Tom Disch writes in the only novel marketed as science fiction I have ever found readable (that is, rereadable), Camp Concentration (1968):
“The Muse descends—characteristically
assuming the mortal guise of an attack of diarrhea, abetted by headache. Auden
observes somewhere (in the ‘Letter to Lord Byron’?) how often a poet’s finer
flights are due/rumpty-tumpty-tumpty to the flu.”
The writer of this journal
entry is Louis Sacchetti, a poet and conscientious objector. He is held in a
military prison and being injected with a form of syphilis meant to accelerate
the intelligence of prisoners. The goal is to use the disease-boosted geniuses
as weapons while slowly killing them. True to 1968, the president of the United
States is Robert McNamara. Most of this information is delivered obliquely, sometimes
unintentionally, by way of Sacchetti’s journal. Despite the unlikely premise, Disch
writes with a minimum of melodrama. His prose is witty, precise and allusive.
The reference to Auden’s poem is correct. In the ninth stanza of “Letter to Lord Byron,” he writes:
“Professor Housman was I
think the first
To say in print how very stimulating
The little ills by which
mankind is cursed,
The colds, the aches, the pains are to
creating;
Indeed one hardly goes too far in stating
That many a flawless lyric
may be due
Not to a lover’s broken
heart, but ’flu.”
He even makes fun of Auden’s
concluding rhyme. There’s a subtle linkage buried here: Disch, like Auden and
Housman, was gay. I missed that when I first read the novel more than half a
century ago. Today, Disch – born February 2, 1940 -- would have been eighty-two
years old. The loss is ours. He would have made a grand old man – irascible, enormously
funny, a dedicated enemy of cant. He took no sides in politics, never played
favorites. A death-obsessed poet, Disch took his own life on July 4, 2008. That
fact still stuns me, just as his vehement anti-religion stance still bores and
offends me. Among poets, his closest kin is probably Turner Cassity, who was also
erudite, non-confessional, formally gifted, very funny and gay. For sad
amusement, read Disch’s website, Endzone, with a final entry made two days
before his death. See the prose entry for April 22, 2008, for a taste of
Dischian whimsy shaded with melancholy. He titles it “Leaves of Our Time”:
“Leaves blown across the
lawns of foreclosed homes; leaves on forest floors, moldering delectably;
leaves pressed between the pages of a book, which so have learned, a little, to
think; leaves still shocked by the summer’s departure, still clinging to their
high aeries and in denial; leaves that had promised themselves to take up yoga
or ballroom dancing when they had the chance, and now they have the chance;
leaves that fell young, half-eaten by caterpillars, and vain about the holes
they have to show for that ordeal; leaves in Missouri so unlike the leaves in
Illinois but not ashamed; leaves that were never seen by any human, having been
hidden, as though in a harem, by other leaves; leaves gathered in the burrows
of chipmunks and witness to their love; leaves dissolving into mulch by the
margin of the road. Number them all and remember them.”
There’s something playfully
prayer-like about that passage. Disch was a master of the list and catalogue, a man of perfervid appetites. He
reveled in the world’s bounty. In “The Dot on the i,” the first poem in his
last book, About the Size of It (Anvil, 2007), Disch refers to the realm
he has entered as “the democracy of dust.” The poem is at once mordant and
exalting:
“When it comes to the
sense
Of beauty we are all
Pythagoreans,
Transfixed upon the
ineffable and inexplicable
Significance of a number;
for instance
(Or especially?), i, the
square root of minus-one.”
4 comments:
Deep Depression in Key West
by Turner Cassity
In vehicles that travel only south,
We camp from isle to isle and hand to mouth.
You South downhill from Ozarks and from Smokies,
Cockroach country, greet us Counter-Okies.
California ceases at the pier;
The sea itself drops off six miles from here.
One town with just two things to do. No more.
Become a sailor or become a whore.
My wife gets seasick; I'm not very cute.
The tourists fish a lot; we'll follow suit.
The coffee's Cuban and the pie Key Lime.
Right now it's "Sailor, can you spare a dime?"
On novels "marketed as science fiction": In the late 1970s I was browsing a bookshop in Arizona -- Tempe, I think -- when a walk-in asked for Mr. Sammler's Planet. The clerk said, "That would be in science fiction..."; and before I could utter a correction he strode to the sci-fi shelves and damned if he didn't pluck down the Bellow.
After that I made it a game on my travels, and vanishing rare were the times I found a shop with both that book and a devoted sci-fi section that they were not conjoined. Cynthia Ozick's Cannibal Galaxy dwelt there too, and a DeLillo title I can't now remember.
So at least at point-of-purchase these were marketed as science fiction.
1. We all have our exceptions that prove science fiction isn't all bad. But it's mostly bad.
2. That paragraph from Disch goes straight into my heart's commonplace book.
Camp Concentration is a good novel, but did anyone else think the upbeat ending came out of nowhere and felt completely false?
Post a Comment