My coworker found this book, the only library copy of it in the State of Massachusetts, and loved it. The plot, about art critic James Figueras who sets out to meet and criticize the work of a mysterious artist told in a detective noir style, sounded interesting enough. It’s a short 190 pages, and I’ve always wanted to read a Charles Willeford book. So I read it, waited for something to happen, and nothing does. It’s not easy for me to hate things, but this books is the easiest to hate. It’s begging for me to hate it.
Told from James’ perspective, the book suffers a lot because of it. He is an interesting, fleshed out character who is horrible. The stereotype of every art critic in fiction. He says fancy things, they are never as enlightening as he thinks and his voice adds absolutely nothing. I don’t normally complain about characters being unlikable, but he is too much to handle even for 190 pages. He’s just not interesting. Nothing he does, says or thinks actually makes any sense to the audience, because he is trying to sound more important than he is. While that is the point of his narration, he spends most of the time explaining things the audience already knows. I’ve never been talked down in a crime story, so this is baffling to me. Full chapters of him explaining his motive, his plans, his concerns, etc. ALL of them obvious to anyone who reads this, but he’s got to tell us in his stupid pseudo-intellectual jargon. Doesn’t that sound like fun?
There’s one early chapter where he explains to his girlfriend, Berenice Hollis, that art criticism is like a scientist telling us how big a baby whale is. Umm what? No, it’s not at all. A whale is a tangible thing. It’s weight and length are measured. Those things are facts. Art, any art, is subjective. You can’t criticize it accurately because nobody sees art the same. They are based on lots of different, contradictory critical theories. THEORIES. A measurement isn’t a theory! It’s a something that is proven. So that whole speech immediately told me this book was a waste of time. And that was early on. It only got worse. And to go back to Berenice, she is completely useless, James spends every moment of the book complaining about her but drags her along anyway, and their relationship leads to the most predictable ending ever. Another reason not to read this.
The elusive painter at the center of the story, Jacques Debierue, is made to be the leader of a brief movement that bridged Dadaism with Surrealism called Nihilistic Surrealism: isn’t that the most pretentious, hipster bullshit art movement name ever made up? It sounds like the genre of The Big Lebowski (a movie which does a much better job of exploiting and satirizing art movements than this book ever could), but taken to a level so over-inflated that if this book were a mylar balloon it would have floated up into the atmosphere, popped, and disintegrated by the time I finish typing this stupid analogy.
I would like to like this book. I tried. But nothing happens for over half the book! The things that people called “twists” in the book were just obvious to me, and nothing about this felt exciting. You want to know what does happen? A lot of talking and set up until something actually happens on (approximately) page 140 out of 190. I read and love books that are steeped in the post-modern school of rambling, but this isn’t my cuppa. The Claire DeWitt crime series does a great job at having close to no plot or logical point, but presents its ideas without rambly speeches or throwing in insular logic that doesn’t matter to anything. This book is more focused on impressing me with an over 20 page chapter/lecture on art history in order to tear all those things down than allowing a story to organically introduce those topics. It explains, then makes fun of, the concept of art criticism so many times, that the intended response can’t actually happen. It’s all too obvious about manipulating my perspective. When I can see what a writer is doing, when I can feel their words trying to force a thought in my head, then you aren’t actually writing a novel just a speech about a topic only you care about.