Jesus Item ID: #114Jesus’ Son: StoriesProduct Information: Review Item DescriptionReview The unnamed narrator in Jesus’ Son lives through a car wreck and a heroin overdose. Is he blessed? He cheats, lies, steals–but possesses a child’s (or a mystic’s) uncanny way of expressing the bare essence of things around him. In its own strange and luminous way, this linked collection of short fiction does the same. The stories follow characters who are seemingly marginalized beyond hope, drifting through a narcotic haze of ennui, failed relationships, and petty crime. In “Dundun” the narrator decides to take a shooting victim to the hospital, though not for the usual reasons: “I wanted to be the one who saw it through and got McInnes to the doctor without a wreck. People would talk about it, and I hoped I would be liked. ” Later he takes his own pathetic stab at violence in “The Other Man,” attempting to avenge a drug rip-off but succeeding only at terrorizing an innocent family. Each meandering story–some utterly lacking in the usual elements… Related posts:
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This review is from: Jesus’ Son: Stories (Paperback)
I’ve never read anything by Chuck Palahniuk. I know about him, however, because the movie ‘Fight Club’ is based upon Palahniuk’s novel of the same title. Chuck Palahniuk is a big fan of Denis Johnson’s collection of short stories, ‘Jesus’ Son. ‘ A recent article about Palahniuk in Poets & Writers Magazine says that Palahniuk ‘has read ‘Jesus’ Son’ over and over’more than two hundred times. ‘ Palahniuk says, in that article, ‘whenever I’m stuck, that’s a book I read to sort of jump start myself. ‘Palahniuk’s endorsement was good enough for me. Any book that someone has read more than two hundred times must be worthwhile, or at least worth taking a look at. Besides, this remarkable collection of short stories is only 160 pages long, the pages are small (I measured it and it was about 7′ x 4′), and there are not many words on each page. It doesn’t take long to read. If it matters, I also always knew Denis Johnson was out there, a highly regarded poet and novelist, ever since ‘Fiskadoro’ had been published more than a decade ago. I had to read something by him sometime. I sat down last night and started reading ‘Jesus’ Son’ and didn’t put it down until I was finished. It didn’t take me long and was worth every minute. ‘Jesus’ Son’ contains eleven short stories, all written in the first person, all connected by the common voice of the same narrator, a young, strung-out misfit whose pathology permeates every story. The stories are grim, just like the dark, desperate life of the narrator, just like the violent, disconnected, drug-clouded lives of the people who surround him. They are stories in which the narrator seemingly transcends his life, his drug- and alcohol-induced cloud of unknowing illuminating an at times crystalline-pure vision of the world. The physical world becomes continuous with the mental world in rushes of stunning prose. Thus, in ‘Car Crash While Hitchhiking,’ Johnson’s narrator, sitting in the back of a car: ‘Under Midwestern clouds like great grey brains we left the superhighway with a drifting sensation and entered Kansas City’s rush hour with a sensation of running aground. ‘ And later, while in a hospital emergency room, his mind drifts in a kind of hallucinatory fugue: ‘It was raining. Gigantic ferns leaned over us. The forest drifted down a hill. I could hear a creek rushing down rocks. And you, you ridiculous people, you expect me to help you. ‘ The writing is brilliant, attaining remarkable heights of intensity and clarity. At the same time, the characters and the events are dark and disturbing, the narrative interrupted and discontinuous. There is drug addiction, alcoholism, violence, torture, murder, voyeurism. There is a disturbing coldness, but also a profound clarity. It is writing from the bowels of life, writing that achieves its power through prose that is as hard, as pure, as the finest diamond. ‘Jesus’ Son’ is not an upbeat collection of stories, but it is resplendent with a writing style and an imagination that celebrates the power of fiction written with stark feeling, written so it reflects the real lives of its desperate characters.
This review is from: Jesus’ Son: Stories (Paperback)
The beauty of Johnson’s prose is evident in every one of these stories. The subject matter is dark, depressing, hallucinegenic, and yet the collection’s overall feel is uplifting. Johnson could have written some cliched grotesqueries about the drug life, could have piled on the filth and dirt of it all, but he doesn’t. The down-and-out characters, most of them junkies and criminals, are given a healthy dose of humanity, where a lesser writer would have turned them into abominable caricatures. Unlike most post modern writers, Johnson cares deeply about his characters and this comes out in every story. He doesn’t follow the pomo aesthetic by declaring that life is inherently meaningless or hopeless, far from it. What we come to find in this amazing collection is the presence of hope in all things, no matter how low or degraded things might appear. And that is precisely what Denis Johnson shows us. There is beauty in everything, and if we can’t see that, then we are not fully human.