Sean O'Brien, The Long Glass (Red Squirrel)
Sean O'Brien provides an Afterword to his latest, third, book of short stories as he did in his limited edition poem Hammersmith and the Maigret poems in Impasse. The background provided is welcome but takes away some of what a commentator or reviewer might have said like when a musician at a recital introduces a piece with the homework or prior knowledge one had prepared to say about it or even described the music in adjectives one wanted to find for oneself. Such notes to the primary text become part of the performance under consideration like territory annexed by the artist that the 'critic' might have had as their own.
Thus one is already thinking of matters of literary theory more than only storytelling. Sean is intertextual enough before we start wondering where his text starts and finishes. In these dozen bi-annual stories written for now twenty years' worth of readings in Newcastle, one hears likely echoes of Adlestrop and 'non serviam' from Paradise Lost twice each and Tennyson's In Memoriam once alongside Juniper that crept into, or out of, his poems as the title Once Again Assembled Here from a previous collection went on to be the title of a novel. References to Auden, Walter de la Mare, Hardy and Ecclesiastes are characteristically literary, and O'Brien, reference points and we may or may not find the relationship between James Mallon and Clara Stafford in Juniper, poets and partners where the female is the more gifted and dies young, like Jane Jarmain was in the novel Afterlife, reminding us of a legendary real-life C20th poetry marriage.
And yet, given so much literary marinade, there is a realism and credibility to the worlds Sean's characters inhabit, safely nostalgic in a disappeared past with period detail and provincial buildings in decline. Except we are never allowed to be comfortable with them because story by story, with two previous books to be taken into consideration, we know there's 'something nasty in the woodshed'. Look, I'm doing it now. We soon get the idea in Ovid's Metamorphoses that the protagonist, or plural of them, will be transformed into a constellation, river or other part of nature. And we don't tune in to Uncanny to hear Danny Robins interview several people who lived in the same house and none of them saw a ghost.
I'm not sure how frightened we can expect to be when we are expecting to be frightened in the same way that those who insist that poetry should surprise us or make us see the world anew can still be being surprised and refreshed by the last page of a full-length collection. It must be very tiring for them.
Time is amorphous, the past is a foreign country, or dimension and, even for a rationalist sceptic, there are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in my philosophy but quite how many of them are external demons and how many are internal is another matter. It can be traced back to the early 90's signature masterpiece poem, Thrillers and Cheese if not further. One only knows that a mirror in an O'Brien story should be immediately suspected of being potentially dangerous.
Most realistically, Old School is set in such a place where the food is bad and insufficient but an elite dining club serving very fine sausages is discovered and one of the more substantially-built boys has mysteriously gone missing. One finishes the final sentence and then, Oh, I see.
Juniper also convinces with less of the paranormal, it approaching the question from the poem Completists,
That art is all there is and might not be enough.
That ultimately poetry is impossible and reduces to nothing. That it is finite, runs out and there is nowhere else to go.
It is certainly true that,
the very effort to explain misses the point, because the attraction of such stories lies in encounters whose power lies in their refusal not only of clemency but at times of interpretation itself.
and that where the last story, But That's Another Story, leaves us with only the screaming.
While these stories are for the most part a genre project that might only be a sideline for Sean, as with Eleanor Grant's stories,
after a time, having read a good many of the stories, she began to wonder, with a trace of unease, whether the writing was really a voluntary undertaking, or more like something given or imposed.
Writers can hardly help, either deliberately or unconsciously, writing themselves into their own work, like Eleanor Grant and thus like Sean O'Brien. And a lawyer called Lightbourn dealing with Eleanor's estate wouldn't be named as such in the work of anybody as well-read as Sean without him knowing that for some readers at least he'll be triggering subliminal thoughts of the murderer in Marlowe's Edward II.
So we aren't quite sure where we stand except we are at least disconcerted in this literary, uncanny territory of insecurities that we know from the cover, because it says so, are only stories. But even sceptical Lisa Simpson held her mother's hand a bit tighter once when it looked like the end of the world even though she knew it couldn't be. I'm sure The Long Glass is twelve more well-made entertainments that provided two days off from my more dutiful reading of 'realist' George Gissing but the more realistic it was the more it confirmed what one thought. The screaming it ends with might be one's final answer.