I Am Alien to Life
Djuna Barnes. McNally Editions, $18 trade paper (240p) ISBN 978-1-961341-22-7
This supple collection from Barnes (1892–1982) shaves the themes of lost innocence, unrequited love, and death of her modernist masterwork, Nightwood, into febrile confessions. In “A Night Among the Horses,” a groomsman falls impossibly in love with a woman who tries in vain to make him into a gentleman, and his determination to stay among his horses leads to a stark outcome. The dialectologist at the center of “A Perfect Murder” meets a trapeze artist who claims to love dying and to regularly come back to life, prompting him to test her abilities by killing her. In “Spillway,” a tubercular woman outlives her prognosis only to feel she is no longer human, and the frustrated wife of a gynecologist in “The Doctors” propositions a peddler with the words, “You will miss the thorns but do not presume to show it.” A dark philosophy frequently emerges, suggesting from the ruined characters’ perspectives that people are interchangeable with beasts, death is life’s great motivator, and the best a woman can hope for is to become a monument to thwarted ambition. These memorable sketches unfurl a barbed wisdom of the grave. (Oct.)
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Reviewed on: 07/29/2024
Genre: Fiction