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102 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2009
Maybe if I hadn't bought the house, I wouldn't have found the videos and none of this would have happened. Judith would still be alive, and I'd have lost nothing except some memories I could live without. But I'm not convinced. I think it would just have found another way of happening. Even before it all started, I felt like I was living backwards. The future seemed more real than the past.
Maybe I'm not really a person. I don't mean I'm something else. I just don't belong to the day or to the night. I'm always stuck in the doorway. Watching the traffic go back and forth.
I’ve lost count of the number of things in my life — dates, films, meals, work appointments — I’ve missed because of delayed or cancelled trains. If I’d been an alcoholic or a junkie, I don’t think I could have bigger holes in my diary. Being a passenger teaches you that life is random and nothing can be counted on.The Witnesses are Gone is the story of Martin Swan, a man who finds strange VHS tapes in the shed of his new house. The tale is permeated with a new millennium disaffection, as Lane situates the story with references to the War on Terror and the geopolitical narratives of the day that justified it.
Do you remember reading Lovecraft or Machen for the first time and believing, just for a moment, that what you were reading was not fiction? That some documents of another reality had fallen into your hands? ... And now the same stories appear in corrected editions, with long introductions and scholarly footnotes by S.T. Joshi, the suspension of disbelief is impossible.
Few reviews refer to the anonymously (nemonymously) published short story that spawned Joel Lane's own The Witnesses Are Gone. I find that curiously apropos in a metafictional sort of way, as the shared premise of both stories is of works that defy attempts at serial contextualization by alternately vanishing themselves from the physical world and then from memory. Again appropriately, finding "The Vanishing Life and Films of Emmanuel Escobada" is challenging but possible... and happily, as yet, is not as catastrophic to the seeker as the finding of the films by these fictional (?) directors appears to be.
Joel Lane writes beautiful, ghostly, devastating sentences. A common thread through his work is of people desperate to find reason amid the chaos of reality. And, tragically, the harder one tries to understand, the more one consequently unravels the veil of order. It is, effectively, psychological suicide. It's why, I imagine, Lane is frequently linked to Lovecraft and Ligotti, in spite of profound mythological and stylistic differences.
The Witnesses Are Gone is a nearly perfect novella: a story with room to breathe without becoming bloated. As others have noted, Lane achieves something magical in his descriptions of the films uncovered during the course of the story. The pacing on these scenes of description is perfect. Lane composes serial snapshots that propel the viewer/reader forward without feeling disjointed. On the contrary, one feels dangerously and seductively immersed. Likewise, Lane's explorations of people and places are at once razor sharp and hallucinogenically misty, capturing that horrible hyperreality that hides behind the illusion of order. My sole criticism would be in the author's/narrator's brief political asides. They aren't entirely out of place conceptually, speaking to the whimsical cruelty of the modern political and social landscape. But too frequently their introduction feels abrupt and tangential. That said, to forgo this novella for such a minor flaw would be to deprive oneself of a powerful literary voice that was silenced far too soon.