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DeCapite writes poetically and impressionistically, sometimes isolating a relatively brief poem on one page with a lot of white space around it. The book opens this way: "Driving through the iron landscape of early Winter, early December: black and white and monochrome: dust of snow on slanted roofs, wide plains of iron, gone numb under a hard low sky, driving blank, gone frozen coasting the lines of longing, slowly scattering all invisible ghosts -- even that of loneliness which usually follows all around and as close as a good friend --"
That's the Cleveland I know and love. The winters pound you till you're numb, there's gray, dirty water in the gutter, slush on the sidewalk, and a slicing, cold wind coming off Lake Erie. And it's only the middle of December -- three and a half, four months of this to go. You forget what summer is. Wake up at five thirty in the morning and go to work in the dark, all hunched over and tight inside. DeCapite's aware of that, and also of summer nights when people sit on their porches and bullshit while fireflies blink on and off, and of vacant lots where wildflowers grow among the leftover bricks of a demolished building. -- Harvey Pekar, The Austin Chronicle, November 19, 1999
THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD
Ah, romantic Cleveland, Ohio: the dead-end factory jobs, the cruel weather and two-bit hustlers.
Yet in Michael DeCapite's novel ``Through the Windshield,'' there's beauty in the city's shadows. The characters are gamblers, hookers, blue-collar prisoners and aimless kids, but somehow their lives are as funny and innocent as they are bleak.
It all filters through the eyes of the narrator, a young cabby named Danny. In the world of the novel, Danny sees more than anyone else, and nothing like anyone else.
``Windshield's'' structure is slightly unconventional. Brief, ravishing prose poems are woven into the narrative, often connected, as are the moods of the characters, to the season: ``Driving through the iron landscape of early Winter, early December: black and white and monochrome: dust of snow on slanted tar roofs, wide plains of iron, gone numb under a hard low sky . . .'' Spring is lighter: ``I was riding that taxi hard on the night through the tender corridors of May with the windows down and the lilac blowing in: I saw some girls walking in the easy final grace of spring and threw an astral lasso around 'em . . .''
Most of the narration, though, happens in conversations between Danny and his friend Ed, a truck driver who lives next door. Danny often becomes a straight man, prompting Ed's hilarious and pathetic accounts of his family and associates.
One of the most memorable is Ed's half-uncle, Honest John, a dimwit in his 40s who lives with his mother and asks Ed to place bets for him because he can't find a bookie who will take his money. John's constant companion is a six-inch plastic hippo named Mike, who makes unreasonable demands and attacks insects and small animals. Ed depends on John, though, because he's double-gambling with John's money, using it instead to bet on his own hunches.
Random characters also crop up, such as the guy at the racetrack who inexplicably shouts ``MAC'' every 15 seconds. Ed can't help making the acquaintance of someone with such a strange affliction. He also meets people through poker games, purchased sex and prank phone calls.
One of the reasons Ed's stories are so great is DeCapite's gift for dialogue. Conversations here are full of partial words and creative punctuation that artfully capture the pattern of the characters' speech. The reader can hear every intonation, see every look. Here Ed and Danny are looking through some of Ed's old photographs:
``What's this?''
``That's me in the service of my country.''
``?''
``I was a Ballistic Meteor Crewman; that was my title.''
``Yeah?''
``I blew up balloons.''
``(laughter)''
``It was very specialized and high-polished -- ''
Ed is always entertaining, but Danny remains lonely. He misses his ex, and he's tempted by another woman who's pretty well out of his reach. He doesn't know how to fill his days.
In Ed's world, Danny is surrounded by examples of what a man can become if he's got no ambition: a lifelong small-time gambler, living from dollar to dime with no hope of change.
For example, Jimmy D: ``His face when he takes off his shades is like a small full moon seen through a passing cloud. He has the wide glazed look of a man who's been watching baseball bets go out the window since the days of Ty Cobb . . . of a man who thought he'd seen every way a horserace can be lost.''
Danny has so much affection for these frail souls, though, that he's drawn to them, almost wants to be like them. We wince as Danny loses his taxi job, coasts on Visa and friends for a while, then starts working nights as a spot-laborer. Eventually, he realizes what's missing and spells it out in a letter to his friend Duke. ``I think I wanna write a novel. I've never felt that being was enough. As though if no one's watching, it ain't real.''
So we readers are Danny's witnesses, and this book is as real as could be: full of original, indelible characters whose lives blow with the wind and can change any minute. -- Barbara Schultz, San Francisco Chronicle, June 27, 1999
"Mike DeCapite is one of my favorite young writers. There are pages of his that do everything writing can do." (Richard Hell)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wise, painful and very funny book about the cost of dreams.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Through The Windshield (Paperback)
Michael Decapite has managed something remarkable here, I think. With "Through the Windshield," he has given voice to a type (I use the term affectionately) that one rarely encounters in American fiction these days: a masculine romantic. But Danny, the dreaming, hesitant, bemused, open-eyed young cabbie whose story this is, is not an emblem. He's not a symbol. He's not a question mark or an exclamation mark or a fraction. He's that real literary rarity: the smart, gentle outsider; the observer; the friend you worry about and rely on; the self-contained man who, damaged by the world, leaks humanity and humor all over the place, and whose bitterness, when it arises, is intense, brief, and ultimately overwhelmed and sweetened by wonder. He's a man you'd like to know, a man you want to spend time with, have a drink with, drive through the night with. I really can't think of many characters in any fiction I've read recently whose voice, gait, clothes, hopes, doubts -- whose life was more familiar and believable to me than Danny's. This alone is no mean feat. The language Decapite employs is funny, smart, and seamless; the book has stunning passages of pure poetry. Here is a heartfelt portrait of a life, generously and painstakingly delineated, and I'm deeply grateful to the author for creating and sharing it.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Addictive!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Through The Windshield (Paperback)
DeCapite finds beauty, humor, & humanity while searching for a way to live in the blighted landscape of urban life; crazy and piercingly realized characters interspersed with surreal job experiences and meditations on the luminosity of physical surroundings; a great reminder of the grandeur possible in any human experience; an earthy, often blisteringly funny, song of a book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I read Ed, I said.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Through The Windshield (Paperback)
What a book. Ed is the funniest character in fiction since Bardamu!... And the prose poems between the jokes are like paintings.
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