Jonathan
Lethem famously isolated the moment the Science Fiction Writers of
America association chose to award best novel of the year to Arthur
C. Clarke’s Rendezvous with
Rama (in turn relegating Thomas
Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow
to second tier) as a turning point in science fiction’s history.
The opportunity for the genre to head in a more literary direction
missed, Lethem lamented the association’s inability to recognize
the moment and push science fiction toward higher standards. Walking
the talk, Lethem himself has never been a popular genre figure
precisely due to the fact his stories rarely if ever run anywhere
near the middle of the road. Backing this idea up is his collection
of short stories Men and Cartoons
(2004).
A very
brief collection, Men and
Cartoons, as the dichotomy
hints, would have the juvenile and mature natures of its characters
examined in short fiction form. In “The Vision”, an irritable
man attends a party where the guests are playing a social deduction
game called Mafia
(aka Werewolf).
Unhappy with the game, he introduces something more to his liking
into the group dynamic. Lethem biting off more than he can chew,
“Access Fantasy” ostensibly tells of cyberpunk-ish future where a
man living in his car enters the neighborhood of the affluent to
investigate a murder. Possible that the story is full-on satire
(versus my impression it is only partial satire), the setting is as
close to middle-of-the-road sf as the collection gets, and if indeed
only partially satire, does just an average job fleshing out the
target of its derision.
Like an
idea dragged from a drawer and never polished, “The Spray” is an
indulgent idea that thankfully ends quickly. Not to say it’s a
poor story, only that Lethem quickly realizes the idea of a spray the
police use which detects things that have been taken is a short
street for fiction. A couple getting their hands on the can after
the police investigate a burglary at their home, antics are aplenty
when the spray is applied to the people. In perhaps the most
poignant piece in the collection, “Planet Big Zero” tells of two
best friends in high school and the wandering directions their lives
take after graduation. In these two men, Lethem captures real but
fleeting bit of humanity we’ve all encountered.
A story
that never explains itself but would rather the reader piece it out,
“The Glasses” tells of an irascible client who goes back to the
optometrists who recently sold him glasses to find out why they
smudge without him touching them. Clearly a piece on race in the
most veiled yet obvious terms, Lethem highlights how opposing
interests damage unilateral communication. A story that had me
giggling out loud, “The Dystopianist, Thinking of His Rival, Is
Interrupted by a Knock on the Door” tells of a writer of dystopian
fiction encountering his best idea/worst enemy, something which
brings to light the writer’s real feelings. A wonderful piss take
on the flood of dystopian fiction saturating the market, Lethem
hilariously pulls the plug on the zeitgeist. (Sylvia Plath sheep!!
I’m still laughing!!)
Possessing the best title in the collection, “Super Goat Man” tells of a superhero—the titular cloven-hooved beast—who settles down in the narrator’s NY neighborhood. Growing up to enter academia in a small New England liberal arts college, the narrator finds a surprise there: a rival in the goat. Let conflict ensue (as absurd as it intentionally is) such that the character’s real motives may exist in relief. The collection closes on likely the weakest story in the collection, “The National Anthem”. About a man having trouble getting over a break up that was an affair to begin with, Lethem attempts some emotional storytelling but struggles maintaining consistency in tone.
A very
peculiar, unusual collection of stories, Men
and Cartoons serves as an
indirect companion piece to his year-prior novel The
Fortress of Solitude. The
majority of stories about a contrast between youthful (i.e.
cartoonish) mindset and something more adult and mature (i.e. men),
Lethem seeks to highlight that each feed into one another, giving
rise to adults who are not quite mature and young people who have the
rudiments of maturity in them. The best aspect of the collection is
that few if any of the stories clearly fit any standard mold that
might exist in science fiction or fantasy. Short, sharp, and
intelligent even if the holes appear in consistency, they require the
reader be an active participant to glean full value—something which
Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s
Rainbow likewise requires,
natch.
The
following are the nine stories collected in Men
and Cartoons:
The Vision
Access
Fantasy
The Spray
Vivian
Relf
Planet Big
Zero
The
Glasses
The
Dystopianist, Thinking of His Rival, Is Interrupted by a Knock on the
Door
Super Goat
Man
The
National Anthem
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