It is not
by happenstance that the two significant events of Katherine James’s new, beautifully
spare novel Can
You See Anything Now? involve water.
In the
first, Margie Nethercott, an artist who has been diagnosed with multiple
sclerosis, paddles a canoe into a lake, ties herself to a rock, and drops the
rock into the water. The lake turns out to be too shallow, the attempt at
suicide fails, and Margie has to call to people on the shore to rescue her.
That means the entire town of Trinity, upstate from New York City, will know of
the failed attempt.
Margie’s
husband Nick is the town’s psychologist. He didn’t know his wife intended
suicide.
In the
second water event, a young college student, the Columbia University roommate
of Margie and Nick’s daughter Noel, falls into Trinity’s river. Her name is
Pixie. She regularly cuts herself, sleeps around, and takes various drugs –
none of which is done by Noel.
Water
becomes a kind of baptism, pushing the people of this novel into new
understandings and new lives.
The
Nethercott family is the center of the narrative, but no one really assumes the
role of lead character. Noel’s high school friends – Miriam, Jason, and
especially Owen – move as much through the story as the Nethercotts. We meet
Etta, a Christian and artist who is known for painting tomatoes, until Margie
begins to teach her how to paint other things. And Pete, Pixie’s somewhat
estranged father, who should probably be on meds.
Katherine James |
But we
more than meet these characters. We find ourselves inside their heads and
hearts, inhabiting the interiors of people before we realize what’s happening.
They tell themselves things they don’t tell the other characters; they make
decision and judgments about themselves and each other. And we come to
understand that we are witnessing a group of people in a small town slowly
breaking through what confines and almost stifles them, to find something as unexpected
as redemption and grace.
James is a
writer of both fiction and narrative non-fiction. Her work has been published
in various literary journals and anthologies. She received an MFA degree from
Columbia University and taught undergraduate classes in fiction there. This is
her first novel; a memoir, Notes on Orion, about heroin use in the Philadelphia
suburbs and how it affected her family, will be published in 2018. She lives in
Pennsylvania.
Set in a
small town, Can You See Anything Now?
is a story about inhabiting the human heart.
Related:
Top photograph by Cristina Munteanu
via Unsplash. Used with
permission.
I’m reading this currently and enjoying it. I like how credible the characters are (they “sound” like people we know) and how well the story’s narrative arc works. It’s also not without humor, which is refreshing in such a story.
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