Read more - CW Smith
Transcription
Read more - CW Smith
MiraCranfill R> fr»kie. lA&pZ<rV^4*T m Su^^ Review of C.W. Smith's Steplings Steplings. By C.W. Smith. Fort Worth, Texas: Texas Christian University Press, 2011. $32.95. When nineteen-year-old Jason Sanborn muses about what he terms the "hocus-pocus business" of life after death, he finds it all, as he says, "pretty hard to swallow." Thinking about his dead mother, he wonders i f " . . . people really drift up into the stars like flaming chaff from a bonfire when they die?" Jason is the protagonist in C.W. Smith's latest novel Steplings, and, as the title suggests, Steplings is about the complex relationships of an American blended family, brought together by death and remarriage, sustained by a tenacity tempered with grace and grit. At the heart of the novel is a rare examination of the multifaceted relationship between two step-siblings, Jason and eleven-year-old Emily. Exploring the intricacies of family life is not new ground for Smith, whose finely written previous novels include Thin Men of Haddam, Country Music, The Vestal Virgin Room, Buffalo Nickel, Hunter's Trap, Understanding Women, Gabriel's Eye, and Purple Hearts. In Steplings, Smith makes a foray into a situation that, as he has said, gives us a love story in a "cultural context," part of that context being the Iraq war, part of it being twenty-first century parenting. The novel's opening scene takes place at the Mesquite, Texas, home of the Sanborn family, comprised not only of Jason and Emily but also their parents, Burl, Jason's father, and Lily, Emily's mother. The family has been constructed hastily, or so it still seems to Jason, who two years ago lost his mother to cancer, then watched Burl spiral into alcohol addiction. Burl has met Lily in AA, and in a short time, the two have married, combining their lives and their only children to forge a new family of four. Jason is at loose ends and without direction when his father remarries. He has dropped out of high school two months before graduation, after his over-achieving girlfriend Lisa departs for college, ending their relationship; as she puts it in her letter to him, "we each need to grow." He finds his new stepsister diffident, I28 difficult, and, most of all, too young to relate to as a sister; instead, she is a "Supernerd" in pigtails and glasses. From the outset there are fissures in the foundation of this ready-made family, wounds that haven't healed for instance, as well as emotional distance, even, as it transpires, between husband and wife, Burl and Lily. Jason is a troubled young man. Confused, cast adrift, he and his father talk at, around, and through each other, but at the novel's outset neither can effectively talk to the other. Even worse, at the beginning of the novel, Jason is facing an impending court date, having been accused of assault following a foolish mistake at Lisa's graduation party. Emily, meanwhile, is at an awkward age. Has there ever been a more challenging time to be a young girl than the early twenty-first century? Emily is often sarcastic and sharp-tongued. The difference in Jason's and Emily's ages is one divide. Another, more substantial divide, is that smart, gifted Emily feels she has been consigned to a terrible fate living in small-town Mesquite, Texas, with Lily and Burl and Jason, and not where she would rather be, with her academically minded father, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. Smith succinctly sums up Emily's feelings about her new life: "She hated the house, the town, her stupid school especially, it was full of redneck ignoramuses, and Jason's dad was always mad at her and her mother always took his side—" After Lisa writes him a Dear John letter, Jason decides to hitchhike to Austin. Lisa is, at this moment in his life, his lodestone. Emily has her own reason for wanting to travel to Austin: the desire to see her father. She wants a different life, the ideal life she imagines she would live with her father, a dream any young child of divorce might have, life with the "other" parent, free of rules, of the mundane stuff of daily life. She convinces Jason to let her accompany him to Austin. Jason reluctantly agrees. What follows is a novel of journey, an Odyssey of sorts as Jason and Emily, reluctant comrades and companions, travel through one small Texas town after another—Mesquite, Gun Barrel City, Corsicana, Waco. Here Smith, Dedman Family Distinguished Professor at Southern Methodist University, 129 knows whereof he speaks. His is an accurate portrait of smalltown and suburban Texas—the webbed interstices of interstates and county roads, the Dairy Queens, the roadside parks. At several points in their journey, Jason and Emily encounter fellow travelers. The most vivid, evocative encounter is with two African refugees (we are not told what country in Africa), Jacob and Emmanuel, who are traveling to Houston in "an old blue Ford Econoline van, one headlight cocked slightly outward like a lazy eye, right front fender sporting a dent the size and shape of a football." Brought to America by church groups, Jacob and Emmanuel are travelers far further afield than Jason and Emily, from across the world, enduring more hardships and struggles than white, culturally and economically insular Jason and Emily have ever known. Their stories of life in refugee camps and the shock of coming to America are riveting to Jason, especially the pure, simple novelty of experiencing something as quotidian as a supermarket for the first time. "And oh, my friend—" Emmanuel shook his head. "You must see through the eyes of a boy who has never been inside the American supermarket to understand how such a thing can make you tremble. It is like an ocean when you are dying of thirst. All around, food, food, food! You do not know how to choose one thing or the other. It takes many years to learn." The conversation captures the haunting essence of their immigrant experience and sharply contrasts their journey with that of Jason and Emily. Jason sees this encounter as a brush with "real life" and is far more impressed by the possibility of writing a song about the encounter than considering the suffering of Jacob and Emmanuel and understanding that this isn't just a gritty anecdote fashioned for his benefit. On the other hand, Emily seems untouched by the encounter. Blase as only the very young can sometimes be, she's also very much a product of her time, where "real life" exists by and large online. She's seen a documentary at school about The Lost Boys of the Sudan. " I bet that Jacob and Emmanuel even know some of them. Maybe they were even in the movie. It's 130 still all going on over there. It's genocide now. Even President Bush said so. You can go online and read all about it." Then she proceeds to focus on eating a granola bar, the momentary brush with tragedy and death forgotten. Smith has created rich, complex characters in the guises of his two young protagonists. It is rare for a writer to capture so keenly and so accurately the everyday thoughts and speech of young characters and temper them so well with moments of soul-searching revelation. Smith has also created a wonderfully complex character in Burl, a man seeking his son's approval yet at a loss as to how to forge a relationship with this young man who is making a painful transition to adulthood. The novel's strongest sections feature Jason and Emily as they journey to and then around Austin. Smith juxtaposes these sections with chapters featuring Burl and Lily, who are increasingly at odds as tensions mount between them. Emily assures Jason she has left a note for her mother explaining her decision to accompany Jason to Austin so she can see her father. The trouble is, as Jason discovers, she has lied about the note, and her lie has dangerous consequences. When Lily reports Emily's disappearance as a kidnapping, the police issue an Amber Alert. From this point the novel's tension builds steadily, no longer only about the journey, but about Jason evading a potentially serious scrape with the law. A less engaging character initially is Lisa, enjoying her freshman year at the University of Texas with new friends and newfound freedom. Scenes between Lisa and her friends lack the urgency or complexity of those between Jason and Emily or Burl and Lily. However, once Jason encounters Lisa in Austin, Lisa immediately becomes more accessible. She and Jason share a finely written scene in which Lisa forces Jason to confront the consequences of his actions. Jason has been so busy casting himself as a victim he's never stopped to consider others he has hurt. His confrontation with Lisa provides a pivotal moment in his moral and emotional growth; it is the moment at which another, a more potent and viable, journey begins. Once Jason and Emily return home and the Amber Alert is cancelled, the time for Jason to salvage and re-direct his life begins. Smith handles this genesis deftly in a beautifully written scene in which Jason 131 attempts to make amends for an accident, a long-overdue apology crafted in note-perfect dialogue. Taking place in 2001, the backdrop of Steplings is the Iraq war, and the novel's conclusion is unafraid of tackling social issues on a fine, intimate scale. Smith draws his characters even closer to world events as Jason enlists in the military. Soon he will experience the "real life" of war first hand. We can't help but be amazed at his journey, and we can't help but feel torn between admiration and concern as walks out of his home in Mesquite and into an uncertain future. Steplings is a richly detailed, complex novel. It is filled with issues of social and personal conscience, inhabited by characters a lot like us: people needing and seeking meaning in a broken, fragile world, people always on an odyssey of one sort or another. Steplings is deceptively quiet at times, subtly and wisely offering several contradictory yet valid perspectives to eternal verities and conflicts within a dense yet accessible prose style. Granted, Smith has given us characters to identify with but, more importantly, he has given us characters to remember. 132