One of America’s best kept literary secrets (Little, Big may just be the great American novel), John Crowley
returns to the printed page in 2017 with what is truly a fan’s collection in Totalitopia. Reprinting a few shorts stories, two-and-a-half
essays (I don’t know whether to call the review of Paul Park’s oeuvre an essay,
paper, article, etc.), as well as a new, in-depth author interview, it makes for
an excellent sampler platter that includes fiction but likewise goes beyond to offer
a behind the scenes look at some of the realities behind said fiction—a fan’s
collection.
Looking at the fiction in Totalitopia, “This Is Our Town” is a nostalgic piece, and opens the
collection with one man’s reminiscences of his upbringing during America’s
Golden Age, particularly his relationship with the Catholic church and how it
relates to his present day life. An
open-ended story rather than a definitive view on religion, Crowley uses his
subtle powers of prose to ask personal questions that touch upon the larger, social
realm. “Gone” is one Crowley’s most well
known and reprinted stories. A moody,
minimalist piece, it is about a woman whose partner has run away with their
children on an Earth where a space ship orbits, sending peace-loving Elmer
robots do housework and common chores. A
bizarre story for the robot premise, it nevertheless manages to draw strong yet
mysterious emotional resonance through the portrayal of the woman’s life. Proving flash fiction is also in Crowley’s
bag of tricks, “In the Tom Mix Museum” is shows the power of excellent writing
technique in the process of relaying a vignette of a person’s visit to the
museum. More happening in its three
pages than some writers can pack into a story ten times as long, the “story” is
interesting as a specimen and as fiction.
What I would call a one-off conceit, “And Go Like This” takes a Buckminster
Fuller quote and runs with it. The
entire population of the world migrates to New York City, and answers the
question, once there, what to do?