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The mechanical men in these storiesIndustrial Age holdovers, outsiders wanting for relevance and respect, or overwhelmed people who confuse the certainties of one reality with the doubts of anotherare cut off in some way from contemporary culture.
Sometimes in these stories, which Randy F. Nelson calls "thought experiments about values in conflict," the characters are like the Native American prison guard in "Escape": Rifkin thinks that atonement is possible even for fugitive killers. Others are less sanguine. In "Breakers," a corporate hitman arrives on a forgettable island off the African coast. His mission: to shut down a hellish, polluting, ship-demolition business. His nemesis: a lawyer, now gone Heart-of-Darkness crazy, who preceded him years earlier for the same purpose. The bottom drops out in other stories, rearranging all reference points to good and bad, true and false. In "Abduction," for instance, a distraught young woman summons a tabloid reporter to a grubby hotel room, where the now-lifeless alien who had invaded her body lies wrapped in a sheet.
Nelson once explained his motivations by alluding to a line in a Gabriel García Márquez story. A crowd of villagers are gazing upon a man, "but even though they were looking at him, there was no room for him in their imagination." "Stories and characters and situations that ask the imagination to accommodate something bigger, further, deeperthat's what I'm after," said Nelson.
Running the gamut from weird to outright creepy, these 13 stories shed sympathetic light on the unseemly, the ungainly and the unrefined. The first story, "Mechanical Men," about animal testing and chimpanzee murder, mixes George Saunders's brand of bureaucratic absurdity with Raymond Chandler's lean prose. "Abduction" sends a jaded tabloid reporter to a filthy motel room on a tip about a girl who gave birth to an alien baby. In "Pulp Life," a girl is sentenced to carry a dead man's photo for 14 years after she kills him in a drunk driving accident. The industrial mayhem of "Breaker" is set on a small African island where ships are disassembled (inspired, the author notes in his acknowledgments, by an Atlantic piece by William Langewiesche), and "Cutters" follows journalists on an assignment that drags them over the edge in a "hillbilly dumping ground in the mountains" populated by snake-handling religious fanatics. Reading not unlike literary dispatches from The Twilight Zone, Nelson's collection won the Flannery O'Connor award for short fiction, and it's not difficult to pick up on O'Connor's influence: strange and damaged characters mired in strange and damaging situations. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
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