"A
Memoir of Absence" by Frederic Colier, Luminous Press (August 2007).
Ever since Salinger, nine seems to be a magic number when it
comes to rendering debut short story collections. Frederic Colier’s A Memoir
of Absence is no exception. Embarking on an evocative journey through the
heartland of our own delusions, Colier’s terse prose guides us beyond the barren
cultural plane of our all-too-malleable American dreams taking us into a realm
of intellectual urgency, linguistic renewal, and eventual hope. Here – where
relativist cant, contemporary platitudes, and even shocking news become no more
than the white noise of a fleeting civilization – there is nothing more alarming
than the ensuing silence left by those collisions that never get the chance to
take place:
In the title story, an estranged father and son are each
relegated their own brand of dystopia only to find that it is their respective
torments that ineffably bind them to one another. While one pursues impossible
love around the globe, the other tries making sense of the void surrounding him.
Oddly, it is their parallel misfortunes that find shelter in the harmonious
space of absence recalled.
Similarly, Lipstick on the Fishbowl depicts how grief
often blinds one from seeing the object of loss. As a bereaved businessman
searches for the proper way to express loss for his departed wife, he begins to
overlook the significance of her passing. As for those in throes of jealousy
misreading even the best of intentions, The Depth of Swimming Pool is a
somber portrayal of a woman who – in her state of constant apprehension - ends
up undermining that which she most desires.
But whether it is observers dreaming of becoming participants, or
the emotionally alienated hordes for whom pain becomes a final solace, the
terrain traversed by Colier’s nine stories is neither one that would fill a
postcard nor one that sports the trendy wasteland so readily employed by our
time’s countdown artists. As the lonely overweight opera singer Josephina
considers the abject proposals of a sexless man, or the abused young woman in
Cristianos y Moros finally returns home to confront her dismissive parents,
we note with relief that Colier’s intention is not to flesh out some vague
musings about our era but to attend to those who straddle the crossroads of a
world where choosing a direction is no longer a value in itself.
If there is a poignancy to be had, A Memoir of Absence
says we’re to find it in those uncertain moments when event is temporarily
subsumed by interpretation. This does not mean that observations made by
characters are lucid or objective. On the contrary, it is our vulnerability to
catch phrases, our compromised visions, and our pathos while estimating our own
suffering hearts that bring integrity to our lives. Colier’s short stories are
the fragments of a lost anthem – the disparate melodies that once made up what
we mystically referred to as, the human spirit.
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