The attempt to capture pain in language transforms Greenwell's sentences.
Pain, it has ain, it has been said, is the great censor, the eater of words. Pain shatters language; it remains untranslatable not just anti-narrative but pre-narrative, calling us back to our first sounds. In the canon of illness writing, there are those accounts— Alphonse Daudet's "In the Land of Pain" and Christina Crosby's "A Body, Undone," to name two-which closely observe how pain shapes a life, how it exists both within and alongside the self as antagonist and intimate companion (Nietzsche called his chronic pain his dog). Typically, however, writers do not sit long with their pain; they busy themselves with the history, the social meanings of sickness. Pain, on its own, seems to have no plot; as Emily Dickinson wrote, it "has an Element of Blank." Perhaps it is a great anatomist of pleasure who can fill in some of the blanks in the story of pain. Garth Greenwell, the author of two previous works of fiction, "What Belongs to You" (2016) and "Cleanness" (2020), has been lauded for his depiction of sex our "densest form of communication," he calls it. His sinuous, stately sentences have brought a formal feeling to scenes of cruising; public bathrooms have become versions of the nineteenth-century ballroom, full of their own occult codes, hierarchies, the season's new beauties. The books have followed the same narrator-a writer and a Southerner by birth, who has spent time teaching poetry in Bulgaria. We meet him again in Greenwell's latest novel, "Small Rain," in the late summer of 2020. He is now living in Iowa, teaching at a college.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 16, 2024-Ausgabe von The New Yorker.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 16, 2024-Ausgabe von The New Yorker.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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ART OF STONE
\"The Brutalist.\"
MOMMA MIA
Audra McDonald triumphs in \"Gypsy\" on Broadway.
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
\"Black Doves,\" on Netflix.
NATURE STUDIES
Kyle Abraham's “Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful.”
WHAT GOOD IS MORALITY?
Ask not just where it came from but what it does for us
THE SPOTIFY SYNDROME
What is the world's largest music-streaming platform really costing us?
THE LEPER - LEE CHANGDONG
. . . to survive, to hang on, waiting for the new world to dawn, what can you do but become a leper nobody in the world would deign to touch? - From \"Windy Evening,\" by Kim Seong-dong.
YOU WON'T GET FREE OF IT
Alice Munro's partner sexually abused her daughter. The harm ran through the work and the family.
TALK SENSE
How much sway does our language have over our thinking?
TO THE DETECTIVE INVESTIGATING MY MURDER
Dear Detective, I'm not dead, but a lot of people can't stand me. What I mean is that breathing is not an activity they want me to keep doing. What I mean is, they want to knock me off. My days are numbered.