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The author, Marisha Pessl |
By now I'm well over 300 pages into
Special Topics in Calamity Physics,
and feel much better qualified than I did last time to say a bit
about it. Marisha Pessl is an excellent writer. Like many contemporary
novelists, she does have an unfortunate tendency to showcase how well
read she is, though, given her skill, I find it more forgivable than
I often do (see The Weird Sisters or
Treasure Island!!!).
And, after all, Dante did the same thing, right?
The
story centers on Blue van Meer, the daughter of a highly intelligent,
self-satisfied and sometimes scathing, but still very likable
university professor whose wife died behind the wheel, tired out from
butterfly collecting. After the death of his wife, Gareth van Meer
moves himself and his seven year old daughter three to four times
each year, teaching at small community colleges all over the country.
In his words:
"Why
should I waste my time teaching puffed-up teenagers whose minds are
curdled by arrogance and materialism? No, I shall spend my energies
enlightening America's unassuming and ordinary. 'There's majesty in
no one but the Common Man.' " (When questioned by colleagues as
to why he no longer wished to educate the Ivy League, Dad adored
waxing poetic on the Common Man. And yet, sometimes in private,
particularly while grading a frighteningly flawed final exam or
widely off-the-mark research paper, even the illustrious, unspoiled
Common Man could become, in Dad's eyes, a "half-wit," a
"nimrod," a "monstrous misuse of matter.") (23)
Determined,
however, that his daughter should attend Harvard University, as he
did, he enrolls her in the elitist St. Gallway School, and settles in
one town for Blue's senior year of high school. A delightful excerpt
on how the school got its name:
The
booklet also featured a delightfully eccentric blurb about Horatio
Mills Gallway, a rags-to-riches paper industrialist who'd founded the
school back in 1910, not in the name of altruistic principles like
civic duty or the persistence of scholarship, but for a
megalomaniacal desire to see Saint
in front of his surname; establishing a private school proved to be
the easiest way to achieve this. (62)
When
she arrives at her new school, Blue, like any new student, is
nervous, worried about making the right impression, and figures
herself a cut above the company (and she's right on that last point,
in many ways):
I'm
obliged to reveal an old trick: implacable self-possession can be
attained by all, not by pretending to look absorbed in what's clearly
a blank spiral notebook; not by trying to convince yourself you're an
undiscovered rock star, movie star, top model, tycoon, Bond, Bond
Girl, Queen Elizabeth, Elizabeth Bennett, or Eliza Doolittle at the
Ambassador's Ball; not by imagining you're a long-lost member of the
Vanderbilt family, nor by tilting up your chin fifteen to forty-five
degrees and pretending to be Grace Kelly in her prime. These methods
work in theory, but in practice they slip away, so one is left
hideously naked with nothing but the stained sheet of self-confidence
around one's feet. Instead, stately dignity can be possessed by all,
in two ways: 1. Diverting the mind with a book or play; 2. Reciting
Keats. (65)
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Visual Aid 2.0 -- Blue is half-hidden |
Despite
Blue's obvious intelligence and clarity of vision, she does fall in
with the cool crowd at school, a shiny, attractive, "mature"
group of five kids whom she eventually discovers to be monumentally
unhappy. Charles, Jade, Nigel, Milton and Leulah become her constant
companions. I have yet to discover how it will all resolve, if there
can possibly be a satisfactory conclusion to what is in many ways a
very dark, very sad book. It is quite a bleak, though I think
accurate picture of the emptiness behind "school popularity"
and the ethereal hipster indie mystique. And yet, despite this
emptiness, even to us audience up on our safe and sage observing
tower, there's still something fascinating and entrancing about these
five young people. Though it has taken me a while to get here,
sharing these descriptions of Nigel, Milton and Leulah is actually
why I started this post. Perhaps I'm reading the wrong things in
general, but it seems to me that it's not often in contemporary
literature that characters are introduced so vividly, so
imaginatively, so tangibly:
Nigel
was the cipher (see "Negative Space," Art
Lessons, Trey, 1973, p. 29). At
first glance (even at second and third), he was ordinary. His face –
rather his entire being – was a buttonhole: small, narrow,
uneventful. He stood no more than five-feet-five with a round face,
brown hair, features weak and baby-feet pink (neither complemented nor
marred by the wire glasses he wore). At school, he sported thin,
tonguelike neckties in neon orange, a fashion statement I guessed was
his effort to force people to take notice of him, much like a car's
hazard lights. And yet, upon closer examination, the ordinariness was
extraordinary: he bit his nails into thumbtacks; spoke in hushed
spurts (uncolored guppies darting through a tank); in large groups,
his smile could be a dying lightbulb (shining reluctantly,
flickering, disappearing); and a single strand of his hair (once
found on my skirt after sitting next to him), held directly under a
light, shimmered with every color in a rainbow, including purple. And
then there was Milton, sturdy and grim, with a big, cushiony body
like someone's favorite reading chair in need of reupholstering (see
"American Black Bear," Meat-Eating Land Animals,
Richards, 1982). He was
eighteen, but looked thirty. His face, cluttered with brown eyes,
curly black hair, a swollen mouth, had a curdled handsomeness to it,
as if, incredibly, it wasn't what it'd once been. He had an Orsen
Wellesian quality, Gerardepardieuian too: one suspected his large,
slightly overweight frame smothered some kind of dark genius and
after a twenty-minute shower he'd still reek of cigarettes. He'd
lived most of his life in a town called Riot in Alabama and thus spoke
in a Southern accent so gooey and thick you could probably cut into
it and spread it on dinner rolls. Like all Mysteriosos, he had an
Achilles' heel: a giant tattoo on his upper arm. He refused to talk
about it, went to great pains to conceal it – never removing his
shirt, always wearing long sleeves – and if some clown during P. E. asked him what it was, he either stared at the kid as if he were a
Price Is Right rerun,
barley blinking, or replied in his molasses accent: "Nunna ya
goddamn business."
And
then there was the delicate creature (see Juliet,
JW Waterhouse, 1898). Leulah Maloney was pearl skinned, with skinny
bird arms and long brown hair always worn in a braid, like one of
those cords aristocracy pulled in the nineteenth century to summon
servants. Hers was an eerie, old-fashioned beauty, a face at home in
amulets or carved into cameos – a romantic look I actually used to
wish I had whenever
Dad and I were reading about Gloriana in The Faerie Queene
(Spenser, 1596) or discussing Dante's love for Beatrice Portinari.
(“Know how difficult it is to find a woman that looks like Beatrice
in today's world?” asked Dad. “You've a better chance running at
the speed of light.”) Early
in the fall, when I least expected it, I'd see Leulah in a long dress
(usually white or diaphanous blue) strolling the Commons in the
middle of a downpour, holding her little antique face up to the rain
while everyone else streaked past her screaming, textbooks or
disintegrating Gallway Gazettes
held over their heads. Twice I noticed her like this – another
time, crouched in Elton House shrubbery, apparently fascinated by a
piece of bark or tulip bulb – and I couldn't help but think such
faerielike behavior was all very calculated and irritating. Dad had
carried on a tedious five-day affair with a woman named Birch Peterson
in Okush, New Mexico, and Birch, having been born outside Ontario in
a "terrific" free-loving commune called Verve, was always
entreating Dad and me to walk untroubled in the rain, bless
mosquitoes, eat tofu. When she came for dinner she said a prayer
before we "consumed," a fifteen-minute plea asking "Shod"
to bless every slime mold and mollusk. "The word God
is inherently male," said Birch, "so I came up with she,
he, and God
rolled into one. Shod
exemplifies the truly genderless Higher Power." I concluded
Leulah – Lu, as they all called her – with her gossamer dresses,
reedy hair, decisions to skip daintily along everything but
sidewalks, had to have Birch's persona of bean curd, that espirit de
spirulina... ("There's something sour about her. She's totally
past her Eat-by date," I heard Lucille Hunter remark in AP
English). (90-91)
Well,
if you're not sold after all that, I don't know what would get you
hooked on this book. Give yourself some time (it's over 500 pages),
brace yourself against the darkness, and bear in mind that it is
quite humorous as well. Buy it! Read it! Talk to me about it.