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Time
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Dante,
Inferno
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The Second Circle
Review
THE JADE CABINET
by Rikki
Ducornet
reviewed by Paul
McRandle
IN "THE WALRUS AND THE CARPENTER," Charles Dodgson poses two sentimental
gluttons on the beach who put to themselves a problem of tidying:
They wept like anything to see
Such quantities of sand:
'If this were only cleared away,'
they said, 'it would be grand.'
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THE JADE CABINET
by
Rikki Ducornet
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AMERICAS,
AFRICA,
AUSTRALASIA
&ASIA
EUROPE
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But
there are no felaheen to do the scrubbing, and the weepy pair take solace
in stuffing themselves on sadly naive oysters, the walrus hiding the numbers
he's gorging behind a cascade of tears. Who knows how many children carry
in their heads this desolate, equivocal landscape where there are "no birds
to fly"? Rikki Ducornet certainly was one, and this comic parable of appetite
and absurdity, the monstrous urge for a clean sweep, haunts her novels,
rising almost to a retelling in The Jade Cabinet.
From the outside she would
appear to have had a childhood to envy: daughter of a Cuban emigre academic,
she grew up in the forties and fifties on the campus of Bard College with
a library whose windows of green glass suggested a sunken archive and biology
labs whose strange bottled contents left her childhood smelling of formaldehyde.
Her father took her for a year to Egypt which "stunned" her, and she retains
cherished memories of old Havana. She mentions a grandmother, however,
a "perverse storyteller," an anti-Semite who never forgave Ducornet's father
for marrying a Jew, and a figure who has become "the bad wind behind much
of my work."
As an adult, she first made her
career in art, though she noted later that she never realized her ambition
"to paint the museum scenery behind walruses and saber-toothed tiger."
Dali's paintings and Cocteau's Blood of a Poet which she saw at
the age of eight, infused her imagination and set her to pursue works by
the surrealists, putting Breton's Nadja in a central place of her
adolescence. Her deep sympathies with the surrealists not only influenced
her drawing, but went on to fuel her writing as well, first in an outpouring
of poetry and short stories then in her Tetralogy of Elements: The
Stain, Entering Fire, The Fountains of Neptune, and The
Jade Cabinet, and finally her two most recent, yet more historically
remote novels, Phosphor in Dreamland, and The Fan-Maker's Inquisition.
There is a persistence of motif and concerns to all of these works, a Manichean
quality in their struggles and a sense of Grand Guignol, which suggests
a larger whole, even though in terms of events and characters the books
refer to one another only once or twice. In its brief span, however, The
Jade Cabinet, contains many of her finest moments,
The story of The Jade Cabinet
is that of Radulph Tubbs' pursuit, marriage, and loss of Etheria Sphery,
sister of the narrator. Tubbs, pure Walrus, is a wonderful grotesque, an
English industrialist who dotes on Stilton cheese and builds a home that
is to be a Temple to Industry and Infancy. Etheria, creature of air, is
by nature his opposite; unable to speak after an experiment in natural
language conducted by her father, she communicates through notes which
only aggrandize her distance from the mercantile hubris of Tubbs. Since
childhood, she has been a friend of Charles Dodgson, posing naked for him
with her sister, and delighting in his native inventiveness which Tubbs
can scarcely tolerate, his envy of the man is so great. Yet, while the
struggles arise between such antagonistic characters, the story's narrator,
the younger sister Memory Sphery, watches on at a remove which is never
chilly, but comes from a basic kindheartedness and concern for all, even
including Tubbs, whom she loathed as a girl. For Tubbs, following his loss
of Etheria, loses himself in a hunt across Europe, beset upon by people
even madder or more loathsome than he is. He arrives in Egypt to buy mummified
ibises and grind their corpses to gravel for export to France as fertilizer.
The country horrifies him, all the more so as he possesses an unnatural
gift for stumbling upon disturbing relicts ("the matted viscera of a princess,
the paw of a sacred cat"). Yet it is there that the bizarreness of Ducornet's
vision and her empathy allow her to satirize with sharp effect while retaining
the possibility that to know all may indeed be to forgive all. Beauty and
pity hold equal sway in The Jade Cabinet.
Throughout her writing career
Rikki Ducornet has demonstrated how broad, supple, and penetrating literary
surrealism can be, in part by exposing its roots in the humor of Dodgson,
Swift, and Rabelais. In her hands, surrealism is no genre but a tool for
satire, for intellectual exploration, and for empathizing with the most
extreme mental states. If that is the case, it is likely because she, as
Dodgson before her, remembers well how charged and enigmatic the world
is in the eyes of children.
Paul McRandle
Reviews by Paul
McRandle at The Second Circle:
Fishing For Amber by Ciaran Carson
The Jade Cabinet by Rikki Ducornet
The
Tunnel by William Gass
The
Melancholy of Resistance
by Laszlo Krasznahorkai
Lights
out for the Territory by Iain Sinclair
An Interview with John Wray
Fiction
Collective 2 by Various
Brief Reviews including Raymond Federman and Iain Sinclair
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