Fiction. A marriage of The Turn of the Screw and Herk Harvey's Carnival of Souls, SOME PHANTOM poses questions about the line between madness and memory, fantasy and abuse. NO TIME FLAT follows Wade, a young boy who grows up on the American plains in an isolated existence with his elderly parents, as he makes his way through a childhood of playground shootings and mysterious strangers. "Stephen Beachy is a complete visionary, a sorcerer, a secret weapon. I'm going to plead with everyone I know: read this book. Read it, and gasp, marvel, rage, weep, and applaud"--Scott Heim.
Stephen Beachy is a writer. He was born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1965. His first novel, The Whistling Song, was published by W. W. Norton with cover illustrations by Curt Kirkwood in 1991 and his second, Distortion, by Harrington Park Press, in 2000. Two novellas, Some Phantom and No Time Flat were published in 2006, from Suspect Thoughts Press. His fiction has been published in BOMB, Chicago Review, Blithe House Quarterly, SHADE, and various anthologies. He has written literary criticism for the San Francisco Bay Guardian.
In October, 2005, he published an article in New York Magazine, exposing the writer JT LeRoy as the concoction of a woman named Laura Albert, with the help of her family members.
Beachy teaches in the MFA Program at the University of San Francisco.
Beachy is also a second cousin of biologist Philip Beachy and historian Robert Beachy.
Two novellas for the price of one! I continue to be impressed with Stephen's line-by-line prose, which is surprising and amazing to say the least. I really liked the style, subject matter, and themes involved in the books, especially in "Some Phantom." References to "Carnival of Souls" and comic books and other movies, bright light being seen as painful and creepy, awkwardness of human interactions... There is a level of complexity here that cannot be summed up neatly. It's the type of stuff you could ponder for years after reading it.
These two novellas are creepy as hell. Full of delusion and psychosexuality, abused, dispossessed, sadistic and above all eerily American these characters rip through the Heartland, cutting off our faces and showing us what we look like. While it just might be impossible for anyone, even Beachy himself to top The Whistling Song, he doesn't disappoint.
The writing is very elegant and intelligent, but the random, episodic structure of both these novellas made them less engaging than other works of similar quality. I'm curious about Beachy's other works though, because he displays a lot of talent. I also liked the witty references to various movies in both works.