cover image The Correspondence Artist

The Correspondence Artist

Barbara Browning, Two-Dollar Radio (Consortium, dist.), $16 trade paper (168p) ISBN 978-0-9820151-9-3

Browning toys with form in her quirky debut, an epistolary love story that, despite a few misfires—the images, for instance, sprinkled throughout feel like unfortunate clip art—should hook readers whose tastes run to the unconventional. The narrator, Vivian, recounts via e-mails her love affair with an artist, who, at different times in the book is an Israeli novelist, a Vietnamese multimedia artist, a Basque poet, and a Malian musician. The narrator creates these characters ostensibly to protect the privacy of her famous lover, and her accounts of her affair vary slightly with each incarnation to reveal incrementally the personality of her "true" paramour and build toward different versions of a betrayal—Vivian's kidnapping by Basque anarchists, a run-in with a Lycra-clad Medusa. Though the story sometimes becomes mired too deeply in its own concept, Browning relentlessly explores her theme of love's many faces, giving readers a rewardingly offbeat novel that's by turns sexy, humorous, and insightful. (Mar.)