Current:Home > InvestEverything she knew about her wife was false — a faux biography finds the 'truth' -Golden Horizon Investments
Everything she knew about her wife was false — a faux biography finds the 'truth'
View
Date:2025-04-14 02:41:43
To those readers who prize "relatability," Catherine Lacey's latest novel may as well come wrapped in a barbed wire book jacket. There is almost nothing about Biography of X, as this novel is called, that welcomes a reader in — least of all, its enigmatic central character, a fierce female artist who died in 1996 and who called herself "X," as well as a slew of other names. Think Cate Blanchett as Tár, except more narcicisstic and less chummy.
When the novel opens, X's biography is in the early stages of being researched by her grieving widow, a woman called CM, who comes to realize that pretty much everything she thought she knew about her late wife was false. The fragmented biography of X that CM slowly assembles is shored up by footnotes and photographs, included here.
Real-life figures also trespass onto the pages of this biography to interact with X — who, I must remind you, is a made-up character. Among X's friends are Patti Smith, the former Weather Underground radical Kathy Boudin, and the beloved New York School poet, Frank O'Hara.
As if this narrative weren't splintered enough, Lacey's novel is also a work of alternate history, in which we learn that post-World War II America divided into three sections: The liberal Northern Territory where Emma Goldman served as FDR's chief of staff (don't let the dates trip you up); the Southern Territory, labeled a "tyrannical theocracy," and the off-the-grid "Western Territory." A violent "Reunification" of the Northern and Southern Territories has taken place, but relations remain hostile.
Feeling put off by all this experimental genre-bending? Don't be. For as much as Lacey has written a postmodern miasma of a novel about deception and the relationship of the artist to their work, she's also structured that novel in an old-fashioned way: via a Scheherazade-like sequence of stories. Most of these stories are about the charismatic X's life and fabrications; all of them are arresting in their originality; and, the final story that CM is led to, housed in a storage facility, is devastating in its calculated brutality.
But let's return to the beginning. In what CM calls the "boneless days" in the aftermath of of X's death, she tells us that:
"It wasn't a will to live that kept me alive then, but rather a curiosity about who else might come forward with a story about my wife. ... And might I — despite how much I had deified and worshipped X and believed her to be pure genius — might I now accept the truth of her terrible, raw anger and boundless cruelty? It was the ongoing death of a story, dozens of second deaths, the death of all those delicate stories I lived in with her."
I hesitate to mention any of revelations CM stumbles upon in the course of her research into X — a person CM says, "lived in a play without intermission in which she cast herself in every role." Watching those bizarre costume changes take place on these pages is part of the pleasure of reading this novel. It's not giving much away, though, to say that one of the earliest shockers here is that X, who arrived in New York in the 1970s ready to create experimental music with David Bowie and pricey conceptual art out of boulders, actually was born Carrie Lu Walker into the repressive Handmaid's Tale world of the Southern Territory.
Hiding her own identity as X's widow, CM travels to the Southern Territory to interview X's parents — a risky move in a land where women who deviate from the repressive norm are still stoned to death. During this research trip and the many that follow, CM also investigates the mystery of her own metamorphosis: namely, how did she — a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist — allow herself to be drawn into what Emily Dickinson called the "soft Eclipse" of being a wife, the very same kind of wife the folks in the Southern Territory would approve of? X may not be relatable, but, as we come to know her, the duped CM certainly is.
"The trouble with knowing people," CM says at one point, "is how the target keeps moving." The same could be said of Lacey's brilliant, destabilizing novel. Just when you think you have a handle on Biography of X, it escapes the stack of assumptions where you thought you'd put it, like a profile or an obituary you'd started reading in yesterday's tossed-out paper.
veryGood! (63619)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Body of missing woman recovered at Grand Canyon marks 3rd park death in 1 week
- New York’s Green Amendment Would Be ‘Toothless’ if a Lawsuit Is Tossed Against the Seneca Meadows Landfill for Allegedly Emitting Noxious Odors
- Musk’s interview with Trump marred by technical glitches
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Musk’s interview with Trump marred by technical glitches
- Prince William, Princess Kate congratulate Great Britain's Olympic team
- A jury says a Louisiana regulator is not liable for retirees’ $400 million in Stanford Ponzi losses
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- What is compassion fatigue? Experts say taking care of others can hurt your mental health.
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Prosecutors won’t charge officers who killed armed student outside Wisconsin school
- Brittany Snow Shares Heartbreaking Details of Her Father’s Battle With Alzheimer’s Disease
- Porsha Williams Mourns Death of Cousin and Costar Yolanda “Londie” Favors
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Injured Ferguson police officer wanted to improve department ‘from the inside,’ ex-supervisor says
- Blink Fitness gym chain files for bankruptcy, here's what it means for locations around US
- Truth Social reports $16M in Q2 losses, less than $1M in revenue; DJT stock falls 7%
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Texas’ overcrowded and understaffed jails send people awaiting trial to other counties and states
Dairy Queen announces new 2024 Fall Blizzard Treat Menu: Here's when it'll be available
Katie Holmes Makes Rare Comments on Bond With 18-Year-Old Daughter Suri
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Stud Earrings That We Think Are 'Very Demure, Very Cutesy'
Want to speed up a road or transit project? Just host a political convention
Pokémon Voice Actor Rachael Lillis Dead at 46