Michael
Chabon, as editor, met success upon pulling together his first
anthology of short stories, Mammoth
Treasury of Thrilling Tales.
Focusing on plot and storytelling, Chabon solicited an experienced
array of authors, asking them to above all entertain, but in
sophisticated, perhaps occasionally throwback fashion. The success
snowballing, Chabon was commissioned with pulling together a second
anthology of likewise engaging, throwback stories. Looking to a new
array of authors (save the recurrence of Stephen King), McSweeney's
Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories
(2004) matches the feat of Thrilling
Tales.
Kicking
off the anthology in devilish fashion is Margaret Atwood’s “Lusus
Naturae”. About a demoness who finds her own sense of peace,
Atwood incorporates stories of yore while taking the pitchforks of
angry villagers to a new level. Dynamic wordsmithery on display even
in short form, “What You Do Not Know You Want’ by David Mitchell
tells of a black market merchant in Hawaii trying to track down an
obscure Japanese dagger from a man who recently committed suicide
from a rooftop. While a relatively standard piece of contemporary
noir, Mitchell’s diction elevates this story above the crowd
(notwithstanding the ending). The opposite of Mitchell’s story,
Jonathan Lethem’s “Vivian Relf” is the subdued tale of a man
meeting a woman at two different times in his life, and the
differences in perception, as well as subjectivity of memory that
result (emphasis on subdued).
A bit of
real-world horror combined with the silver screen variety, “Minnow”
by Ayelet Waldman tells of a woman who suffered a miscarriage in the
last trimester of pregnancy, and is now trying to pick up the
psychological pieces of her life. With the baby transmitter
broadcasting strange children’s sounds, however, it’s tough to
believe she actually lost her child. The success of that combination
depends on the reader... In what seems the seed from which the
eponymous novel sprouted, “Zeroville” tells the story of a
Hollywood film editor obsessed with finding certain individual frames
hidden secretly within longer film reels. Collecting the those he
finds and putting them on his staircase walls, he eventually gets to
the top of the landing and finds… something that Erickson seems so
adept at conjuring.
Another
story that would spawn a novel, “Lisey and the Madman” by Stephen
King (the only crossover author from Chabon’s first McSweeney’s
anthology) tells the story of a woman, whose Pulitzer Prize winning
husband was murdered in front of her eyes, picking up the pieces of
her life. Entirely balancing the mediocrity of King’s previous
McSweeney’s entry, Lisey’s story (har har) possesses a fine
swimming-between-the-lines authorial voice rooted in woman who
subsequently comes across as real as sweat and pain. A bizarre story
with bleeding edges, “7C” by Jason Roberts tells of a near-future
biology lab and the experiments the scientists are doing that seem to
go meta.
A
Twilight Zone
episode written in 2003, “The Miniaturist” by Heidi Julavits
tells the story of a group of woman going on a trip to a lone, winter
cabin, and the horrors they encounter there. Sound stereotypical?
The story is about as stereotypical, and predictable as can be.
Nee-NEE-Nee-nee Nee-NEE-Nee-nee
(my Twilght
Zone sounds). Wonderful in
style but mundane in substance, “The Child” by Roddy Doyle tells
of a man who starts hearing the voice of a small boy, and as a
result, the names of women he’s dated in the past start to trigger
in his mind. What connects all the women is where the story takes a
left turn. While it tries to be sharp and clever, “Delmonico” by
Lemony Snicket is more like using a butter knife to eat a steak: it
gets the job done, but the whole time you’re thinking it’s not
the right tool for the job. About a “witty” bartender listening
to the tale of woe of one of her patrons, Snicket’s mindset is
clear what in terms of what was intended for the story, only that
execution is lacking the edge it needed to fully deliver.
A
work piece of meta-fiction, in “Reports of Certain Events in
London” China Mieville himself reviews meeting minutes for a
political club he belongs to. Slightly pretentious, Mieville’s
relationship with London is nevertheless artfully expressed. The
evolution of the city described via the strange behavior of the
roads, it is one of the best pieces in the anthology, if not its most
literary. “The Fabled Light-house at Vina del Mar” by Joyce Carol
Oates is about a lighthouse keeper and his trusty terrier, Mercury,
who are stationed at a lighthouse on Cape Hatteras as cabin fever
slowly sets in. While a story about an American, the tone is
decidedly yesteryear British, giving the man’s tale airs that
wonderfully juxtapose the mundanity of his day to day life with what
unfurls. (As the afterword states,
this story is a fleshing our of a fragment called “The Light House”
found after Poe’s death.) And the last piece in the anthology is
“Aickman’s
Air Rifle” by Peter Straub. About four elderly men, all once
involved in the publishing industry in some fashion (publisher,
writer, reviewer, etc.), the unlikely crew convalesce together in a
sanitorium. When one of their number disappears, things really get
curmudgeonly.
All told,
this collection is an improvement on Thrilling.
This is likely due to a couple of standout stories, namely those by
King, Erickson, and Mieville. The remainder not poor in quality,
they fall in line with content from Thrilling,
meaning if you enjoyed Chabon’s first anthology, there is a strong
chance this second will also butter your bread. For relaxing
reading, these plot-centric stories meet such expectations.
The
following are the fifteen stories anthologized in McSweeney's
Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories:
Lusus
Naturae by Margaret Atwood
What You
Do Not Know You Want by David Mitchell
Vivian
Relf by Jonathan Lethem
Minnow by
Ayelet Waldman
Zeroville
by Steve Erickson
Lisey and
the Madman by Stephen King
7C by
Jason Roberts
The
Miniaturist by Heidi Julavits
The Child
by Roddy Doyle
Delmonico
by Lemony Snicket
The Scheme
of Things by Charles D'Ambrosio
The Devil
of Delery by Poppy Z. Brite
Reports of
Certain Events in London by China MiƩville
The Fabled
Light-house at Vina del Mar by Joyce Carol Oates
Mr.
Aickman's Air Rifle by Peter Straub
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