Remember the gum from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory? The one that made Violet turn violet? It was an entire three-course meal concentrated into one stick of gum. That’s kind of what Small Change by Andrez Bergen is like; its a book that reads like an entire season’s worth of TV episodes condensed into a 25 minute sizzle reel, and I mean that in the most honorific way possible.
This slim novel is a ‘casebook’ of its two main characters, Roy Scherer and Suzy Miller who are self-titled investigators of the paranormal and super mundane. These are characters Bergen has worked with before in the comic book medium and, thus, he is very familiar with them. Many of these stories were comics until Bergen decided to replace the artwork with prose. Typically, I’m not a big fan of a novel becoming a comic or vice versa, but Bergen manages to avoid the cardinal sin of writing a lazy adaptation that just rehashes what was already written and doesn’t bring anything new to the table. This noir/horror/fantasy mashup manages to tread its own path and view the familiar characters and cases through a new lens.
The genre mashup can be a tricky thing to conquer. Sometimes it is skewed so far in the direction of one of its genres that it leaves the reader wondering why the other is even there. Other times it can be so heavy handed that it leads to unintentionally humorous scenes, characters, and conflicts, and there are few things more terrifying to a storyteller than creating something that is unintentionally funny. But Bergen has come to master the genre mashup story. Each genre (in this case I would consider the main ones to be noir, horror, and fantasy) support each other, working to strengthen the others while also defining themselves. One genre never drowns out the other. Noir may be the overarching genre found throughout the book, but when horror or fantasy elements, like, say, a werewolf or some bitter, sassy talking heads come into play, the tones mold together perfectly. Then, when the scene is done, they break apart and we find ourselves back in the smoky embrace of noir. Think of each genre in this book like a droplet in a lava lamp; they combine to form a larger glob and then break back into smaller separate droplets seamlessly. Like with a lava lamp, I found myself oddly mesmerized by the shift in genres without the accompaniment of a shift in tone.
The dialogue, however, was my favorite part of this novel, which I’m quickly realizing is my favorite aspect of most of Bergen’s writing. The dialogue in Small Change is fantastic. It is sharp and pithy and zips back and forth between the two characters like an olympic ping pong volley (is it called a volley in ping pong?). The repartee between Roy and Suzy is noir through and through. It is clear Bergen has a soft spot (or perhaps a smokey, whiskey-soaked gritty spot) for noir. He is very adept at casting an ambiance over the entire scene he is writing to the point where your mind’s eye seems to be wearing a shadowy, black and white lens.
Although, that is not to say this book is without its faults. Something that wasn’t quite as deftly handled as the dialogue or the genre mashup aspect was the pace of the book as a whole. Each individual anecdote was paced wonderfully, beginning exactly where it needed to and zipping along like a hummingbird in the wind until it reached its necessary conclusion. Unfortunately, the stories don’t fit together with each other quite as nicely. Part two, titled ‘Way Back When’ was paced the best as a whole (and was also my favorite part) but still stood out from the rest of the novel. The individual shorter stories, as well as the longer sections, kind of felt like puzzle pieces that didn't quite fit but someone jammed together anyway. Fortunately, because this is a ‘casebook’ and not a typical novel with a chronological, start-to-finish structure, it doesn’t stand out too much.
Small Change is a difficult book to classify; a comic book adaptation that is part noir, part horror, part fantasy, and all strange. But that is also the beauty of the book, it is, at once, all of those things while never veering into the land of beige-colored boredom. It could have been incredibly easy for this book to garner the label of ‘Not having any clue what it wants to be,’ but it is apparent Bergen never questioned what he wanted these stories and these characters to be. To borrow a line from Dennis Green, they are exactly who he thought they were (yes, I understand that reference is not exactly what would be considered timely). Small Change, which is a fitting title for this slim novel, is a good bit of weird fun with a little bit of heart, copious amounts of well-crafted dialogue, and just the right amount of humor and appropriate references to keep you speeding right along.
Coming in at just under 120 pages, this novel is concentrated noir mashup goodness, despite some of its shortcomings, that can act as a good introduction to some of Bergen’s other works. So, grab a stick of Andrez Bergen’s three-course noir and enjoy, I promise you won’t turn into a blueberry. A werewolf, maybe, but certainly not a blueberry.
3 1/2 out of 5 stars
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