The phrase "labor of love" can sometimes feel like a backhanded compliment - one which suggests that a book belies a certain amount of artistic struggle or overreach that went into its creation, or else that it lacks audience appeal outside of the author him- or herself. It can, if disingenuously deployed, come off sounding a little condescending; a little judgy; a little smug.
But!
Other times, it means something else entirely. Something rare, and enormously special. Sometimes (and this being one of them) it denotes a level of care and patience and daring originality; a commitment to a specific, and somewhat esoteric vision with no guarantee of commercial success, and the will to harness and hone that vision into something virtually flawless; something too brilliant to ignore. And so, when I say that Ben Borek's Sissy is a towering, thrilling, monumental labor of love, that is what I mean. It's also just about the funniest fucking thing I've read all year.
Written entirely in verse (ABABCC sestet stanzas, to whom it may concern), Sissy tells the tale of a profoundly growth-stunted, 21st century British lad - one who is literally birthed every morning from his mother's womb, and after putting in his daily 8 hours at an aggressively nondescript office drudge job, returns to his cozy uterine apartment (complete with Morrissey posters) every night. There he leads an Alex DeLarge-esque second life online as a virtual gangster lothario who takes what he wants and answers to no one. No one, that is, until he gets hooked by a catfishing anarchist performance artist via a mail-order bride website and embarks on an ill-fated quest for love (or at least lust) that leads him clear across the continent and back. Invoking Lord Byron and Irvine Welsh in about equal measure, Sissy pulls off the incredible trick of joining two wildly disparate literary pantheons simultaneously, while also taking the piss a bit out of both.
Borek's mastery of language(s) is sublime, and his poetry barrels forward with a kind of fluid pugnacity, bobbing and weaving between voices, tongues, and dialects as he crafts verse after verse of unexpected, creative, and hilariously multisyllabic rhymes like some hyperliterate battle rapper (Lin Manuel Miranda's got nothing on this guy, but boy what I wouldn't give to see Sissy staged and performed aloud). Likewise, his scathing dissection of modern masculinity (or lack thereof) and his seamless alignment of contemporary concerns with classical sensibilities bakes a degree of timelessness right into the text. Sissy is a true "the more things change, the more they stay the same" proposition, and while I won't spoil the ending, I will say that if men are still behaving this badly (or worse) 50 years down the road, this book will most assuredly be part of the canon that tracked our continued decline.
In all of these ways, Sissy is a labor of love in the absolute best sense of the term - a book that undoubtedly took heroic amounts of time and effort, but reads like it spilled forth from quill and ink via one long, mad spell of divine inspiration. A book that will challenge your very notion of what books are still allowed to do and be. Indeed, a book that must be read to be believed.