Ridiculous, Corny, Dead: Andrew Martin's Cool for America
Ridiculous, Corny, Dead
Andrew Martins Cool for America.
By Jennifer Schaffer
(
The Nation) Like many writers of my socioeconomic, educational, and psychochemical background, I often find myself bound up in mental contortions over problems that, under sober scrutiny, are not problems at all, but thatleft to foxtrot about in the recesses of ones mindpresent themselves as urgent questions. Questions like: What is the role of realist fiction in an age of political upheaval? How should a critics identity bear on her reading, and how should a writers identity bear on how he is read? And what should we do, now, with all the well-heeled, hetereosexualish, white-man writers who, up until quite recently, might have strolled chest first onto the literary scene, but who now find themselves met with a healthy dose of corrective skepticism?
Mercifully, these questions tend to recede in the face of good fiction, which proves its purpose in its pleasures. While reading Andrew Martins new story collection
Cool for America, the follow-up to his excellent 2018 debut novel, Early Work, I didnt have space for neurotic third-person self-examinations. For the length of each of the collections 11 stories, there was just pleasure to be had. Yes, at a glance, Martins work belongs to an established tradition whose moment has largely passedcomfortable white male writers broadly concerned with the life and times of comfortable white male writers. But Martin strikes me as less of a kind with Roth or Foster Wallace or Franzen and more decisively a descendent of the great Ann Beattie.
Like Beattie, Martin compassionately chronicles the sorrows and sex lives of drifting overeducated malcontents who, in another era, may have resigned themselves to more overtly conventional lifestyles but who, in Beatties 1970s and Martins 2010s, commit themselves to gently bohemian (though never truly subversive) projects, like graduate school and self-aware promiscuity and drinking too much. Both Beattie and Martin wrote during periods of heightened political awareness oscillating with burned-out ambivalence. Yet, thrust into their respective moments in history, their protagonists rarely attempt to affect their surroundings. Rather than make productive use of the limited but real power they wield as educated adult citizens, Martins characters are desperate to assume a posture of powerlessnessin sex, in politics, in their careers. In Martins vision, there is something borderline spiritual in the millennials desire to consider themselves beholden to forces outside their control. .......(more)
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