiscent of the late work of misogynist-leaning authors like Coetzee or Updike.

In my mind García Márquez is linked with magic realism, so I’d be better off trying one of his more representative works. I have several of his earlier novellas on the shelf (received as review copies as part of the same recent marketing push), and if I get on better with those then I’ll be sure to try one of the most famous full-length novels.

With thanks to Viking (Penguin) for the free copy for review.

 

Mothership: A Memoir of Wonder and Crisis by Greg Wrenn

Wrenn is an associate English professor teaching environmental literature at James Madison University. He has also been exploring coral reefs for 25 years, with a love of marine wildlife sparked by growing up in Florida. But all along, he’s been trying (much like Cyrus Shams) to come to terms with addiction, queerness, suicidal inclinations, and especially his mother’s place in his life. She made him feel dirty, that he would never be good enough; she hit him with a wooden spoon and bathed him until he was 17. Though he never found out for sure, he suspects his mother was sexually abused by her father and repeated the cycle of molestation.

This is the third C-PTSD memoir I’ve read (after What My Bones Know and A Flat Place), and has a lot in common with I’m Glad My Mom Died, which features a co-dependent relationship with an abusive mother. After Wrenn’s parents’ divorce, he and his mother remained close. “I had been her therapist, confessor, girlfriend, and punching bag.” He helped care for her after a stroke but eventually had to throw up his hands at her stubborn refusal to follow doctors’ orders. Drawing on the Greek etymology of ecology (oikos means house or family), Wrenn insists on a parallel between the personal and the environmental here: “What we’re facing amounts to global C-PTSD” as “Mother” Earth turns against us. On each trip to Raja Ampat, he knows the coral reef is dying, his carbon footprint only accelerating it.

There’s a lot in this short memoir. Even the summary had me shaking my head in disbelief. For me, though, the tone and style were too erratic. Wrenn can be wry, sorrowful, or campy; he includes scientific data, letters to Adrienne Rich and an imagined descendent, a chapter riffing on “Otters” (the animal and the gay stereotype), flashbacks, and E.T. metaphors. The final third of the book then takes a left turn as he experiments with therapeutic psychedelics via ayahuasca ceremonies in South America, and ditches dating apps and casual sex to try to find a long-term relationship. The drug literally alters his brain, allowing him to feel trust and love. Add on nature and a husband and that’s why he’s still here rather than dead by suicide.

Like Akbar, Wrenn published poetry before switching genre. Their books are both amazing in premise but wobbly in execution. Still, I’d say both authors are laudable for their effort to depict lives wrenched back from extremity.

With thanks to Regalo Press (USA) for the proof copy for review.

26 responses

  1. A Life in Books's avatar

    I think I’d enjoy Get the Picture. My sight is at a point where I can’t quite read captions in galleries without reading glasses which is a fiddle so I’ve given up and found it quite liberating.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Studies have found that people spend twice as long reading the caption as they do looking at the artwork itself! So you’re probably better off ignoring it. And if you do have a particular question, you can always make a point of reading it then, or speaking to a guide.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. A Life in Books's avatar

        Exactly! Or look it up when I get home.

        Like

  2. Elle's avatar

    Lots going on here! I actually quite like the sound of Bosker’s book—I always feel like art wants more time from me than I give it in a museum or gallery.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The statistics she quotes on how long people spend looking at artwork are astonishing — it’s a very low number of seconds, with twice as many devoted to reading the caption. My problem is that I quickly get overwhelmed and museum-ed out. Ideally, I’d just focus on one floor, or one wing, or even one room! (Difficult when you’re travelling and only intend to go somewhere once. Thus why I deliberately skipped the Uffizi when we went to Florence.)

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        I’ve tried so deliberately not to read the wall panel text when I go to galleries or museums, but they ARE overwhelming. Someone once told me the best way to do the British Museum is to plan to visit just a single room each time, but again, that’s fine if you live there, not so great if you’re on holiday. Though I suppose there’s nothing wrong with trying to see, e.g., the most famous/most appealing-to-me painting in a given gallery on holiday, and not troubling about the rest of it.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. lyndhurstlaura's avatar

    I’ve tried a couple of books by Marquez but couldn’t get on with them. From what you say here I don’t think I’ll be giving this one a go.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Interesting … I wonder if I’d have any better luck with his older, or longer books. I have several from his backlist that were sent as part of this promotion. I may try one or more during Novellas in November.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. hopewellslibraryoflife's avatar

    Good reviews! I need to find Get the Picture and Cork Dork! lol–love the last title.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thank you! Bosker’s style is delightful.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Davida Chazan's avatar

    Well, not all “lost” manuscripts can be masterpieces. Some work, some don’t. I guess this one is the latter, which is a shame. I loved his Love in the Time of Cholera, and really enjoyed 100 Years of Solitude. So far, I haven’t been convinced to get this one, and you haven’t changed my mind.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Those are his two masterpieces, it seems. I should really try one or the other.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Davida Chazan's avatar

        I prefer Cholera but most people prefer 100 Years.

        Like

  6. Cathy746books's avatar

    I am a BIG fan of Garcia Marquez, but have no plans to read this one.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      What would you recommend, Cathy?

      Like

      1. Cathy746books's avatar

        Go for the classics. One Hundred Years of Solitude or Love in the Time of Cholera. You do need to like magic realism though.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. Laura's avatar

    The Akbar sounds completely mad, but also good? Maybe? I also like the sound of the Bosker.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      You’re welcome to my proof of Martyr! if you’d like to give it a try.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laura's avatar

        Thanks so much. I think I’ll pass this time because I’m so snowed under with ARCs!

        Like

  8. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I loved One Hundred Years of Solitude By Garcia Marquez. I tried Love in the Time of Cholera and didn’t get far, but probably wasn’t in the right mood.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Liz Dexter's avatar

    I am looking forward to the art one I have to say! I have CPTSD myself so I’m not massively keen on reading books about it, though I don’t think I’d have sprung at those ones anyway. Well done for facing the Marquez, I expect you’d get on with one of his classics.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Are there particular things you have found that help? (Not psychedelic drugs, I’m guessing!)

      Like

  10. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    And you were just commenting on the eccelctic nature of MY stacks. hee hee Each of these sounds like a very strong voice, even if you didn’t wholly connect to each narrative. The only Marquez I’ve read is 100 Years. I have been vaguely thinking of rereading, but I know it won’t fit into this year’s reading plans. I’d like to read more, but the idea that this was published against his wishes rather niggles at me, so not this one. I wouldn’t like to think that such a thing had been done against my own wishes and, yet, I can see where having it available to see how his last work was progressing would be very interesting from the perspective of those who’ve studied his fiction. But not for first-time readers like yourself!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Of course, if people had obeyed Kafka’s strictures, all of his papers would have been burned…

      Like

      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        Well that’s a straightforward approach!
        Imagine all the reviews published today with Kafka-esque.
        What would they say instead? 😮

        Like

Leave a reply to Marcie McCauley Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.