Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Animals Strike Curious Poses by Elena Passarello

Though his name is listed on the title of every Kinetoscope movie, it's unlikely Edison had much to do with the short films of Edison Studios. The War of Currents was basically over and alternating current had triumphed, so it's possible he had no clue about the plans to make Electrocuting an Elephant. The film is a minute-long, live short of the first elephant--and the second female of any species on the planet--to be condemned to electrocution for her crimes.

In the yards around Coney Island's Luna Park, the condemned elephant places each foot onto a copper plate. Once ignited with over 6,000 volts of alternating current, they smoke beneath her planted feet. The smoke rises around her body, her trunk goes rigid, and all five tons of her list forward.

The best part of Elena Passarello's Animals Strike Curious Poses, a collection of essays about animals given names by human beings, is "Jumbo II," a history of the elephant who was executed by Thomas Edison's motion picture studio at the turn of the century. In this essay, Passarello ties together several different currents--excuse the pun--that came together to result in Jumbo's execution. One such current is the history of elephants in the new world, another the adoption of electric current as a source of power. At the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, an attempt to electrocute an earlier elephant is botched; it's at the same exposition where President McKinley will shortly be killed by an assassin. That assassin, Leon Czolgosz, will end up in the electric chair himself, starring in a short film of his execution filmed by--of course--Edison studios. In this way, Passarello brings together those kind of rhymes that history bears, and captures a moment of American history marked by cruelty and violence as much as progress and scientific advancement.

The second best part of the book is a two-page sketch in which Koko the gorilla uses her sign language to deliver a version of the famously vile joke "The Aristocrats":

"Ingrid hole smoke-ring blow. Mother-gorilla hole blow harmonica. Father-gorilla dance, balloon-on-noodle. Baby-gorilla clowntime, balloon-on-tadpole. Ingrid hole smoke-smoke. Around together skateboard do--smoke noodle balloon harmonica ride all! Harmonica hole play 'Purple Rain' All MAYONNAISE RAIN! All finished! Thank you."

Mustache-man tell: "Wow. What name show?"

Father-gorilla tell: "WE WONDERFUL SNOB PEOPLE!"

A note in the back of the book informs that the essay is constructed by only using words that were in Koko's vocabulary. You might say something like, the essay shows us how communicative Koko was within the limits of her language, and reveals how closer animals are to the human than we sometimes think. But mostly, it's just really, really funny.

I didn't think every essay in Animals Strike Curious Poses worked. I was less patient with essays on Yuka the frozen mammoth, the Wolf of Gubbio that befriended St. Francis of Assisi, and Mike, the Headless Chicken. At times I thought the essays verged a little too much on the literary, when what I really craved was a much more straightforward explanation of who this animal was, which sent me more than once to Wikipedia. That said, some of the swinging-for-the-fences pieces are the most successful and interesting, as with the Renaissance-era poem about the cat Jeoffry which is missing, apparently, a left-hand side of the page, and which Passarello reinvents. Other animals that appear include wartime messenger pigeons, the horse that broke Christopher Reeve's back, Arabella, the spacefaring spider, and a maneating crocodile named Osama.

"Jumbo II" worked best, I thought, because in the end it had something to say: as the targets of human cruelty, animals often end up mixed up with our human histories in ways they may never really be able to understand. And yet, this fact entails upon us a kind of obligation to consider them more deeply than we do. Topsy--the "bad elephant" electrocuted at Coney Island--was put on trial much like the human being who killed the president, and yet our attempts to understand Topsy pale in comparison with our attempts to understand why a human being like Czolgosz would do such a thing. We name animals because we see in them reflections of ourselves, but perhaps we should try harder to see and understand them on their own terms.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

The Way of Florida by Russell Persson

We visit our life just once. It could rain down or it could sun a string of days or an unended ease could be what days you live in but I come to believe we visit our life just once this only one time in which we live, the string of days entire from one until the end. Inside this now I live with my body underneath the stars there I would bet the stars up there in measure of what we do an pourn down from the moon is my revital. I'm as wracked as any man here and I toil more and eat less and my charge demands that I lift us to the next day and so it is I underneath the moon the other men have fallen upon each other in what could be close to giving in as a body spells its coming day and sapped to the utmost lands where it might and I the moon addresses and it is I the moon floods up with sand for what's upcoming so that I may guide in some way these rafted men who pell-mell upon each other like blown twigs I like here standed to that task our Lord I become the one who gathers them in to proceed us all into the.

In 1527, the Spanish explorer Panfilo de Narvaez made the decision to split his party in two. Half would go by boat along the coast of Florida, and the other would go over land. The two parties would never meet again. The land party traversed not only Florida but across the southern and southwestern United States and into Florida, becoming the first non-Native Americans to see these parts of the New World. We know this because the journals of one such explorer, Cabeza de Vaca, survive, recounting the story of how the party nearly starved to death again and again, encountering friendly and not-so-friendly Indians, and eventually, when there were only four left, became famous as a band of traveling medicine men and healers. As Brian Evenson notes in his prologue, Russell Persson's The Way of Florida is in one way a translation of Cabeza de Vaca's account, hewing closely to it, though in idiosyncratic English.

I got to hear Persson read from The Way of Florida at the Association of Writers and Publishers' conference last weekend. I was struck by the section he chose, in which one of the explorers rides his horse into a river and is drowned. The stark, denuded language, the collective "we" that makes it seem as if some piece of the entire body is being peeled off. And of course, the decision to eat the unfortunate horse, a decision that presages the group's future need to resort to cannibalism. The story, such as it is, is one of increasing alienation and desperation, moving deeper into the unknown world. Cabeza de Vaca and his fellow explorers get farther and farther away from the familiar, and they grow farther and farther away from themselves. Their clothes become ragged, then fall away, leaving them entirely naked. The pious Cabeza de Vaca meditates constantly on God's will; he reasons that they have been cast out safety in punishment for their sins. What to make, then, of the way the final survivors are built up again, and transformed to a kind of prestige? Other transformations are here, and I found myself wondering if the same were recorded in Cabeza de Vaca's true journal, as when one of his fellow Spaniards chooses to stay with his new companion, a Native man who lives as a woman, over another push to return to civilization.

It's the language, though, that animates The Way of Florida. If the novel is a translation from the Spanish, it's a translation that doesn't quite arrive in English, or if it does, an English that is wholly new and unfamiliar. Persson writes long stretches without periods or breaks, with few commas, or perhaps none. Verbs, nouns, and adjectives switch places; often I found him using the "right" word but not quite the "right" form, as in "the moon is my revital" above. The experimental language slows the speed of the journey, and perhaps makes it as painstaking for us as for Cabeza de Vaca. More importantly, it has an alienating effect, and captures the strange and uncanny experience of confronting a new world. If you're like me, The Way of Florida will remind you of William T. Vollmann's novels about European-Indigenous encounter. Like Vollmann, and perhaps moreso, Persson recognizes that really seeing these exchanges for what they were requires a language that presents them to us as new and strange as they must have been.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Something New Under the Sun by Alexandra Kleeman

"Yes," Patrick says with audible relief. "I want to come all the way back, Alison. I want to crawl back into the old life with you and grow small in its belly, like a baby. A man needs a woman, he needs it like a water needs duck. I've been out west now, to see what I can see, and what I discovered is that it's all on fire and giving off a dark-blue smoke. I saw the palm trees and the bathing-suit beach and the surf-whitened sea, and I looked until my eyes burned down to the nub. There's no paradise here unless you're a bird of paradise. There isn't enough ocean to put out all the flames."

Patrick Hamlin is a writer whose semiautobiographical novel has been picked up for adaptation into a movie. He's been invited to Los Angeles to work on the film, but it isn't quite what he expected. His book has been mangled beyond comprehension, and instead of working on the script, he's been tasked with chauffeuring the movie's star, a tempestuous and troubled former child star named Cassidy Carter. Cassidy is cynical but shrewd; she's the first to notice that the movie doesn't really seem to be a movie, that the crew keeps getting smaller and more patched together, and that the producers' disinterest in the filming itself may be connected to the frequent pickups of cash-filled briefcases that are part of Patrick's workload. The transparently fake production is related, too, somehow, to the advent of a commercial brand called WAT-R that has recently replaced natural water in California. Cassidy never drinks the stuff, correctly intuiting that it's connected to the rise of a debilitating form of dementia that ends with people being whisked away, vegetative, to mysterious "care" facilities.

I wanted an L.A. novel for my trip to California, and Something New Under the Sun delivered. Kleeman's Los Angeles is a Los Angeles of about five minutes into the future. Everywhere it's on fire, and the water has disappeared. Public goods have been replaced by private enterprise, which is more interested in short-term profits than keeping its customers alive. It's a state in crisis, but it hardly seems to know it's in crisis. "But it's not really an emergency," Patrick thinks when driving around a brush fire, "putting on his signal and shifting into the fast lane, if you can drive around it. An emergency would be everywhere you looked, inescapable; some long-submerged animal intelligence would recognize it with fierce instinct. In an emergency, the mind would not drift aimlessly from daydream to distraction as his did now, in search of something to grasp." But of course, Patrick's got it all wrong; daydream and distraction are the prerequisites of disaster, they dominate until its too late, and even afterward. Something New Under the Sun is a novel about a state at the crossroads of all our modern crises: ecological, climatological, epidemiological, technological, capitalist.

I really enjoyed the character of Cassidy Carter, the former child star. Her shrewdness and intelligence are in violation of both her tabloid image and typical ideas of vapid celebrity. It means something that only she, as someone who has navigated the exploitative bone-crushing systems of Hollywood, can see what's going on. There's something, too, about the way that pop culture gives us a kind of buried insight into the real world that's very DeLillo. The whole book is DeLillo, maybe more DeLillo than any other book I've ever read, though it can't capture DeLillo's effortlessness (who can?). I loved the sections where Patrick combs through the Reddit boards devoted to interpretation of Cassidy's old kid's show, a Veronica Mars knockoff called Kassi Keene: Teen Detective. The message board community has splintered into schools of interpretation like rival cabbalists, building a division between those who believe the grand designs of the show are only textual (like those who spend hours inventing internally consistent interpretations of Twin Peaks) and those who believe a grander symbology is at play that points to social, even mystical truths. Again, this is all about the actress who starred in Happy Birthday, Miss Teen President!, a movie in which she exclaims, "This land is our land, and now this skateboard is your skateboard." (She tells this to the "crabby, wizened Senate minority whip, as she teaches him how to do an ollie on the somber white steps of the Lincoln Memorial.")

Patrick begins to lose it in California, an effect of the WAT-R along with his own personal fragilities. In his absence, his wife and daughter have disappeared to a summer camp-like commune in upstate New York. He worries and frets, thinking that he's lost them to a kind of cult, unable to understand that it is he himself who has landed into the lap of America's cult culture. Perhaps, in Hollywood, he's become enmeshed with the country's biggest cult of all. Patrick and Cassidy team up to investigate the evils of WAT-R, and for a while, we think we're being offered something much more conventional, a legal thriller, an Erin Brockovich. But this isn't an episode of Kassi Keene: Teen Detective, and the pair's abortive investigations are no match for the urgent logic of crisis, nor for their own needs and insecurities. If you're looking for a novel that tells us the end of the climate crisis will be a renewal of hope--or that we might find our own personal end somewhere else but within it--look somewhere else.