The Driftless Zone is the first book in the Driftless Trilogy, and Rick Harsch's first novel. You will notice very quickly that the author"Noirdreams"
The Driftless Zone is the first book in the Driftless Trilogy, and Rick Harsch's first novel. You will notice very quickly that the author is a virtuoso of the English language, with a talent equal to Jack Kerouac's, but a voice all his own.
The driftless zone is what the small city becomes once all the beautiful, brilliant and productive citizens have left for greener pastures. It is grotesque and narrow and corrupt. This setting is ripe for luscious and wry observations from the viewpoint of Spleen, and the derelict denizens that drift through his mystifying life. This is where dreams and slow burn Noir converge, and the loneliness of urban nomads, unattached pseudo-humans, and upstream swimmers in the dirty undercurrent meet in the commerce of want, the joy of dissolution, and the haunt of hurt. We explore through the dark and elegant poetry of Harsch's productive prose, which constantly reaches further than rhythm and words, straddling deep alleys of meaning and collage, the startling peculiarities of these city slickers. Undoubtedly, the atmosphere and ripe imagery will linger indefinitely in the mind. Coupled with pigeons, fish and mayflies, engaged in their own arcane microcosmic tragedies, a superstitious and constantly curious main character encapsulates the themes and accompanying conflicts with cinematic aplomb. Sprinkled with morsels of philosophy, this book operates through complex sentences injected with poetic meaning, such as:
"Between buildings softened by the thick mist moths live their absurd looping lives out in the skirts of doomed light."
The language requires you to slow down, chew and savor the intense flavor of the words.
As the players endlessly try to outrun destiny, responsibility, and even meaning their lives of desperate flight, escape and tension had my eyes riveted to the page....more
This is a difficult book for me to rate. It has high entertainment value, but unfortunately, it is of the action movie variety. Sure, it's fun to readThis is a difficult book for me to rate. It has high entertainment value, but unfortunately, it is of the action movie variety. Sure, it's fun to read about explosions, human depravity, quick-draw knife battles, torturing hostages, and what not, but after a certain point I begin to question the time I've spent, to examine the pages I've turned for some semblance of human dignity.
I understand the author's utilitarian concerns. This is pulp fiction, printed on recycled toilet paper. A hundred years from now, no one is going to write a dissertation on the Traveler series. It is just one notch above those adventure magazines boys hide under their beds. I must say, however, that if you are looking for a simple, straightforward gore-fest, look no further.
The first book in the Outrider series, in my opinion, was far superior to this one. In that epic yarn, you had a Mad Max ripoff battling inhuman odds, with incredible pacing and satisfying moments of heartbreak and sadistic joy. In this series, however, I had trouble identifying with the main character. A certain amount of sarcasm is warranted, I'll grant, but the acidic cynicism of Traveler borders on the misanthropic. The twists and turns of his pre-doomed misadventures are less predictable than they are completely random. There is no real femme fatale, and the big baddies rarely show their ugly mugs. Instead you get endless ranks and files of disposable thugs, shoddily armed, and mishap-prone. You get tasteless depictions of women doing un-progressive things against their will or against the odds.
The bleak societal criticisms, relying as they do on Vietnam-era politics come off as more dated than relevant. The perspective of a near-future which has by now past usually has that effect. But think of Philip K. Dick or Orwell, who could make 1984 look ominous, and who got a few things right. I'm not saying that D. B. Drumm didn't think about what he was doing, but what I've read of this series seems to play out like a weekly serial the author wrote using a series of checkboxes. Pressed for time, he might've reached into a tried and true toolbox of snide comments, fluffy tropes, and contrived situations. Instead of plotting out a logical progression for the protagonist, the reliance on intense violence violates my innate inability to turn off my brain.
On the plus side, all of the prerequisites for a good time for most people are met. Every word out of the protag's mouth elicits a chuckle. The chewing-gum plot is completely forgettable but for some, will be a welcome distraction. I am a sucker for burnt out wastelands tenanted by goofy, grimy sociopaths. Witty banter is never so apropos as when it comes from a gritty, gristly, leather-jacket sporting mercenary and a blundering henchman. Is it a harmless diversion or a searing cult classic? Decide for yourself.
Is it morbid curiosity or subtle appreciate that makes me want to continue on to Traveler #2?...more
A 2008 interview with Vice quoted infamous mangaka, Shintaro Kago, saying: “Shit and sex are merely the starting points, and unless you can tick thoseA 2008 interview with Vice quoted infamous mangaka, Shintaro Kago, saying: “Shit and sex are merely the starting points, and unless you can tick those off you can’t even begin thinking about a narrative.”
Grotesque literature has its paramours, and Ballard sits in the ranks of William S. Burroughs and Georges Bataille. Examining Ballard’s literary output, you have to wonder what this unbashful bloke was thinking behind those puffy, doughy features. His innocuous, austere sci-fi worlds glisten with post-human despair. His crystal alligators frozen in time are reminiscent of hard-edged fantasy, and the dozen novels about urban ennui amid thinly veiled warlike conditions read like historical poetry from the amber-thick mind of a slathering autocrat.
In Crash, Ballard occupies the headspace of an obsessive narrator, inconsequentially, also named James Ballard. This is not an autobiography, neither is it autofiction. It is a novel about automobiles having sex with people, or is it the other way around?
In a gallery of fractured dreams, Ballard immortalizes the destruction of innocence, the disharmony of vehicular manslaughter recast as moral epiphany, the elegance of chrome fixtures reflecting dark insecurities, the cruel inhumanity of inflatable HOV-lane partners, the fallacy of the crosswalk’s imagined, scintillating security blanket, the tragicomic splendor of careening into a parked ice-cream vendor with your head jutting from the window, jowls jostling like a jolly St. Bernard, the salacious out-of-body experience of Cro-magnon-level rutting in apocalyptic parking lot Twilight zones, the tabloid-fumes wafting through the hot, sticky ventilator, the secret pock-marked underbelly of the depraved masses spasming toward the perfect societal thousand-car-pile-up of a newly evolved symphonic mutilation of the planet.
I was reminded of two unassuming short stories, one by Vonnegut, the other by Bradbury. The first depicts Earth as a world inhabited by cars. People are mere organs within these mechanical beasts as they roam endlessly and without purpose, toward their ultimate disintegration. The second tells of car-crash enthusiasts, gathering around the bloody craters of crash-sites, always the same eerie faces, staring down, gaping into the maw of the twisted, excruciating pleasures of death. The group gathers innately, like an atmospheric anomaly.
The “formula of death” prescribed by Ballard in what some have called his greatest work is a pure expression of mankind’s technological dependencies, which taps into our mental gas-holes to inject them with sugary, straight-faced dementia. It is an examination of the fascinating nature of accidents, the unexplainable collision of particles, the spontaneous idol-worship that occurs on the side of the freeway four to eight times per day along your routine commute. What you think about on your daily drive, the perverse morbidity that comes bubbling out of your psyche as you stroke the worn leather of the grease-imbued steering wheel. There is of course an obsession with wounds, as separate from the death fixation, but involved with the involuntary compulsion lurking in every passenger’s mind, that sick daydream crash that always happens between meaningless conversations, if only subconsciously. Not to mention the animalistic instincts, the macabre voyeurism of driving by those apartment complexes at night, slowing down, turning off the headlights, sinking deeply into the well-stained driver’s seat…
Love, in this novel, is ungendered. Vaughn’s masculinity is supplanted by other factors – the presence of forehead grease for one, or the sickly sweet odors secreted by the human body, and much, much more. He is the accomplice lover, a being composed of concrete, asphalt, tar, heat and smoke, grit and slime, the personification of the machineries of joy, connoisseur of the soul-enlivening destruction of binge-frolics in the multi-story car-parks, the seedy airport terminals, erecting frozen testaments to forbidden pleasures, tweaking out psychotic musings mid-sentence, obscene snapshots tumbling out of his day-planner, erotic tenderness oozing from his pores. Get ready for discomfiting juxtapositions, deliberate, depraved behavior, and a flaunting of the artistry of fate. Ballard’s creepy poetic sensibilities have their roots in Nabokovian lyricism. He paints a “lacework of blood,” mosaics of shattered bone, all while preserving an awkward confessional quality. What could be misplaced desires leads to rehearsals of death, strange coagulations of reality and imagination, superimpositions, mythic ur-lusts, unparalleled vanity, palimpsest upon palimpsest, dripping with blood and sex, and endlessly beguiling repetition. What are the correct symbols of violence? Could not a surgery be a warzone? What clinical thrills go unacknowledged amid the reeking bedpans and crusty sheets? Sociopathic neuroses manifest like tummy aches. The savors of slo-mo, heart-stopping artistic doom punctuate this egotistical monstrosity.
Imagine what this character would say in the confessional. Would any number of Hail Marys absolve his behavior? Instead we are given a sodium-lit romance of twisted steel, Polaroid pornography, freaks courting disaster, children lost in the wild foreplay of undiscovered vistas of lust and ecstasy, head-on, roll-over, whiplash, pulsing horrid, motorized phalanxes distilled from the marriage of sexuality and a satirical hellscape. The sweet tingle of tinkling glass, the glorification of scars as status symbols, those quiet gas puddle rainbows gleaming in the driveway. What are our bodily fluids but gas driving us toward the various fender-benders of fate?
We are desensitized crash test dummies, which objects, Ballard believes, were originally designed as sex toys. Our recalibrated brains are nightmare-machines, our lives are described as serene sculptures in motion, awaiting the beautification of death, corpse-painted traffic lines, jewel-studded windshield-powder pavements are the backdrops of our carefully controlled environments. The petrol-explosions, the geometric, weaponized pleasure, the psychological horror of transcendental spectatorship, the poetry of excess, the charnel-house back room discussions, the taboo fatuations of inveterate recluses, the relentless rhythm of our boring-as-parked-cars lives, all add up to a pulsing hamburger meat roadkill-fest, a maiming mad scientist, Ballard deploys the stylized assassinations of propriety and our hallowed securities beneath the insensate heavy mass of molded plastic that is our cloistered civilization, with cinematic exuberance, and not sparing us the intricate descriptions of vomit clotted between the seats - in this, Ballard has not been equalled.
Lastly I am reminded of the odd film by Shin'ya Tsukamoto titled Tetsuo, The Iron Man, which I watched at 1 AM one night years ago on a fuzzy, miniature television – I never bothered with the Cronenberg adaptation. This transgressive s-f may be an untapped literary grove. This is not Grimdark, it can only be called Kago or Ballard. Even Burroughs never fully concentrated his literary pretensions. These works speak of our aimless destinations as a surrogate for our purposeless existences and the unrestrained attractions and misconstrued emotions inherent in our lives lived in cars, between places, the car as a second body and the total prosthetic, our true bodies in which our souls are no more tangible than the wings of angels. This book is a celebration of human frailty, a lucid rite of passage, haunted by the pressures of our impending demise, a cathedral composed of smegma and mucosa, the ultimate expression of anthropomorphic literature, which reveals the true purpose of car magazines. Even with its ceaseless, Sysiphean copulation, its hollywoodized disregard for sacred human rights and logic, its anarchism and religious imagery, the fossilized rictuses of weird WASP botox-faces, the absurd accumulation of details, and the immense stark, uncompromising vision all combine to provide a salacious and enigmatic masterwork.
I appreciated the parallels with bullfighting, probably misinterpreted the ritualized cruelty, the executions, but feasted on the meditation these pages offered, pervaded by euphoria, a pervasive unease, and improvisational streamlined distortions of reality, immense cerebral dislocation, immeasurable cognitive dissonance, found in the Darwinian confidence of these theatric method actors. Is it possible to go too far in consumerist desecration, in recording the private, unspeakable thoughts bred in solo exertion of literotic muscular spasms, in partaking in arousal prolonged to torturous heights, in self-immolating furies, in feverish, palpitating prose-serenades, in gory frenzies of flesh-toned bumper cars? As all this percolates uncomfortably into your brain, ask yourself if this soiled purity, these syphoned veins, this chaotic exhausting manifold transliteration of homo erectus prutid journalism is what you actually wish to read.
Will you share in the gross weight of secret knowledge, will you also come to regard car dealerships as brothels? A collide-o-scope of horror, for the most jaded literary enthusiasts, who don't mind a page-by-page instant replay of the suggestions of coitus in the mere act of driving with the main character’s automobile mistresses. Anatomical contortions, lacerations, toxic relationships, the significance of partnership, illicit amatory forceful enemas, viscerally uncouth seduction, trance-like precision, squealing tyres, infinite corruption, mannequin-like waxy uncanny valley characters all sliding down the greased slope of post-modern wingeing, toward a pallid, comatose climax. If you were not bothered by Burroughs’ fictive suicidal asphyxiations, witness the driver’s seat become Ballard’s orgone accumulator. I have not used the word ‘fetishistic,’ but don’t forget ‘brave, bold, and un-subtle.' It is a waterfall of metamorphic imagery, a scatological haunted house pantomime, a pareidoliac encyclopedia of orifices and mechanical architecture. Reckless but not wreckless. Also, the fictions imposed on reality by television should not go without mentioning, and cinema’s effect on our perception of reality seeps into the thin plot. The synthetic narrative distance it provides is paramount to nurturing the transgressive nature of the animals we have become. If the vivid vortex of exterior description is not too repetitive for you, the melancholy people in their nakedness will leave your tank on E....more