When
one examines wood for purposes of construction, one looks at the direction of
the grain, its flow through the sanded plank. A grain's pattern offers
indications of a plank's strength. Grain that wavers like a sine graph yields a
weaker structure than a grain pattern more oriented and point-to-point. Woven
throughout Plainsong is a deep-rooted
sense of goodness and grace that almost seems hokey and antiquated in today's
world. But goodness in this book is not bumpkin in the way that sophisticated
city-dwellers often sneer. No, Plainsong is
brave. It's also a slow book in the way that a mist only begins to saturate you
with time. It takes hours or days perhaps to realize the strength of this book
and allow it work upon you. One fingers the pages and comes in stages to know
Tom Guthrie, his boys Ike and Bobby, the troubled but sweet girl Victoria
Roubideaux, and the work-rough hands and wind-blistered faces of the McPheron
brothers. It's the McPherons, two brothers who live alone on a farm outside of
town, that buoy this novel of human cruelty with an unyielding air of decency.
What's so compelling about the McPheron's good nature is that they are decent and the veracity of their
decency is never challenged. That decency is a fact weighty and undeniable as a
boulder. I imagine that if one could slice the McPheron brothers apart the way
a tree's trunk becomes wood plank, one would see the grain of good in them run
arrow straight. Normally I admire characters that skirt the terminator line
between right and wrong. That teetering often makes the characters feel real,
but that wobble between shades doesn't exist with Raymond and Harold McPheron.
They are good people, simply that, and it's incredibly pleasing to encounter
them, to be reminded that we can create such light and people that embody those
characteristics might exist in the world.
There's
a blurb on the front cover of this book by the New York Times that sums up the
feeling I get from reading Plainsong:
“A novel so foursquare, so delicate and lovely, that it has the power
to exalt the reader.” Exalt the reader. How often do you encounter
those words in the description of a novel? Often novels entertain, stun,
confuse, surprise or excite us. But exalt? What a weighty word exalt is. It
means to praise, to esteem, to revere, venerate, worship, lionize, and ennoble.
Ennoble. It seems like we often lose sight of what being noble means. It's not
a large part of our reality tv lexicon. Nobility is a smaller facet of our
modern character because to be noble means also we have to believe in something
greater than ourselves. I think this capacity is shrinking in the human animal,
especially the Internet-connected human animal. We have to be noble for something larger than our own concern.
That can be God, Nation, or Community even. One can be noble for another
person, one's daughter, son, mother, or even a stranger, but being noble is
never an aggrandizing of self or self-image. To be noble is to not be
solipsistic or surface-oriented. Many modern texts are concerned with their own
aims and goals only. Such texts engineer ways to make their voice heard in the
modern din of literary work by confusion, manipulation, or straight-out,
unqualified weirdness. Often we laud the strange as being something new when in
fact the strange is really nothing more than a weakness of communication, a
grain run awry through the wood. There's a marked difference between having no
meaning at all as opposed to merely being sly about meaning. But the sorts of
inward-oriented texts I'm talking about here fulfill many needs still. They can surprise, flabbergast, stun, or
entertain us, but such works cannot exalt a reader. Only a text concerned with
reaching out can connect enough to exalt a reader.
In
Plainsong, it's that exaltation that
does me in, every time. See, I'm a huge fan of Cormac McCarthy, his tortured,
wonderful sentences, and the grim, nihilistic characters that inhabit his
landscape. It's easy to consider the world in McCarthy's terms. Such an ill-hearted
determinism often feels right when we face what we face in the world. In a book
like Blood Meridian, one marvels at
the intensity with which McCarthy stares into blackness, never wavering. He's
showing us the true heart of the human! At one point, I thought it brave to do
such a thing. Many consider Blood
Meridian his best work, and a work like The Road to be inferior, but I tend to think of it differently now. While The Road is brutal and forlorn, there is
a moment slowly built up to where the book offers a gesture, when the boy
reaches out to take the stranger's hand, and that textual gesture is also the
book itself reaching out to the reader. With that motion, the book elevates
itself. Sometimes it behooves us to deny reality because in that turning away,
we have a chance to change things, to reimagine our world in different terms. Each
denial is also the spore of recreation, or can be. The Road does not exalt the way Plainsong
does, however, because the focus is different. Plainsong's focus has what John Gardner may have called a moral
intent, or if that word is too bold, then perhaps one might proclaim the aim of
Plainsong to be an effort to not tear
down and lay waste, but instead to lift.
Some
may consider these types of gestures to be remnants of the magical thinking
that has plagued our species since its inception. And perhaps that is so. To be
wedded to feeling or emotional states often presents a poor invention in the
face of bald facts and many consider that moment at the finish of The Road to be McCarthy growing soft. I
don't think so. It takes guts to reach out like that. It takes balls to write
about hope, especially when cataclysm gathers the large crowd.
That's
why Haruf's Plainsong, to me, is such
a brave tome. It's not fanciful. It's constructed of straight lines and forward
glances. The morality in Plainsong is gray, however, never unilateral, and its
variations are wide as the sky in Holt, Colorado. Tom Guthrie takes
questionable actions against one of his students, but he's also fierce in his
defense of his children. There are no reasons, no explanations. The same sorts
of things we get in McCarthy, we can find in Haruf (and one hears as well tones
of Cormac in Kent's measured prose), but what we find in Plainsong that's not
in Blood Meridian is a willingness to entertain that good does exist in the
world, that good is not imaginary, nor foolhardy, nor magical, nor is good
delivered from God or portioned out by spirits otherwise incorporeal and unseen.
Instead, goodness is realized, or better yet, created in the world by how we act, how we treat others, and how we
protect those that we love from the small-hearted. Because what is exaltation
other than a recognition and transcendence of faults? What makes me weep when I
read Plainsong is seeing how easy it is to be a good person and then wondering
why, for me, it's always so hard.
This essay was originally published at the Lit Pub.
Brad Green
has lived most of his life in North Texas. His work appears in the Minnesota
Review, the Texas Observer, Surreal South '11,
Needle: A Magazine of Noir, and elsewhere. He's a contributing editor here at Native Home of Hope and an associate editor at
PANK magazine and can be found online at http://about.me/bradgreen.
Brad, thank you for a thoughtful and decisive look at the nature of art to uplift or tear down. Wow. Depth of your discernments here really brought such wisdom to bear and built to a true and graceful power. thank you for your words.
ReplyDeleteshann ray
Hi Shann,
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to read and comment. It's much appreciated. I think it's easy for us to forget that writing can be more than entertainment, that it should be more. I wonder sometimes if that 'should be more' will eventually be diluted from our lexicon entirely. Everywhere there's such swift rising towards the surface. Again, thanks for reading! Hope to see another book from you soon.