Disturbances: Inside and Out

August 29th, 2008 bhenricksen

Atmospheric Disturbances, a first novel by Rivka Galchen, is filled with fun and promise. Her narrator is a psychiatrist named Leo, who is certain that the woman who came home one day was not his wife but rather a perfect, or near perfect, simulacrum. It’s a promising start for readers who enjoy the bizarre. Leo sets out in search of his true wife and of a patient who has also disappeared. The patient had seemed to have delusions about working for the Royal Academy of Meteorology on a secret project with military implications. A rival group known as the 49 is out to foil things. Have they kidnapped his wife?

As he proceeds on his quest, which takes him to Argentina, Leo consistently psychoanalyzes himself and others in an effort to remain convinced of his own sanity, and Galchen seems to have a firm grasp of the shop talk. But is he really mad, or are all the strange happenings not just in his mind? For much of the novel we tend to opt for the former explanation, but then things start to confirm his “delusions.” Read the rest of this entry »

Pen/Faulkner and The Great Man

August 4th, 2008 bhenricksen

When this year’s Pen/Faulkner Award went to Kate Christensen’s The Great Man, the decision was announced as a departure. Rather than look for artistic subtlety or social significance, the committee simply chose the book they most enjoyed. In doing so, they picked a novel by a woman–not for the first time, but still a departure from the norm.

Christensen’s novel combines satire and comedy of manners in a story of a deceased painter, Oscar Feldman, as he’s remembered by his wife, his sister, and his mistress–or one of his mistresses. In the decade of abstraction (the 1960s), Oscar stuck with representation, painting nudes of whoever would take it off. Now, five years into the grave, he is about to be memorialized by two young (and male) biographers. Their inquiries elicit the memories that are the novel’s substance. Read the rest of this entry »