In “Signs and Wonders,” Rebecca
McClanahan successfully weaves together comedy and broken dreams, threading a
sliver of silver threaded hope to fill any of the dark gaps, creating a warm,
itchy blanket of words good enough for any homeless man in Central Park to
cuddle up in. I loved this piece. It’s at once sarcastic and thoughtful, funny
and heart breaking, conclusive and wondering.
As a whole, the work speaks of bloated expectations and the dreams that
get crushed when those shimmery hopes turn out to be a smoggy nightmare. NYC as a setting works perfectly; it’s the
city everyone wants to know and love even if they’ve never been. That instantly creates reliability. Wonderful comedy speckles the piece in quips
like, “the kind of children you want to touch but you can’t of course,
especially in New York,” or “Maybe at my age I should take it as a compliment,
that I should inspire such…peaks.” This
gritty, blunt humor works perfectly with the setting of a city like New York –
both are rough and obnoxiously in your face, but totally worth the opportunity
to say you had the experience. The
ending is great, too. Inconclusive, a
bit lost in a cycle of repetition: “Catch and release.” Just like life in a fast-paced, unforgiving
city like New York, you’ve got to take the missteps in life in stride, live in
the good moments, peddle past the bad. In the famous and poetic words of Dory
the blue tang, “Just keep swimming.” (Sorry, I don’t know any good duck
quotes.)
I completely agree with the points you have made.
ReplyDeleteMcClanahan really embodies the city of New York in her writing style, the repetition and short sentences reminding us of the city's fast-paced lifestyle, and the little quips she includes helps paint a picture of its street-smart inhabitants.
Many years ago, I had the opportunity of visiting the Big Apple and the representation that McClanahan provides was spot-on. The people were gritty and quick with a comment and as a girl coming from a rural Ohio town, the pace everyone was operating on seemed like warp speed in comparison.
P.S. You don't need duck quotes. Dory is appropriate for any occasion.
Ah, so jealous you've got to see New York. I've always wanted to go.
DeleteAlso, I must agree. Dory's unmatchable. (Especially considering Ellen is the voice of the character. Too perfect.)
Excellent energy here. "Silver-threaded" sentence is a little cloudy! I'll take energy over clarity in these, but I'm guessing you can do both!
ReplyDeleteI love that you're noticing that this essay has its sides. Especially the idea that the writer seems so sure of herself but inconclusive at the same time. That's a huge thing to notice and a good stance to take as a writer, I think.
Essay-writing is conversation. Conversations are best when people are trying out ideas, not when they're declaring them. Right?
(I should remember that! ha!)
DW