ALGIS VALIUNAS

bookS In revIew A World of Hurt he sighed with a humorous bitterness. The humor seemed momentary, but the bitterness was a constant state of mind.” So Cousin Eva, a Texas schoolmistress,...

...By then the young girl was writing stories, act­ing in summer stock, reading Gibbon, Voltaire, and William James...
...Her beloved grandmother Cat Porter, who took the bereaved children in hand, died when she was 11...
...At 14 Callie asked to be called Katherine in honor of her grandmother...
...The world will leave those who hope for an agreeable passage through it, or at least a pain­less one, begging for a quick end, with a blindfold...
...The Library of America’s new volume of her stories, essays, and reviews— her most famous work, the novel Ship of Fools (1962), is omitted—is almost too pungent in its despondency to bear in high doses...
...that he is never referred to by name but only by the capitalized pronoun bespeaks both his degraded status and his exalted one as the child most beloved by his mother...
...December 2008/January 2009 THe amerIcan SPecTaTor 89...
...1912—her never having married evi­dently attributable to a recessive chin—reveals her spiritual morbidity to a young relative, Miranda, who has happened to sit across from Sher on a train that is taking them to a family funeral...
...a writhing terribly alive and secret place of death, creeping with tangles of spotted ser­pents, rainbow-colored birds with malign eyes, leopards with humanly wise faces and extrava­gantly crested lions...
...After getting her divorce in 1915, she married and rid herself of two more men in rapid succession...
...In 1918 the Spanish influenza nearly num­bered her among the millions it killed...
...Oh, no, there’s nothing more cruel than this—I’ll never for­give it...
...T he 1920s and 1930s saw porter come blazing into her own as a writer of stories and essays...
...She could not remember any other sorrow because this grief wiped them all away...
...When He suffers a seizure and becomes bed-ridden, his parents decide they must put him in the county home, and his moth­er thinks on the journey over, “there was nothing she could do to make up to Him for His life...
...screaming long-armed monkeys tumbling among broad fleshy leaves that glowed with sulphur-colored light and exuded the ichor of death, and rotting trunks of unfamiliar trees sprawled in crawling slime...
...life or try to love it, it will gore you and stand there watching you bleed out real slow...
...She stuck out the marriage for nine years, which was at least nine years too long...
...She stretched herself with a deep breath and blew out the light...
...This poor boy’s existence is gratuitous cruelty for which there shall be no consolation...
...In 1933 she tried marriage again, to a man 14 years younger than she...
...Put out the light, and then put out the light: in stories that take a turn toward the macabre, such as “Maria Concepcion” and “Noon Wine,” people whom you would never suspect of having it in them commit murder...
...the experience of and sensitivity to natural and moral evil that warped her as a woman also guided her as an artist...
...That changed a woman...
...bookS In revIew A World of Hurt he sighed with a humorous bitterness...
...Kinsey...
...Again no bridegroom and the priest in the house...
...when he asked her in an interview whether she had ever made love with a dog, she replied, “Why, no, Dr...
...Youthful hopes are a fine thing, especially when they have some experience and acquired wisdom to back them up, but constant bitterness has a way of engulf­ing hope in Katherine Anne Porter’s world...
...In the story “He,” Porter depicts the travails of possum-eating poverty, the pride of those who have nothing and refuse to be pitied, which is to say looked down upon...
...for Callie Russell Porter was born in Indian Creek, Texas, in 1890, the fourth child of native Texans...
...Unrelieved, unjusti­fied, unredeemed, the pain of one nameless defective swells to fill the human world...
...Never one to pass up sexual adventure, she had successive affairs with the governor of Yucatan, 88 THe amerIcan SPecTaTor December 2008/January 2009 bookS In revIew a Polish diplomat, and a Nicaraguan poet, whose baby she aborted...
...she claimed to have been vouchsafed on the verge of death “what the Christians call the ‘beatific vision,’ and the Greeks called the ‘happy day.’” Something less than happy about the near-death experience turned her hair permanently white...
...Coming close to death did seem to make her bolder...
...The closing sen­tence indicates that she is in for a rougher time than she expects: “At least I can know the truth about what happens to me, she assured herself silently, making a promise to herself, in her hopefulness, her ignorance...
...When what she wound up doing was ghostwriting and cranking out publicity releases for movies, she took off for Mexico to write articles on politics and culture...
...it would last four years...
...Her mother died when she was two...
...I hate love, she thought, as if this were the answer, I hate loving and being loved, I hate it...
...The title character is a severely retarded boy...
...Renouncing love in one’s youth suggests the fantas­tic desperation of a bargain with the devil, and the devotee of solitude who abides by the terms of the bargain will likely find himself, or herself, more bit­ter than the inveterate lover whose heart is broken time and again...
...She married and buried another good man, and had no choice but to take over his work when he died...
...One wonders how she found time to write a thing...
...Why, he couldn’t possibly recognize her...
...She can no longer abide the legendary romantic past—frontiersmen who risked everything, splendid belles who loved them—that her family has inflicted upon her, and she is determined to go at the rest of her life clear-eyed, free of illusions, free of attach­ments, indeed free pure and simple...
...But her bitterness is a constant state of mind, and in the end, she makes one long for the writ­ers who give the angels their share of the melody...
...this marriage too would last four years, and would be her final one...
...There seemed never to have been a time when she didn’t know life was hard...
...Her art is one of fearless­ness and consummate skill, like those required in milking a rattlesnake, and the spectacle fascinates for a time...
...If you’ve just noticed rhythm getting the better of grammar for rhetorical effect, that’s Texas talk­ing...
...The sexologist Alfred Kinsey hoped to find her a trove of recondite erotica, but in certain respects she proved quite conventional...
...She she grew up on farms and in small towns, her sensibilities abraded by prairie winds, even as she was reading all of Shakespeare by the age of 12...
...A few years as a journalist, in Fort Worth and Denver, followed...
...She was still an attractive woman, however, especially vain about her breasts and legs, and she took to dyeing her hair black...
...By the time Katherine Anne Porter’s story “Old Mortality” is over, Miranda has vowed to part ways forever with her blood relations and with her recently acquired husband...
...Begging, however, will not help...
...So Cousin Eva, a Texas schoolmistress, suffragette, and old maid, ca...
...This withering nihilism is at the bitter heart of “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall”—the woman whose name suggests that she has seen and endured everything...
...Left at the altar in her youth, on her deathbed she regards her misery then as so much sil­liness...
...Nature’s malevolence, and man’s—witness the erotic, racial, and political poisons expressed in Ship of Fools, Porter’s yarn about a sea voyage from Mex­ico to Germany in 1931—overwhelm the felicities of art and intellect and love that Porter attempted to live by...
...Death by violence and by pestilence crushes the love of life in “Pale Horse, Pale Rider,” the story to which Porter earned the rights when she nearly died of the flu...
...As the illness takes hold, Miranda— Porter’s alter ego in several stories—has a delirious intimation of the world’s frightfulness: Back of the ship was jungle, and even as it appeared before her, she knew it was all she had ever read or had been told or felt or thought about jungles...
...For several years she would bounce between New York and Mexico and carom among an assortment of men, resulting in stillbirth, gonorrhea, removal of her ovaries...
...Porter was not a born hellion but a person whose energies were turned demonic and who was unable to love life...
...Ten days after that divorce, she mar­ried another man, 21 years younger than she...
...Wisdom comes from suffer­ing, it is said, but the only wisdom here is wrung from the mother, who learns that even her love for Him counts for nothing in the end...
...Have you...
...She headed to Greenwich Village, bent on writing stories and poems...
...Texas, Mexico, and Europe, where she spent the years 1931 to 1935 (most of that time in Paris, which she loved) became her prime imaginative ter­rain...
...All that behind her, preparing to die yet clinging to life, she prays that God send her a sign, but she is jilted once more...
...Whether you hate algis valiunasis a Florida-based writer and critic...
...She had fenced in a hundred acres once, digging the post holes herself and clamping the wires with just a negro boy to help...
...She contracted tuber­culosis and did time in a Dallas charity hospital...
...It is not compassion that Porter evokes here so much as horror...
...Oh, what a mortal pity He was ever born...
...Stark landscapes bred hard people who knew a thing or two about heartbreak and perhaps some­thing about violence...
...At 16 she married a hard-drinking yahoo who beat her into unconsciousness and threw her down the stairs...

Vol. 41 • January 2009 • No. 10


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.