Ali Smith, Autumn

 Ali Smith, Autumn

As we feel our way into how to adjust to our new circumstances, wherever we are in the process, I’m appreciating the pieces that writers are sharing to help us look after each other. One of the writers in my current advanced novel-writing class told us that Toni Morrison’s essay “Peril” had helped her through a very hard time right after the election. It’s an intensely useful reminder of how authoritarian governments respond to artists, as well as a reminder of why we have to keep reading and writing: “…stillness can be passivity and dumbfoundedness; it can be paralytic fear. But it can also be art. Those writers plying their craft near to or far from the throne of raw power, of military power, of empire building and countinghouses, writers who construct meaning in the face of chaos must be nurtured, protected.” Another writer then shared a Vaclav Havel poem that led me to his writing on hope (as quoted in Rebecca Solnit’s Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities, currently available as a free e-book from Haymarket Books) not as “an estimate of the situation” but “an orientation of the spirit, an orientation of the heart.” So as a way of reclaiming our minds and, yes, the hope Havel describes, I want to share some delight with you, from Ali Smith’s first novel in her seasonal quartet, Autumn, about friendship and mortality, bureaucracy and Brexit, “arty art,” time, loss, and the real-life artist Pauline Boty.

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Drawing the Line: Rael San Fratello at the U.S.-Mexico Border and Gabrielle Brant Freeman, Girltrap: Disrupting the Game

Drawing the Line: Rael San Fratello at the U.S.-Mexico Border and Gabrielle Brant Freeman, Girltrap: Disrupting the Game

Disruptions of the border wall, conceptual and actual: massive hot pink seesaws with glittering bicycle seats and children playing teeter totter, confessionals, a massive greenhouse, a wildlife or horse race or xylophone or cactus map. Also “Reunite,” a yellow warning sign with a child running towards her parents with her arms held out, her parents racing towards her, their bodies frantic, desperate. Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello, via their architecture firm Rael San Fratello, have spent more than ten years creating subversive responses to the U.S. Mexico border wall, and the whole idea of border walls, with interventions, dioramas, and games (including a 2017 board game called “Tunneling.”). These disruptions are fiercely playful, defiant, and moving.

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Helen Oyeyemi, Mr. Fox, and Angela Carter, “The Bloody Chamber”: Muse and Bride

Helen Oyeyemi, Mr. Fox, and Angela Carter, “The Bloody Chamber”: Muse and Bride

Mr. Fox

Helen Oyeyemi’s Mr. Fox, full of twists and discoveries, offers a set of variations and reversals on the old English folktale of Mr. Fox and Lady Mary. Though it has a number of differences from the Bluebeard tale, it has a mysterious, powerful, murderous husband. In Oyeyemi’s version, there’s Mr. Fox, a writer, Daphne, his wife, and then Mary, his muse who comes to life and upbraids him for all the women he kills in his books. The stories within stories in this novel display multiple configurations of triangles, alterations in the power structure, and new versions of old relationships.

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