11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stunning Short Stories, February 9, 2010
This review is from: Something Is Out There: Stories (Hardcover)
Richard Bausch has written a stunning collection of eleven short stories, all strong and memorable. The stories tackle the themes of the frailty of love and relationships, fears, losses, betrayals. His characters often want to leave the present for something new and unknown. "I wish it was tomorrow" is a quote from one of the stories but is applicable to most of them. During the course of his stories, the characters become different people than they were initially. Often, they have reached a point of no return when the story begins or they find themselves at this point when the story ends. There are omens of things bad and frightening waiting in the ordinariness of daily life. There are also omens of momentous positive changes to come.
'The Harp Department of Love' is about the marriage of two musicians. Josephine is a young wife thirty years her husband's junior. She has had a loose upbringing and has a gift with music. He has been brought up safely, and creating music is difficult for him. Perhaps through Josephine's lackadaisical attitude or her desire for admiration, she allows a friendship with a young man to go a bit too far. He becomes obsessed with her and confronts her husband, telling him that Josephine loves him. Her husband moves out and in his world of pain he realizes that he is becoming old and can't compete with youth. When her husband comes over to visit her, Josephine thinks, "He seems old. For the first time in her life with him, she sees his age as a separate thing, a fact about him, like something that might be explained to her".
In 'Reverend Thornbill's Wife'. a reverend's wife has a one-time sexual liaison with a man she met on an internet site for "people mutually looking for extramarital excitement without commitment". For one day, ordinary life becomes filled with passion and mystery. "Except that there was also a kind of macabre sense that she had opened a little crevice in a fortification on the other side of which something awful awaited - there did seem to be an element of morbidness about all this." When her husband comes home, she looks at him differently and sees him as more limited and sexually repressed. This is her future.
'Son and Heir' is about a boy who grows up in a home with a lot of hypocrisy. To the outside world, his parents appear happy. However, they are miserable with each other and often go for weeks without talking. They even have the boy pass notes between them. As the boy matures, he is a disappointment to his parents. He drifts through life "in defiance of their expectations - his parents' ambitions for him - and of the falsity he had grown up with". When he turns 27 years old, his father gives him $500 and stops supporting him. He is told to come home when he is a man, not still a boy. A traumatic event occurs and the young man, who has not had anything to do with his parents for a few years, returns home while they are out of town. He goes to his bedroom and hides underneath his bed, both a scared little boy and a man who realizes that he is lost.
In 'Trophy', we meet Jimmy. Jimmy owns a car dealership and is facing a round of bad luck. This isn't much different from the rest of his life as he's experiened sorrows, losses and defeats. The people who work for him view him as a mentor. One of them stages a situation on a golf course that makes Jimmy think he's attained something he hasn't. This leads him to believe he's in for a round of good luck. He does find success but he still carries the weight of the world in his face.
In 'Something is Out There', a woman begins an ordinary day "wholeheartedly believing in goodwill, contracts, commitments, friendship, helpfulness". During the day, her husband is shot by an irate ex-business partner. Later on, she and her sons are caught up in a snowstorm and all the power goes off in their house. She begins to think that her husband, who she is intending to leave, may be involved in some sort of crime. She senses something frightening and scary in the air. "She stood for a moment in the chilly doom of the basement and had the thought that this day's badness was the beginning of something more, and unfolding. She didn't even know what it would be about; she wasn't even sure it was coming. But her blood told her it was, and she had to be ready for it, whatever it might be."
In 'Overcast', a young woman, recently divorced and rather aimless, sees her life as overcast. She attempts to keep up a positive attitude and a good front. In reality, she's stuck in her past as she ponders her future, floundering in the present. One day a man comes into the diner where she is a waitress. "She saw him, and abruptly had an unbidden strong sense that this morning would be important, that something momentous would take place". The man drops a leaflet with some enigmatic writing on it and she can't get it out of her mind. She finds herself wanting this man to reappear in her life again. He and the leaflet represent "where she might go, who she might come to be with, what she might find to an do or be, and whether or not she would be happy there, so far away, in the magical distance, the future, that was taking so long to arrive".
My favorite story in the collection is 'One Hour in the History of Love'. At different tables in a restaurant sit separate couples, each dealing with the nuances of love and their own relationships - disappointments, joys, expectations, angers. Across the street, an elderly couple grapples with their disappointments about their grown children. Bausch segues beautifully between the different couples and conversations. He examines the universal elements of intimacy by having the strangers' conversations briefly intersect for the reader.
In 'Sixty-five Million Years', Hennessey is a priest who is in the midst of a spiritual burn-out. He finds that "his hours in the booth were an almost unbearable ordeal now". He has trouble sleeping. One day, a 15 year-old boy with comes to confession. He is precocious and filled with doubt. He asks Father Hennessey about the 65 million years when the dinosaurs roamed the earth and why did God let that happen. All Father Hennessey can tell the boy is to have faith. The boy returns and Father Hennessey desperately tries to connect with him. There is something about this boy that affects him in a way that nothing has for a long time. However, Father Hennessey feels like he has failed the boy. All he can do is tell him to have faith. The boy returns and says "I'm worried about all the places in the universe where there's nothing going on, and nothing but silence". The boy talks about the faulty nature of God and of God being just like people. As much as Father Hennessey tries to communicate the importance of faith and combat the boy's doubts, he feels like he just can't reach this young man. Father Hennessey becomes obsessed with him, wanting to know who he is, where he lives, what his life's like. Where once he dreaded the boredom of confessional, he now yearns for it, hoping the boy will return. Father Hennessey feels like "something is intolerably wrong" with his life despite the orderliness of it. He wonders if this boy is an "angel who has been sent to goad him out of his apathy". Speaking to this boy gives him "a sense of having come face-to-face with a living sanctity".
There is a brooding darkness in all the stories, a sense of something about to go wrong or something bad waiting just around the corner. People are betrayed, their impulses lead them to do things outside their range of self-perception, they become obsessed. Intimacy is fragile, easily broken and difficult to repair. No one ends up happy. There is no such outcome in a Richard Bausch short story. The reader ends up feeling enriched, privy to the private lives of complex and rich individuals, and to the dark side of the soul that is not easily described. Richard Bausch is a master craftsman and a wonderful story teller.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
How to Destroy Your Life, May 3, 2011
Hint: It's not by reading this book.
Something is Out There is eleven stories about one thing: love lost. What is a human and what potential is there for relationship when those in them are so flawed and prone to error?
One reviewer, Bonnie, has it right, there is a darkness that collects in these stories. By the end you feel as if heartbreak and suffering are always upon us.
"The Harp Department in Love" is about a young wife to an insecure, older man. She realizes she can forgive him now, but what about in 10 years. How will she hold contempt at bay?
"Son and Heir" is a story of the love between parents and child broken. A young man flees his parents dysfunctional relationship until he sees his friend dead after a blown drug deal and flees back to his parents mansion on a hill. But what safety can be found among two people who hate each other?
"One hour in the History of Love" is about five couples, four of whom are falling or fallen apart. The fifth are happily about to have a baby, but what hope can we have for the couple when they are surrounded with such warnings.
Looking back, I realize there are stories somewhat more optimistic. "Overcast" for example, is about a forlorn divorcee who meets a stranger who has just found out he doesn't have cancer. Reprieved, he seems to reprieve her as well.
But then there is the story at the end, "Sixty-five Million Years," which is about the falling apart of a priests relationship with God. He looks up to the stars and sees, not heaven smiling down, but void and emptiness.
Is something out there? Mr. Bausch answers, "Yes, but it's nothing pleasant."
Maybe I'm wrong. My intuition is Mr. Bausch is really a quite pleasant, upbeat guy with much optimism for the future. I always found myself looking between the cracks of his prose for hope, for the authors murmur, "Yes, life is hard, but it's going to be okay." I'm not sure I found it or if I just read it into the text.
Regardless, we should ask, why read stories about heartbreak, loss, betrayal and rejection? Why read tragedy?
Aristotle said tragedy purges us of negative emotion. It lifts us to other things like joy, peace, hope, even love. The assumption is, upon finishing Something is Out There, you will take a look around you a realize, "Maybe life is not so bad."
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