Brian
Leung's recent book of short stories, World Famous Love Acts,
is a deft and crafted first collection. Though it initially comes across
as overly Straightforward Narrative (several reviews, including one in
the Indiana Review and a snarky one on Amazon, have criticized
the heavy-handedness of his story endings, suggesting that they wrap up
too neatly, that they become too baldly thematic), we found much to like
herein.
There's a moment in "Drawings by Andrew
Warhol," the penultimate story in the book, which turns out to be
the most important story if not the best story in the book, where the
running head flicks from "Andrew" to "Andy" (on page
169, a recto page, if you're counting). This is almost definitely an accident—one
typographical error in an otherwise clean book—but there is a chance
that it's not. Reason being that the heart of the story—the detail
revealed on that very same page—is the difference between Andrews
and Andys, which is the difference between the background and the foreground,
between the flatlands and the elevation, what's dull and what's important.
The story features a character who is quite probably a serial killer,
and that moment in the story—this close-up with/of death—activates
the narrator's life.
Again, it's hard to believe that this is
intentional: this is a book that otherwise honors the rules of the book
as a container for text. Nowhere else does the content (the stories) interact
with the form (the layout and typography): this is a conservative book
design (and one might take issue with the font selection and leading—the
text block looks a bit too double-spaced workshop prose). Too, these are
mostly conservative stories (as Chris Offutt notes in his Foreword/blurb:
"[Leung] gains trust the old-fashioned way—through confidence,
craftsmanship, and compassion").
Yet the attentive reader is confronted with
the possibly radical fact of it, a glitch that happens at exactly
the right time in the story and in the book. It's a fitting violation:
a poke in the fictional bubble, an interchange between form and content,
an acknowledgment that the book's form has meaning and potential
to work with (or against) the text.
This particular moment in this particular
story (probably the most consciously exciting of the bunch: it's
got sharks and guns, where elsewhere we see eggs, gardens, and archaeology—though,
to be fair, the second story, "Executing Dexter," is fairly
high-profile too) pushes the thing from Good Book into Something Special.
These stories are Good Stories,
as Offutt reminds us. We see a range of characters and situations, an
excellent array of conflict and narrative. The strength of the collection
only begins to reveal itself as we read further, as some of the stories
begin to connect (the lost daughter in an earlier story is the gone-LA
porn star in a later story; several characters are from a presumably fictive
small town in Washington state), and this structural flourish, this convergence
(reminiscent of Leung's flair for story endings), this recognition of
underlying order has a pleasing effect. It suggests that maybe there is
a genius to the thing working beneath our radar, and gives us a reason
to believe that the typo, the glitch, isn't simply that, that it might
be an element of craft. And that's a pretty neat bit of magic.
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