1.
First, the idea of a fragment. Then the idea of a novel in fragments. Somehow
echoing the heterogeneity of real life and love.
2.
If a novel were a piece of art hung on a wall, this would not be a simple
photograph nor painting, but a mosaic. Renata Adler's Pitch
Dark is filled with fragments that might well be shards of photographs, or shards of glass showing the
scene beyond the wall, or shards of a mirror reflecting back the reader's mind.
3.
"We were running flat out," the narrator of Pitch Dark begins. "The opening was
dazzling. The middle was dazzling. The ending was dazzling." And then she goes
back again and again: "The truth was, there was something in the ice cube";
"I broke the law, perhaps I ought to confess this at the start;" even
asking, "Why don't you begin then with at first?"
4.
If those are the beginnings, where are the ends? Maybe Pitch Dark only ends in the minds of its readers. This is a novel
of ellipses, of scattered thoughts and incomplete stories. We hear references
to "the Sanger people," "the matter of the Irish thing,"
"the scandal at the tennis courts," and wait for the full story to
emerge. Sometimes, especially in the case of Jake--the man with whom the
narrator is having an affair, the reason she is running away to desolate
islands and driving down pitch-dark roads--the clues are so oblique that we
must infer from the gaps what has actually come to pass.
5.
David Markson did the same thing in Wittgenstein's
Mistress. Amy Hempel, too, with "In
the Cemetery Where Al Jolson is Buried." And Renata Adler joins the
two in drawing inspiration from Wittgenstein's epigrammatic Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus, which begins, "The world is everything that
is the case" immediately followed by, "The world is the totality of
facts, not of things."
6.
But perhaps facts are not what these authors are after. Emotions, maybe, or components of an individual consciousness.
7.
"Did I throw the most important thing perhaps, by accident, away?" the
narrator Kate Ennis repeatedly asks herself, and so we wait for that important, final
piece to complete the picture of her life. Until then, Kate's thoughts and questions pull us along
from a late-night experience with a dying raccoon to letters exchanged with suicide-assistance societies, from a relationship on the rocks to a
beautiful realization that the world cannot be reduced to facts, but to
stories.
8.
If a narrative, a plot, does not hold all these fragments together, then the promise
of a full picture must.
9.
Is a novel in fragments the ideal literary form of the early twenty-first
century? After a day of clicking through web sites and checking Twitter, I
almost want to say yes. And yet, "I’m not good at [using the Internet].
Work is lost. Emails, unfinished, unwise, go off sua
sponte," Adler says when asked by an
interviewer. Both Pitch Dark and Speedboat were acclaimed upon their
original publication in the seventies and eighties. It must be that readers back then were able to
accept that not all the threads would be neatly tied up, that a crucial moment might
always remain out of sight. They must have been willing to decide, as Kate Ennis was told, that "We just need something to tide us over
the pitch, the daily pitch of not knowing whether one or the other is going to
go."
10.
In the absence of a clear and full picture, what must
remain is voice. Voice and emotion.
11.
There may be no proper story in Pitch Dark;
it is every bit as unmoored as its better-known sibling Speedboat, but its melancholy, ruminative tone is
unforgettable. After the facts and the fragments, after the stories and the
sorrows, Renata Adler has left us with the pure and real emotion of a woman distanced from her relationship.
Image credit: Flickr user DavidGuthrie