August Releases: Sarah Manguso (Fiction), Sarah Moss (Memoir), and Carl Phillips (Poetry)

Today I feature a new-to-me poet and two women writers whose careers I’ve followed devotedly but whose latest books – forthright yet slippery; their genre categories could easily be reversed – I found very emotionally difficult to read. Gruelling, almost, but admirable. Many rambling thoughts ensue. Then enjoy a nice poem.

 

Liars by Sarah Manguso

As part of a profile of Manguso and her oeuvre for Bookmarks magazine, I wrote a synopsis and surveyed critical opinion; what follow are additional subjective musings. I’ve read six of her nine books (all but the poetry and an obscure flash fiction collection) and I esteem her fragmentary, aphoristic prose, but on balance I’m fonder of her nonfiction. Had Liars been marketed as a diary of her marriage and divorce, Manguso might have been eviscerated for the indulgence and one-sided presentation. With the thinnest of autofiction layers, is it art?

Jane recounts her doomed marriage, from the early days of her relationship with John Bridges to the aftermath of his affair and their split. She is a writer and academic who sacrifices her career for his financially risky artistic pursuits. Especially once she has a baby, every domestic duty falls to her, while he keeps living like a selfish stag and gaslights her if she tries to complain, bringing up her history of mental illness. The concise vignettes condense 14+ years into 250 pages, which is a relief because beneath the sluggish progression is such repetition of type of experiences that it could feel endless. John’s last name might as well be Doe: The novel presents him – and thus all men – as despicable and useless, while women are effortlessly capable and, by exhausting themselves, achieve superhuman feats. This is what heterosexual marriage does to anyone, Manguso is arguing. Indeed, in a Guardian interview she characterized this as a “domestic abuse novel,” and elsewhere she has said that motherhood can be unlinked from patriarchy, but not marriage.

Let’s say I were to list my every grievance against my husband from the last 17+ years: every time he left dirty clothes on the bedroom floor (which is every day); every time he loaded the dishwasher inefficiently (which is every time, so he leaves it to me); every time he failed to seal a packet or jar or Tupperware properly (which – yeah, you get the picture) – and he’s one of the good guys, bumbling rather than egotistical! And he’d have his own list for me, too. This is just what we put up with to live with other people, right? John is definitely worse (“The difference between John and a fascist despot is one of degree, not type”). But it’s not edifying, for author or reader. There may be catharsis to airing every single complaint, but how does it help to stew in bitterness? Look at everything I went through and validate my anger.

There are bright spots: Jane’s unexpected transformation into a doting mother (but why must their son only ever be called “the child”?), her dedication to her cat, and the occasional dark humour:

So at his worst, my husband was an arrogant, insecure, workaholic, narcissistic bully with middlebrow taste, who maintained power over me by making major decisions without my input or consent. It could still be worse, I thought.

Manguso’s aphoristic style makes for many quotably mordant sentences. My feelings vacillated wildly, from repulsion to gung-ho support; my rating likewise swung between extremes and settled in the middle. I felt that, as a feminist, I should wholeheartedly support a project of exposing wrongs. It’s easy to understand how helplessness leads to rage, and how, considering sunk costs, a partner would irrationally hope for a situation to improve. So I wasn’t as frustrated with Jane as some readers have been. But I didn’t like the crass sexual language, and on the whole I agreed with Parul Sehgal’s brilliant New Yorker review that the novel is so partial and the tone so astringent that it is impossible to love.

With thanks to Picador for the proof copy for review.

 

And a quote from the Moss memoir (below) to link the two books: “Homes are places where vulnerable people are subject to bullying, violence and humiliation behind closed doors. Homes are places where a woman’s work is never done and she is always guilty.”

 

20 Books of Summer, #19:

My Good Bright Wolf by Sarah Moss 

I’ve reviewed this memoir for Shelf Awareness (it’s coming out in the USA from Farrar, Straus and Giroux on October 22nd) so will only give impressions, in rough chronological order:

Sarah Moss returns to nonfiction – YES!!!

Oh no, it’s in the second person. I’ve read too much of that recently. Fine for one story in a collection. A whole book? Not so sure. (Kirsty Logan got away with it, but only because The Unfamiliar is so short and meant to emphasize how matrescence makes you other.)

The constant second-guessing of memory via italicized asides that question or refute what has just been said; the weird nicknames (her father is “the Owl” and her mother “the Jumbly Girl”) – in short, the deliberate artifice – at first kept me from becoming submerged. This must be deliberate and yet meant it was initially a chore to pick up. It almost literally hurt to read. And yet there are some breathtakingly brilliant set pieces. Oh! when her mother’s gay friend Keith buys her a chocolate éclair and she hides it until it goes mouldy.

Once she starts discussing her childhood reading – what it did for her then and how she views it now – the book really came to life for me. And she very effectively contrasts the would-be happily ever after of generally getting better after eight years of disordered eating with her anorexia returning with a vengeance at age 46 – landing her in A&E in Dublin. (Oh! when she reads War and Peace over and over on a hospital bed and defiantly uses the clean toilets on another floor.) This crisis is narrated in the third person before a return to second person.

The tone shifts throughout the book, so that what threatens to be slightly cloying in the childhood section turns academically curious and then, somehow, despite the distancing pronouns, intimate. So much so that I found myself weeping through the last chapters over this lovely, intelligent woman’s ongoing struggles. As an overly cerebral person who often thinks it’s pesky to have to live in a body, I appreciated her probing of the body/mind divide; and as she tracks where her food issues came from, I couldn’t help but think about my sister’s years of eating disorders and my mother’s fear that it was all her fault.

Beyond Moss’s usual readers, I’d also recommend this to fans of Laura Freeman’s The Reading Cure and Noreen Masud’s A Flat Place.

Overall: shape-shifting, devastating, staunchly pragmatic. I’m not convinced it all hangs together (and I probably would have ended it at p. 255), but it’s still a unique model for transmuting life into art.

With thanks to Picador for the free copy for review.

 

Scattered Snows, to the North by Carl Phillips

Phillips is a prolific poet I’d somehow never heard of. In fact, he won the Pulitzer Prize last year for his selected poetry volume. He’s gay and African American, and in his evocative verse he summons up landscapes and a variety of weather, including as a metaphor for emotions – guilt, shame, and regret. Looking back over broken relationships, he questions his memory.

Will I remember individual poems? Unlikely. But the sense of chilly, clear-eyed reflection, yes. (Sample poem below)

With thanks to Carcanet for the advanced e-copy for review.

 

Record of Where a Wind Was

 

Wave-side, snow-side,

little stutter-skein of plovers

lifting, like a mind

 

of winter—

We’d been walking

the beach, its unevenness

 

made our bodies touch,

now and then, at

the shoulders mostly,

 

with that familiarity

that, because it sometimes

includes love, can

 

become confused with it,

though they remain

different animals. In my

 

head I played a game with

the waves called Weapon

of Choice, they kept choosing

 

forgiveness, like the only

answer, as to them

it was, maybe. It’s a violent

 

world. These, I said, I choose

these, putting my bare hands

through the air in front of me.

 

Any other August releases you’d recommend?

23 responses

  1. MarinaSofia's avatar

    I’m a great Sarah Moss fan, so am eager to read this memoir.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s intriguing; so different. With your ambivalence about memoir, I think you’ll particularly appreciate her style/perspective/structure choices here.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Elle's avatar

    I absolutely adored My Good Bright Wolf. My review is on Goodreads already, but it’ll be in my August Superlatives post tomorrow. I found it said so very many of the things I wanted to say with the book I started writing about diabetes and womanhood and feminism and food—the only difference being that Moss doesn’t have a chronic metabolic illness complicating the picture even further. The second-person (and then that switch to third) worked brilliantly for me, preventing the perceived solipsism of constant “I” statements but keeping the reader close to the narrating voice, and as a bonus, working in that sense of constantly being under fire and forced to defend every statement you make. It’ll be on my Books of the Year list for sure.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      So glad you had a chance to read it! I knew it would be right up your street and was going to offer you my proof copy. By the end I realized how fully she’d drawn me in despite, or maybe because of, the second person. I’ll be recommending it for a Star for Shelf Awareness and it will likely make my year-end best list as well.

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        That’s so kind of you! I would absolutely have taken it; I just saw the eARC available on NetGalley and snapped it up. (Can’t believe I’d heard nothing about it pre-release—maybe because I’m not on X or in bookselling/publishing anymore, but still, a little surprising not to have more buzz for this?!)

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        No, you’re right, it seems very much to have flown under the radar, which is bizarre.

        Like

  3. Laura's avatar

    Having now read both your and Elle’s reviews, plus a recent Guardian article from Moss, I think I’ll be skipping My Good Bright Wolf. Moss is always on the edge of rubbing me up the wrong way and I think she might do it here, as important as this memoir sounds. I’m glad that I’ve picked up Manguso’s Very Cold People to try her fiction rather than Liar.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I agree with Elle that this was a lot more interesting than Moss’s most recent novels, but fair enough. You know your own taste!

      Hope you’ll enjoy Very Cold People. Its depiction of girlhood felt more universal to me than in the Febos.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. […] I had a few 4-star highlights: Company by Shannon Sanders, Sleeping with Cats by Marge Piercy, and My Good Bright Wolf by Sarah Moss (if anyone in the UK would like my proof copy of this last one, let me know and […]

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  5. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I enjoyed reading your reviews of the first two although they don’t sound like books for me. But that poem! Wow. I need to seek out some more of his work.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I was pleased to discover Phillips. I hope you’ll be able to find one of his collections.

      Like

  6. Carolyn O's avatar

    I think of Carl Phillips’s poems as chiseled. (I love them.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      These were great. I couldn’t believe I’d never come across him before.

      Like

  7. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I want to read the novels by men who are frustrated by their wives’ sloppy habits and irksome behaviours. The novels by lesbians who recognise this sort of pattern in their relationships. I understand where this story of Manguso’s resides, but I’m weary of reading it. Of course I love the sounds of the part of Moss’ memoir about reading. And the poetry is beautiful: I’ll have to seek out more of Carl Phillips for sure. Thank you!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Good point. One-sided stories just make you wonder about the other perspective out there somewhere. And for all people have been saying about feeling ‘seen’ through this book, it’s not as if it’s an uncommon story.

      Like

  8. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Liar just looks horrible. Yes, it’s good to expose things but yes, I’ve got a bumbler, too, he can NEVER seal a resealable packet properly and leaves a trail of crumbs but I sure as hell miss him when he’s away! The Sarah Moss, hm, I have trouble reading about EDs because of a friend with a severe enduring ED but I also recognise the brain in a pesky body thing. The poem’s wonderful even though I’m not good with poetry!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Liars definitely doesn’t seem like a book for you. I know you struggle with marriage/infidelity stories as it is.

      The Moss was a tough read even though my sister’s issues are long in the past.

      Liked by 1 person

  9. lauratfrey's avatar

    I missed this when it was posted, but I’m glad I read it. More blog posts should end with a poem! Now off to read the scathing review of Liars, and you know how I love a scathing review 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks! Quoting a sample poem is often the best way to give the flavour of a poet’s work.

      Like

  10. […] that made me cry: On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan, My Good Bright Wolf by Sarah […]

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  11. […] My Good Bright Wolf by Sarah Moss: Moss effectively contrasts the would-be happily ever after of generally getting better after eight years of disordered eating with her anorexia returning with a vengeance at age 46. The mood shifts so that what threatens to be slightly cloying in the childhood section turns academically curious and then, somehow, despite distancing pronouns (mostly second- but also some third-person narration), intimate. Shape-shifting, devastating, staunchly pragmatic; a unique model for converting life into art. […]

    Like

  12. […] and desire in common – and so I would be happy to see either as the winner (more so than Liars, the other one I’ve read, even though that addresses similar issues). […]

    Like

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