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309 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1976
I live in nightmare. My primary activity is concealing that fact. I am less and less successful.it is a house of many memories, many scenes. the scenes come and go and bleed into each other. is one scene connected to the other? it may have a different cast of characters, it may have characters that overlap. each room is its own story, its own era; yet it is all the same house.
A house is a copy of a brain, divided into chambers.there sits a man at his typewriter, writing the story of his life, surrounded by walls of his own making. his past is sloughed off like so much dead skin, stories peeling away like old paint from an old wall, showing more paint below, more stories, memories cracking and flaking off. look closely at certain spots and you can see the layers of different colors that have been painted on this wall over the years, multiple colors once vibrant and now dull and faded, blending into each other. what was the original color? impossible to tell.
At the age of thirty-eight, Christopher Webster lived in his mind, that last refuge of the old or the sick.there sits a man named Chris. he has divided himself. at one point Chris goes to a party and is repelled, he leaves immediately once he realizes he is the victim of mistaken identity and that he is surrounded by gargoyles; he leaves and picks up a hustler and begins a sad and rather sick relationship. at one point Chris goes to the same party and he is known by all, a guest as repulsive as all the other gargoyles; he leaves with his mistress and they continue their sad and rather sick relationship. Chris has many nemeses and they are all women. Chris has only a few enemies and they are each of them men. who is this man named Chris? even he doesn't know. all he knows is that he is lonely on his island. is Chris the island itself?
Fragments. Fragments: even to himself, that's what a man is.there sits a genius in the center of a book. each phrase, each sentence, each paragraph is a revelation of what prose can do and how feelings and memories can be articulated in new ways, articulated or shaped, beaten or wooed into new shapes, transformed midway into something quite different from how it all began. and yet not so different at all. that piece of living wood is still there in that piece of dead furniture. but what if you want it changed, if you tire of wood and its many shapes? the solution: burn it to ashes. obliterate it; kill what is already dead. now it is something new! and so the genius in the center of this book shapes and reshapes and turns a life into furniture, pieces to be moved around in different rooms, depending on mood, depending on the level of sadness or anger or pain or shame that colors that mood. no matter, all of these moves... all of this furniture that will eventually find itself on the ash heap.
All there is, is fragments, because a man, even the loneliest of the species, is divided among several personal, animals, worlds. To know a man more than slightly it would be necessary to gather him together from all those quarters, each last scrap of him, and this done after he is safely dead.there sits a bitterness in the center of a man. where did that bitterness come from? is it mother's fault? father's? is the world to blame? is it the man himself?
He had not realized how much he had come to hate language and saw his hatred as too complex; surely his goal was to simplify.there sits a reader, agog and aghast. Chris is so many things he despises. there sits a reader, full of empathy and admiration. Coleman Dowell is so many things he respects. there sits a reader, his names are Chris and Coleman Dowell and mark monday and Mark Molnar.
A man in his last days may be simultaneously in many places. All of life is compressed like a checkerboard so that he may step from light to dark square, from past to present (the future is now the past) with no effort to speak of.there sits a writer, his name is Coleman Dowell. despondent over his career, he committed suicide in 1985.
He was an island of ruined men.This is how a dream is read. This is how a nightmare is read. This is how echoes of the past are read. This is how loneliness, isolation, desire, depravation, desperation, sorrow, love, lust, hate, pain, pleasure are read. And here I thought that reading this book would be like a fun voyage to an Island. How wrong I was and how glad I am. I wanted to shout, I wanted to type this whole review in uppercase just to put across my point in case anyone misses it that I LOVED THIS BOOK. This despite of the fact that almost 70-80% of it went over my head and I’m not to blame. It’s the kind of novel that should have the Annotated Island People, a Coleman Dowell Wiki and since we’re on it, Understanding Coleman Dowell won’t harm either. But it’s just a wishful fancy on my part as a result of my overenthusiastic reaction to this...Masterpiece.
Woke in the night, went outside as though drawn by fine wire. The stars were astounding. One understood “stellar,” and its misapplication to show-biz types, seedy comedians, brassy girls, made one mourn for the death of the word. The populous western sky! Great masses of constellations, myths, fables – a great literary sky-city.
Here is the child grown up and old. Sterile. Is there a deeper silence than that? Old, lustful, sterile, alone. Praying. Praying to be rid of his cock. Can we offer you more than that for your liberation?
All there is, is fragments, because a man, even the loneliest of the species, is divided among several persons, animals, worlds.
In other words, which we always seem to need, I would no more put my own experience into a story than I would into a conversation. The difference is that in writing I draw on the emotional side of experience and distort facts; whereas in conversation I include obvious facts and distort everything else, especially emotions.
The point of verbal communication, as I see it, may be to explore the possibilities of insincerity in oneself and others. This has a deadly serious — no quotes this time — purpose for me: the game of divining how one uses insincerity to cover what.
People say friends don’t destroy one another, what do they know about friends?Which, I felt was thematically appropriate for that work, but just not specifically appropriate (as almost the entirety of One Of The Children Is Crying is about how families destroy one another). Well, hell, it looks like I get to reference the quote after all though, as Island People still takes the same view of interpersonal relationships – which I’ll discuss a bit more a bit further on – but applies it to friends and lovers instead of family.
He gazed into her unclothed eyes that were devoid of that illusion of distance which civilized people are able to set between each other to keep the brute at bayWhether his characters have, or are devoid, of this illusion of distance, Coleman is always at work highlighting the hostility and instability of all of our interactions. There is a great deal of pent-up hurt and anguish in all of the characters of this book – but twisted into that is the characters’ overwhelming needs; and the pain and desires are in constant conflict – these characters have been hurt so badly as to no longer be able to willingly communicate their needs in the face of the persistent fear of greater hurt, but the needs remain, and their continual lack of fulfillment underlies and informs the malice and hostility present throughout the book.
You drive, walk, eat, look at television, read, and all the while, beyond you and the cozy circle created by your lady around herself and you, like the natural emanations of stars, other lives circle yours, seeds still winged and wind-borne, looking for sympathetic soil. You feel the juices and solids of your body in attempted rearrangement, or, more disturbing, making an effort to create a stillness that approximates death, beyond which the body does become soil, receptive to all wind-borne seeds. In a not especially prolonged stillness, as though no chances could be taken that you might decide to become perpetual motion, words fall out of the air, a random fall from which you might be tempted to make selection, and as you do not move, cannot, a string of words falls onto you, and from you, onto the paper: winter rye greening up, smoothing the old brown earth with a fine new plane: Carpenter Rye, neighbor.