Russell Wangersky, Whirl Away (Toronto: Thomas Allen, 2012). Paperbound, 207pp., $21.95.
Russell Wangersky’s Whirl Away offers twelve stories about characters
whose lives are spinning out of control. The stories depict the disorder
and grief that results from this and the attempts by the various characters
to cope. A number of stories deal with failing marriages. In “Sharp
Corner,” we meet John and Mary, a childless couple who live at a
sharp bend in a road at which there are a series of car accidents. The
story hints early on that there are problems between them. Instead of
dealing with these, John becomes progressively more obsessed with
the accidents. Talking about them garners him attention at social
events and becomes his way of coping with feelings of emptiness.
Mary, meanwhile, is revolted. Near the end of the story she says, “I
don’t think I can do this anymore,” and it is clear that she is referring
to both John’s obsession and to the marriage.
Two of the strongest stories, “Family Law” and “Open Arms,” deal
with the failing marriage of a lawyer named Michael Carter. “Family
Law” is told from Carter’s point of view. He’s having an affair with a
woman in his office and is fearful that his wife has found out—a fear
that is realized, in the end, by the delivery of divorce papers.“Open
Arms” explores the same situation from Carter’s lover’s viewpoint,
and reveals a shocking secret about the origin of the divorce papers.
Other stories examine the coping strategies characters employ in
the face of life’s unravelling. Dave, in “The Gasper,” has recurring
panic attacks that have him on familiar terms with the 911 dispatcher
and ambulance crews. In “McNally’s Fair,” Dennis copes with loneliness
by working maintenance at a decaying amusement park, globbing
on paint to cover the rust and broken bolts of the park’s main
ride, a roller coaster called The Thunder. Like a number of other stories
in the collection, these two are told from a slightly detached, thirdperson
point of view, which focuses events through the consciousness
of the central character while creating an ironic detachment. The
effect is to heighten the pathos, I think, for the reader is left to fill in the
true horror that the characters themselves are unable to acknowledge.
I was particularly moved by “Echo,” which concerns a five-year-old
boy named Kevin, who copes with his abusive father by echoing his
father’s abusive language. This is a risky story. Any story from the
point of view of a child always risks sounding false or precious—and
the subject matter here is especially intense. Wangersky, though, pulls
it off by a combination of carefully controlled “off stage” action and
the use of third-person point of view.
All in all, this is a very accomplished collection, with some very
fine writing. In each story, Wangersky quickly manages to establish
his characters and set the action in motion. There is even, occasionally,
some sardonic humour to lighten the serious subject matter. When
the lover in “Open Arms” thinks about the lawyer “doing the math”
on the costs and benefits of his marriage ending and this new relationship
beginning, she thinks: “Math happens, and it usually happens
when there’s already a fight going on, and by then it’s always too
late to redraw the lines.”
As I neared the end of this book, I have to admit, I developed some
resistance to the stories. Well-written or not, by the tenth story in
which a character was introduced only to show his or her life falling
apart, I found myself imaginatively pushing back. Is the whirling
apart of a life inevitable? I suspect Wangersky intended to provoke
just this kind of questioning. My suspicions are increased by the last
story, “I Like,” which introduces a couple in danger of splitting up
before it delivers the most unlikely of endings. Even in the midst of
life’s whirl, the story suggests, there are, occasionally, small rituals
that allow us to hold things together.
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