The feeling of ending was the feeling of a new season. My complexion changed, and birthmarks that had gone into permanent hibernation once again rose to the surface. I was suddenly famished. The house unfolded around me like a paper swan laid flat and the spring air came rushing across my shoulders, and I knew the job was complete. I know this isn't how houses work, but this is how it felt, and it's the only way the memory exists for me now. I packed my leather planner, soon to overflow with meetings, interviews, endless interviews. I collected the envelope of payment from the mailbox at the end of the driveway, closed the front door one final time, and went off to claim my palimpsest career.
The narrator of Hilary Leichter's Temporary is just that, a temp. She fills in for all sorts of jobs: Chairman of the Board, pirate, bank robber, murderer, pamphlet-deliverer, human barnacle. In this strange world, as perhaps in ours, to be a temp is to live in a strange kind of limbo where your existence is never your own. Our narrator's mother was a temp, also, and took her daughter to her first job, opening and closing the doors of a strange house on a particular schedule--an eerie job that turns out to be filling in for a ghost. The narrator yearns to be made a "permanent," that is, to find a permanent job, and thus a permanent identity, a permanent self, something that perhaps happens to temps, but only rarely. Even her love life has a kind of indeterminate status; while she's out filling in for pirates and murderers, all of her various boyfriends (the tallest boyfriend, the culinary boyfriend, the favorite boyfriend) are convening in her house and growing closer. To choose from them, we perceive, would be the kind of thing that a permanent can do.
Temporary is a kind of book that you recognize well enough once you see its basic design: take one of the metaphors or cliches that underline our lives and elevate them to literalness. It's the same basic logic, though a very different book, as Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad, and it succeeds for the same reason that Whitehead doesn't, because it throws itself into the schtick with gusto, and runs gleefully away from any question of realism or internal consistency. Leichter's workscape is a caricature universe, but the image of labor is a very real one. It captures our gig economy world, where so much labor is temporary, and where the promise of a good, steady, and permanent job--the kind my grandfather had from the time he graduated on the G.I. Bill to his retirement--has become entirely elusive. It's funny, I don't think temps exist anymore, or if they do, the cultural niche they occupy in the cubicle world (Ryan on The Office, for example) has become much muted. But we're all temps now. (Except, not me--I'm union.) More than this, Leichter builds upon the literalized metaphor to illuminate how destabilizing the constant ebb and flow of life's changes can be, and how difficult it can be to establish anything that feels like steadiness and reliability, in work or love, or anything else.
Temporary is 180 pages long; still, sometimes, it felt to me like she was stretching the idea a little too thin. But I wouldn't want to let that detract from the whirlwind imagination it took to make it work to the extent it does, and how what might have been a one-note idea is constantly refreshed and renewed. I loved the moment, for example, when a fellow temp on the pirate ship takes captive a woman who turns out to be the one for whom she's filling in. The violent reaction from the temp shows just how cutthroat you might turn out to be when face-to-face with your own life's competition. I liked the man filling in for the parrot, and I liked how the narrator is accompanied by the ghost of the Chairman of the Board, whose ashes she's been tasked with keeping talisman-like around her neck. Some of the jokes land flat, but most of them just land. And in the end, it made me feel how powerfully precarious life in this modern world can be, and how there is a small voice in the back of all our minds reminding us how easily we might be replaced.