|
RANDY MARSHALL
Review | You
Are Here: A Memoir of Arrival, by Wesley Gibson
(Back
Bay Books, 2004)
The title of Wesley Gibson's new book evokes,
for me, an odd image of myself, standing at one of those mall directory
obelisks, searching for the name or number of some shop or restaurant
and attempting to orient myself with respect to the gargantuan schematic
of the shopping center by finding the small red circle that will tell
me where I stand amid all the neatly boxed store numbers and the universal
icons for Restrooms and Pay Telephones. You Are Here. Of course
I am, right here at Entrance Thirteen. Yep. There's Spinnakers.
So, if I turn right at the food court. . . . The
ellipsis here could signal a host of possible omissions. Choice and fate
are implicated, but only we know where we wish to go in the first place.
Or do we? A central theme undergirding Gibson's delightful story-telling
is an examination of our notions of orientation on a number of levels.
How do we manage to navigate the distances we travel from the familiar
spaces we share as parents and children, brothers and sisters, through
the broader matrix of our social and professional interactions, into
the fraught, intimate landscapes of our adult lives? The humorously officious
gesture of Gibson's title is disarming in that it seems to answer a question
the reader doesn't necessarily remember having asked. Or, perhaps, the
title is making a promise that the text which follows will function in
much the same way as that red circle on the mall directory, giving us
some essential starting point from which we might begin a journey toward
the author himself or, at the very least, toward some destination he
has envisioned for us as we traverse his narrative, from memory back
to the world we inhabit.
The tension between history and memory suffuses this,
Gibson's second book. For the book is a memoir, not simply
a piece of fiction. As such, its very fabric automatically depends on
the bare facts of the author's autobiography in a way that does not typically
apply in a work of fiction. Here, the evanescent boundary that separates
the narrator from the author in the reader's mind all but disappears.
In the supplementary writings that follow the main body of You Are
Here, Gibson makes some interesting comments and observations that
shed light on these formal aspects of the book. He admits that he set
out to write a much shorter essay, but the initial story grew to encompass
more autobiography and personal anecdote than he had originally intended.
As he describes his return to New York and plots the illness and eventual
death of his new friend, John (a man he has come to live with by way
of a gay roommate service), Gibson finds numerous opportunities to reflect
upon his own past, on growing up gay—in the South, during the sixties
and seventies—in a family that was, more often than not, unable
to understand, much less validate, his emerging artistic sensibility
and the troubled sexuality of which it was a symptom. (Is that a tongue
in my cheek?) But the trouble is the human heart comes to know itself
so very slowly. Its lessons are painful. Families help, or they don't.
Friends come and go. Sometimes we get wise to things when we least expect
it. So the writer picks up his pen. . . .
That the events and characters which Gibson describes
for us are real poses a certain challenge to the writer himself to be
truthful with his own subject matter. But Gibson is seldom comfortable
playing the mild-mannered servant to mere history. As he weaves his facts
together his story-teller's penchant for insinuation and exaggeration
step in to offer assistance just when the vast superstructure of what-really-happened
seems about to collapse. In one passage early on in the book, a passage
which describes the first visit of his friend Jo Ann to his new New York
digs, Gibson recalls going to pick her up from the bus station, but then
memory
blurs:
I don't remember how we got home. For some
reason it feels like it was the subway because I have a distinct memory
of wrists with gold bracelets, and the stubble of gray above the suit
of some guy who was past tired, and a crumpled coffee cup with QUARTERS
drilled into it with a Bic pen. The usual body-part sightings of any
subway ride.
The effect of this passage (and others like it) is
to render something both more and less than recollection. The objects
of the speaker's memory here are quite sumptuous but completely over-determined
as outward details of the moment in question. I mean, he just told us
he didn't really remember the ride. The significant and authentic claim
the passage makes has more to do with revealing the emotional pitch of
that bit of time, its interiority, the manner in which the speaker felt
himself abstracted into a mood, a state of mind, a hazy point of view.
Gibson's efforts to tune into memory at this more
visceral, impressionistic frequency results in a lyrically dense prose
that is at once straightforward and inventive. He has a poet's ear for
clichés, and a comic's desire to redeem them with easy wit. In
a passage describing the first time he is awakened in the middle of the
night to the horrible sounds of one of his roommates having a lung-cancer-induced
bout of coughing, Gibson writes "I sat up, my covers clutched in
my hands. . . . Whatever drunk I'd tied on had completely unraveled.
I was six-cups-of-coffee awake. My heart hummingbirded inside my chest." Not
only does Gibson invigorate the tired old phrase "tie one on" by
presenting it in a perfectly disheveled past tense that has to work hard
to tidy up and make sense of itself coming "unraveled," he
throws in a comically compound uber-adverb to describe just
how awake he ends up. He then choreographs a precisely calibrated catching
of the breath with the consonance of "heart humming . . ." even
as the verbalized noun in this phrase creates a perfect image of the
sudden nervous energy of his adrenaline rush.
Telling some of these stories called for a great
deal of courage on Gibson's part, and a willingness to make himself vulnerable
to the high standard of truth he felt compelled to bring to the telling
of John's story. More than anything else, Gibson wanted to be able hear
his own voice speaking out of the context that this material provided.
Not as a thing contrived or artfully arranged, but springing from it
authentically, already there. With guts and a good sense of humor Gibson
has more than succeeded. The overwhelming majority of reviewers and critics
have noted how hilarious this book is. In fact, the moments where Gibson's
tale turns "uproarious" or "laugh-out-loud" funny
are too numerous to mention. A stand-up comic could mine the book for
a great many wicked one-liners. But, with equal frequency, these same
reviewers and critics use words like "brutal," "heartrending," and "cruel" to
describe the author's accomplishment. Could it be that the dark-edged
truth telling Gibson engages in on some fairly serious themes is not
balanced by a large enough dose of his wry, often side-splitting wit?
Maybe that's the price of a certain kind of honesty.
As a narrative of contemporary gay male identity,
Gibson's memoir, with all its conflicted musings and persistent apprehensions,
feels truer than many of the glaringly optimistic representations of
the gay self that have emerged in pop culture in the last decade or so.
Having rounded the corner of a new century at full
speed with the sunny spin-light of Will & Grace and the Bravo Network's
Fab Five in our eyes, the images and arguments which are so suddenly
and so pervasively there in Gibson's book feel like a head-on collision
of sorts. Gibson's reflections on what it means to be gay are instructive
for their candor and for their willingness to re-problematize certain
issues that the Hollywood Dream Factory would just as soon file away
as "Dealt With." At one point in the book, Gibson recalls himself
at seventeen, attempting to come to terms with coming out. He describes
the surreal floating feeling of being lost and found at the same time,
cruising the bars, trying to look tough, then muses: "Even then
I could see the crippling irony of this. There I was, milling around
a gay bar, hoping that people didn't think I looked like a faggot." Brutal?
No, brutally honest. The human heart changes very slowly.
So where has all this led us? Are we any better prepared
to explore the vast shopping mall of the self without popping Paxil or
leaving someone at home to tape Jerry Springer? Probably not. But at
least we have been warned by this hilariously disquieting romp through
one man's imagination, based on the true story of his life, that to settle
for an identity is to miss the point. Identity is an answer. The self:
a question. In this respect Wesley Gibson has much in common with an
earlier generation of writers like James Baldwin, who, in The Devil
Finds Work, comments:
The question of identity is a question involving
the most profound panic—a terror as primary as the nightmare of
the mortal fall. . . . Identity would seem to be the garment with which
one covers the nakedness of the self; in which case it is best the garment
be loose, a little like the robes of the desert, through which robes
one's nakedness can always be felt, and, sometimes, discerned. This trust
in one's nakedness is all that gives one the power to change one's robes.
Having had the pleasure of long talks with
the author in the flesh (though not in the buff) I can assure you he
is here in the pages of this book, in the voice that emanates
from each argument, shaping the terse, episodic prose of his personal
experience into a story based less on the ebb and flow of day to day
than on the slow accumulation and rearrangement of sympathies and rituals
we grasp all too imperfectly as his life (the book) sweeps us along.
Into the arms of family and of strangers. Into the empty chairs of
coffee shops across from the expectant smiles of friends. Into ambulances
and cramped elevators. Too late or too early. Toward that place where
pain blurs into joy. We all get there.
|
|