Author Spotlight
EVER: A Review
The narrative constraints of Ever – presumably a woman inside a room; that’s it – is a precarious way to write a novella. Without characters, plot arcs, locations, etc., language itself is summoned as a surrogate protagonist. The writer – thus reader – are both stripped of the typical arsenal of fiction; what is left is simply language’s ability to summon or evoke the most intrinsic visceral ‘truths’ of being alive, a collection of nerves funneled into a consciousness.
And that is, at heart, what Blake Butler’s Ever is about, a kind of timeless consciousness that is, remarkably and/or ironically, very relevant to a particular time: now – dispersed with cryptic evocations of some post-apocalyptic world, as in “[…] not that we knew the moon here anymore […]” Notice that Butler chooses the word ‘knew’ instead of the more likely ‘saw’ or ‘had.’ This suggests either a cognizant or intuitive decision to focus more on perception than facts.
Light (even the shifty bracketed-text seems to flicker on the page) is used, I think, as a metaphor for consciousness. Early on, Butler establishes light’s residence in place of the brain with the brilliant line, “Behind my eyes the light went on.” (I got light-headed when I read that.) This has some objective significance, being that our visual world is this exact refraction of light. Butler’s use of it is not merely a romantic trope, but a way to juxtapose the ‘natural’ world (“Let there be light” Genesis-y stuff) and the unnatural ‘corrupted’ world (post-human), a world colonized by human endeavor and its architecture – which brings me his concept of ‘the house,’ Butler’s Barthian a la Lost in the Funhouse play-thing. Put simply, the ‘house’ is used to create a dichotomy with ‘light,’ representing the unnatural and natural world, respectively. The house – that which physically confines the narrator is the very same thing that launches and enables [her] hyper-solipsist narration. Ceilings, windows, and doors are mentioned in a frenetic way, unable to establish space or location. We get the sense of entropy happening, we just don’t know where: outside the house, inside the room, or — terrifyingly — inside the body.
Butler‘s version of the body, relieved from any sentimental humanist tendencies, is both a parasite and subject to parasites; a mere host (some dot on a food-chain) for fungi, mold, and bacteria. Butler‘s use of skin as some permeable sack makes it difficult to distinguish its edges. His fixation on body fat/lard reminds me of Joseph Beuys and his homeostasis concerns. For Butler, the body is not an entity, but an event.
I find the writing very ‘male,’ and the choice of a female narrator is peculiar. Perhaps Butler, given his penchant for boundary blurring, is supplying us some hermaphrodite text. Not trying to make a joke here, but while reading I kept on reminding myself “this person has a vagina.”
Light, house, body – a lovely triad by the way – functions (or dysfunctions) in the same manner. The vague motifs themselves collapse. Ever is an experiment in narrative entropy. (Not to be too gushing, but I find it more resonant than Beckett’s work of similar concern.) The result is something aesthetically brilliant and mentally nauseating. Ever is an important, enthralling read.
Tags: blake butler, ever
Jimmy, this just downright silly. Everyone knows that Blake doesn’t know what a metaphor is.
Jimmy, this just downright silly. Everyone knows that Blake doesn’t know what a metaphor is.
wow, thank you for such a thoughtful and in depth review jimmy. really awesome to come home to.
i like the idea of the book as a hermaphrodite. this is a marketing option i had not considered. its my only hope for oprah. and its on.
seriously though, thank you for the kind eye and words.
wow, thank you for such a thoughtful and in depth review jimmy. really awesome to come home to.
i like the idea of the book as a hermaphrodite. this is a marketing option i had not considered. its my only hope for oprah. and its on.
seriously though, thank you for the kind eye and words.
“…the body is not an entity, but an event.”
i just wanted to repeat that line, so that i might abide in that idea a little longer.
jimmy, i think that clarifying idea is vital not only for the text, but for being alive as a whole. a whole with many holes: holes which enable the event itself.
“…the body is not an entity, but an event.”
i just wanted to repeat that line, so that i might abide in that idea a little longer.
jimmy, i think that clarifying idea is vital not only for the text, but for being alive as a whole. a whole with many holes: holes which enable the event itself.
i read the book this weekend. it’s one of those books that i think should be re-read … that reveals more nuance/levels the more it’s probed. it’s like an instrumental vs. a song w/ lyrics. w/ lyrics, U know where U stand. w/ just music, a multitude of interpretations/revelations are possible.
EVER reminds me vaguely of Anais Nin’s HOUSE OF INCEST, a very dreamlike novella about loss/love/memory/fear etc…. all the emotions and experiences distilled and filtered thru language…
i read the book this weekend. it’s one of those books that i think should be re-read … that reveals more nuance/levels the more it’s probed. it’s like an instrumental vs. a song w/ lyrics. w/ lyrics, U know where U stand. w/ just music, a multitude of interpretations/revelations are possible.
EVER reminds me vaguely of Anais Nin’s HOUSE OF INCEST, a very dreamlike novella about loss/love/memory/fear etc…. all the emotions and experiences distilled and filtered thru language…
[…] “The house – that which physically confines the narrator is the very same thing that launches and enables [her] hyper-solipsist narration. Ceilings, windows, and doors are mentioned in a frenetic way, unable to establish space or location. We get the sense of entropy happening, we just don’t know where: outside the house, inside the room, or — terrifyingly – inside the body.”(Jimmy Chen, quoted from HTMLGIANT) […]