Give Me Your Heart应该是美国作家乔伊斯·卡罗尔·欧茨最新短篇小说集了吧。这位超级多产的当代作家所涉猎的题材也是非常广泛。这个集子里所收录的是作者创作的神秘和悬疑小说。颇能代表南方哥特小说的风格特色。以下是《纽约时报》上的一篇书评介绍。感兴趣者不妨一读:
Reckless Abandon
By ANDREA THOMPSON
In this story collection, Joyce Carol Oates, master of the American gothic, revisits territory she has long claimed as her own, a fictional realm where mild-mannered men turn into monsters and the maternal embrace is more often crushing than comforting. Her effusive, exclamatory prose can be — and has been — mocked, but there’s little doubt that Oates is a well-practiced storyteller. Too well practiced, perhaps: the impact of these precisely turned tales of violation and violence tends to be more mechanical than visceral.
Part of the problem is thematic. In story after story, a woman is childless (read frigid and controlling) or has given birth to a nasty piece of work. Girls are vulnerable, hurt by their fathers, looking for acceptance; and, in turn, they are murdered, transformed into objects of obsession or driven crazy. A woman’s bodily integrity is breached by rape or by pregnancy, by relinquishing her virginity or by nursing an infant.
“You entered my virginal body, you took from me my innocence, my youth, my very soul,” writes the woman at the center of the title story, which takes the form of a letter to the man who deflowered her 23 years earlier. Her rage remains fresh, yet there’s little sense of emerging danger or keen insight in her insistent narration. Instead, the story’s menace depends on typography, as if italics might turn overboiled sentences into something creepy rather than clichéd: “I have forgotten nothing . . . . While you, to your fatal disadvantage, have forgotten almost everything.”
Negligent, absent fathers disorient their daughters. In “Strip Poker” and “Nowhere,” fathers have been imprisoned for assault; in “Smother,” an emotionally distant father and an anxious mother cause a woman named Alva to recollect, or imagine, that they murdered her sister. Men and women engage in ceaseless warfare. “You did not love a man who didn’t inspire fear, though you might fear a man — many men — whom you did not love,” thinks a character in “The Spill.” In “Nowhere,” a teenage girl feels “weak with desire for the man, unless it was fear.”
Oates does deploy some original twists and suggestions of ambiguity, assets that emerge most forcefully in “Smother,” which is split between the fractured memories of Alva and the more collected viewpoint of her mother, Lydia, as she meets a pair of detectives in order to rebut Alva’s allegations. Initially, this device leads the reader to sympathize with Lydia: she’s a well-respected professor, Alva an itinerant artist’s model with a history of drug problems. Here and there, though, a destabilizing note emerges: the collection of pills in Lydia’s medicine cabinet, her deeply ambivalent feelings about motherhood. The story is wonderfully executed, and left tantalizingly unresolved.
Unfortunately, these moments are fleeting. Instead, one is struck by Oates’s infelicitous images and repetitions. Some are clearly meant to be resonant: the quarry at Sparta, the blue-collar town in upstate New York that makes regular appearances in her fiction, pops up several times, easy shorthand for downtrodden lives. But is there some deeper meaning to the fact that in three stories men are pointedly noted to have bands of fat settling around otherwise slender waists?
It’s disheartening, then, that the story that fits this collection’s pattern least, “Vena Cava,” also feels the most cynical. Here a grievously injured veteran returns from his third tour of combat duty in the “War Against Terror” feeling less than human. His body is filled with life-sustaining machinery and his hometown seems like a movie set — soon enough, a horror film. But as this sadly predictable story grinds to its conclusion, the response it engenders isn’t suspense or even a queasy disquiet; it’s a desire to get a desperate man’s cold march to a gory end over as quickly as possible.
Andrea Thompson is a freelance editor and writer.
有着“美国文坛黑夫人”称号的乔伊斯·卡萝尔·欧茨(Joyce Carol Oates)是一位有颇多争议的作家。人们对她的高产及风格多变自然褒扬有加;与此同时,对她略带色情意味的暴力描写也颇有微词。在欧茨的作品中,暴力之下总是隐藏着激情,而激情又几乎不可避免地会导致暴力的发生。这一不断重复的主题和无法摆脱的陷阱再一次出现在她的《天堂的小鸟》(Little Bird of Heaven)中。这是欧茨自1964年以来的第57部长篇小说了。
当地时间2月16日晚,美国当代最富盛名的作家之一,并且是最为高产的女作家,乔伊斯·卡萝尔·欧茨(Joyce Carol Oates)使得印第安纳大学IMU内的Solarium演讲厅第一次出现了爆满的状况。欧茨的演讲令前来的师生和当地的热情读者大饱耳福。欧茨首先回答了组织者,艺术和人文研究学院的院长安德烈·奇卡莱利(Andrea Ciccarelli)提出的一些经过准备的问题。然后,欧茨女士朗读了她的一些新作品中的片段,并回答了现场听众的提问。在回答奇卡莱利有关主题及其作品涉及种族、性别、阶级和历史题材的问题时,欧茨女士回答说:
美国当今最负盛名的多产女作家乔伊斯•卡罗尔•欧茨(Joyce Carol Oates)入围了美国年度国家图书奖•书评家奖的最后角逐名单。她获得了虚构类作品和非虚构作品的两项提名。她的虚构类作品是”掘墓人的女儿”(”The Gravedigger’s Daughter”),非虚构类作品是一部相对较新的自传类的”乔伊斯•卡罗尔•欧茨志”(”The Journal of Joyce Carol Oates”)。其他获得虚构类作品提名的还有朱诺特•迪亚兹(Junot Díaz)的《奥斯卡•瓦噢短暂而神奇的一生》(”The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao”);玛丽安•威金斯(Marianne Wiggins)的《影子捕手》(”The Shadow Catcher”);希山姆•玛塔(Hisham Matar)的《男人国》(”In the Country of Men”);以及维克拉姆•钱德拉(Vikram Chandra)的《神圣的游戏》(”Sacred Games”)。在传记方面,欧茨女士的对手有乔舒雅•克拉克(Joshua Clark)的《水一样的心灵》(”Heart Like Water: Surviving Katrina and Life in Its Disaster Zone”);埃德维奇•丹提卡特(Edwidge Danticat)的《兄弟,我要死了》(”Brother, I’m Dying”);萨拉•佩内特斯基(Sara Paretsky)的《沉默年代的写作》(”Writing in an Age of Silence”);以及安娜•波利特科夫斯卡娅(Anna Politkovskaya)的《俄罗斯日记》(”A Russian Diary: A Journalist’s Final Account of Life, Corruption and Death in Putin’s Russia”)。