Wolf in white van

John Darnielle

Book - 2014

"Welcome to Trace Italian, a game of strategy and survival! You may now make your first move. Isolated by a disfiguring injury since the age of seventeen, Sean Phillips crafts imaginary worlds for strangers to play in. From his small apartment in southern California, he orchestrates fantastic adventures where possibilities, both dark and bright, open in the boundaries between the real and the imagined. As the creator of "Trace Italian"--a text-based, role-playing game played through the mail--Sean guides players from around the world through his intricately imagined terrain, which they navigate and explore, turn by turn, seeking sanctuary in a ravaged, savage future America. Lance and Carrie are high school students from Fl...orida, and are explorers of the Trace. But when they take their play into the real world, disaster strikes, and Sean is called on to account for it. In the process, he is pulled back through time, tracing back toward the moment of his own self-inflicted departure from the world in which most people live. Brilliantly constructed, Wolf in White Van unfolds backward in time until we arrive at both the beginning and the climax: the event that has shaped so much of Sean's life. Beautifully written and unexpectedly moving, John Darnielle's audacious and gripping debut novel is a marvel of storytelling brio and genuine literary delicacy"--

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Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
John Darnielle (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
207 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250074713
9780374292089
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

A PATH APPEARS: Transforming Lives, Creating Opportunity, by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. (Vintage, $15.95.) Kristof, a New York Times columnist, and WuDunn, his wife and a former business editor at the paper, outline ways to improve the lives of the less fortunate, with concentration on those that bring demonstrable results. Though humans may be biologically hard-wired for empathy, the authors direct convincing appeals even to the calculating egotists among us. WOLF IN WHITE VAN, by John Darnielle. (Picador/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $16.) After a gruesome accident leaves him disfigured as a teenager, Sean Phillips largely withdraws from society and develops an intricate choose-your-own-adventure game played through the mail. The contours of Sean's inner life structure this novel, which our reviewer, Ethan Gilsdorf, called "a stunning meditation on the power of escape." DATACLYSM: Love, Sex, Race, and Identity - What Our Online Lives Tell Us About Our Offline Selves, by Christian Rudder. (Broadway, $16.) The author, a co-founder of the dating website OkCupid, saw an "irresistible sociological opportunity" in the troves of data the site has collected. He uses it to identify trends in our behavior and preferences, including how we connect and what drives us apart. THE HUNDRED-YEAR HOUSE, by Rebecca Makkai. (Penguin, $16.) At the outset of this novel, Zee, a Marxist scholar, and her husband, Doug, have moved into the carriage house of her family's historic estate, which once housed an artists' colony. Doug's academic career has stalled, but after realizing the obscure poet he is studying once visited the colony, he delves into the estate's past, turning up a century of overlapping histories, family secrets and ghosts. THE INVISIBLE BRIDGE: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan, by Rick Perlstein. (Simon & Schuster, $21.) Dealt blows by the defeat in Vietnam and Watergate's corruption revelations, the nation's self-image reached a low point between 1973 and 1976. As America seemed poised for self-reflection and humility, Ronald Reagan (and his signature buoyancy) entered the political scene. Perlstein's engaging account considers Reagan's influence on the modern conservative movement and its "cult of official optimism." HONEYDEW: Stories, by Edith Pearlman. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $15.99.) A perceptive witness to intimacy and solitude, Pearlman captures rhythms of daily life in her collection, which has been nominated for a National Book Award. Our reviewer, Laura van den Berg, praised the author's "quiet, humble precision," noting that these tales "excel at capturing the complex and surprising turns in seemingly ordinary lives." MADEMOISELLE: Coco Chanel and the Pulse of History, by Rhonda K. Garelick. (Random House, $20.) Chanel is often credited with creating a timeless aesthetic, but Garelick shows how the designer's enduring relevance is intimately tied to European politics and history.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 4, 2015]
Review by Booklist Review

Sean Phillips was an unremarkable, moody teenager until tragedy left him with a horrific injury, changing his life forever. Who or what drove him to his fate? Can anyone be blamed? Is there a lesson to be learned? These questions are explored but never fully answered in Darnielle's first full-length novel. To read it is to become claustrophobically trapped inside Sean's disfigured head as he alternates between dealing with the repulsive medical realities of his trauma and escaping to the role-playing-game world he has since created. While most of his mail-order game customers are anonymous, a handful come to mean more to Sean than mere characters on paper. Their paths, walking the tightrope between reality and fantasy, put Sean's into stark relief. Within the constructs of his game world, each turn presents finite choices, but in real life, the possibilities are limitless and, therefore, potentially terrifying. As senseless as a car accident, and as hard to look away from, the inconclusiveness of this journey will either captivate or madden readers.--Ophoff, Cortney Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In his incantatory debut, Darnielle (of the indie band the Mountain Goats) captures the allure and danger of being in thrall to a mythic vision. Lying in the hospital recovering from a gruesome wound, Sean conceives of a mail-based strategy game in a "fury of assembly," building out an "idle little dream in a small dead space." In the game's scenario, players head across an apocalyptic landscape in search of sanctuary at the Trace Italian, a star-shaped fort on the "wasted Kansas plain." With each successive choice, players find themselves further along a "path than can belong only to them." Darnielle doles out just enough information about the game to give it texture without stripping it of its mystery. The appeal lies in decoding the landscape, scanning for "little details" that reveal a larger pattern and might eventually allow players to figure out the impenetrable safe harbor. When one young couple's attempt to find the Trace Italian in real life leads them to a fatal "terminus" in the desert, Sean revisits his own dark history. He tracks back through the branching series of choices that led to his disfiguring injury, the creation of the game, and the couple's tragic end. Through it all the Trace looms, a monumental symbol for a supple novel. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Though in a way about sf, this debut novel by the lead singer of the Mountain Goats is not a sf story. It's essentially a character study about narrator Sean Phillips, a thirtysomething man with severe facial disfiguration caused by an "accident" during his late teens. It's only after about 100 pages that we start to learn the nature of the incident and much later that we discover more details. While recovering, Sean imagined and later realized a mail-in game called Trace Italian; much of the book deals with moves from the game, especially when one couple extends it to reality with fatal results. Not much is made of the court case that ensues. Mid-book there's a vignette, in which Sean watches a man deliberately back his truck at speed into the front (face) of a parked car, then drive off. The point? None, until you realize it's a foreshadowing, also an "accident." It's that kind of book. The title comes from the satanic lyrics of a rock song played backwards. VERDICT Beautifully written psychological fiction for sophisticated readers, with not much else like it out there.-Robert E. Brown, Oswego, NY (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A man badly disfigured in a gun accident ponders gaming, heavy metal, family, love and the crazed emotions that tend to surround our obsessions. As the singer-songwriter of the band the Mountain Goats, Darnielle specializes in impressionistic, highly literate lyrics delivered in a stark, declamatory voice. Much the same is true of Sean Phillips, the narrator of Darnielle's second novel, who has been largely housebound since his accident at 17 and is prone to imaginative flights of fancy. (Similarly, Darnielle's first novel was a consideration of the Black Sabbath album "Master of Reality" as told by an institutionalized teenage boy.) We know early on that Sean makes a modest income as the inventor of Trace Italian, a role-playing game conducted through the mail about a post-apocalyptic America; and we know that he was implicated in the death of a woman who obsessively played the game with her boyfriend. The novel shifts back and forth in time as Sean recalls a geeky boyhood of Conan the Barbarian novels, metal albums, and other swords-and-sorcery fare; its tension comes from Darnielle's careful and strategic withholding of the details behind the woman's death and Sean's disfigurement. In the meantime, the mazelike paths of Trace Italian serve as a metaphor for the difficulty (if not impossibility) of finding closure, and they also reveal Sean's ingenuity and wit. The book's title refers to a diabolical subliminal message on a metal record, a topic Sean is particularly interested in. (The novel seems partly inspired by a teenager's failed suicide attempt in 1985 that led to reconstructive facial surgeries and a lawsuit against the band Judas Priest.) Sean is a consistently generous and sympathetic hero, and if the novel's closing pages substitute ambiguity for plainspokenness, they highlight the book's theme of finding things worth living for within physical and psychological despair. A pop culture-infused novel that thoughtfully and nonjudgmentally considers the dark side of nerddom. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 My father used to carry me down the hall to my room after I came home from the hospital. By then I could walk if I had to, but the risk of falling was too great, so he carried me like a child. It's a cluster memory now: it consists of every time it happened and is recalled in a continuous loop. He did it every day, for a long time, from my first day back until what seemed like a hundred years later, and after a while, the scene blurred into innumerable interchangeable identical scenes layered one on top of the other like transparencies. On the wall to the right, as you head toward my room, there's a small bookcase with a painting above it, a western scene: hills and trees, a lake. A blue and green vista near sundown, a silent place. But if you look harder, or happen to turn your head at the right moment as you pass, you see figures, human figures, on what you might otherwise take for an empty ridge. It's like an optical illusion, this hunting party on the near hill, their curving hats dark in the orange dusk: they come out of hiding if you look at the empty scenery long enough. They were always there in my journey, popping up in the same place each time I'd drift by in my half-sleep. They never lost their power to surprise just by being there, a little smoke rising from somewhere within their three-strong party, their brushstroke rifles resting lightly on their shoulders. Next to the bookcase, receding into the wall, there's a chest-high shelf for a rotary phone. To the left, just past the painting, on the other side of the hall, is the bathroom, the sort of open door that if the cameras found it as they passed through the house in a horror movie would trigger a blast of synthesizers. In my many days home after the hospital, I spent long hours in there, lifetimes: in the tub, at the sink. Just getting in and out. It would be a long time before I could comfortably stand underneath a showerhead, and my parents didn't trust me to sit in the bathtub by myself, so the bathroom became a communal space of forced intimacy. Reconstructed skin is very sensitive to temperature and moisture; the pain sneaks up on you. Every other day they'd bathe me, and every time, I'd feel like it wasn't so bad for a few minutes; and then the heat would slacken the resewn flaps of my cheeks a little, and the tingling would start up, a rippling alarm traveling down confused wires. I was too generally exhausted to be able to experience fear or panic for longer than a moment, and I'd try to bear the feeling evenly, but its grip was hard and sure, and it held me. My parents' eyes on me, trying to head off the pain at the pass, to start hoisting me out before I had to ask. Several kinds of pain for several people. The portal still glows with menace in my memory. Ahead and beyond, two further doors: mine, straight on, and to the right, my parents'. My parents' room is an uncataloged planet, a night sky presence unknown to scientists but feared by the secret faithful who trade rumors of its mystery. I stood before this door once and didn't go in: that's the extent of the legend, really, but my journey down the hall that night, down the same stream through which my father carries me now in my wheeling memory, hints at pockets in the story that are still obscure, which will never find light. What if I'd gone in? I didn't go in. I stood there a minute and then turned away. If I'd turned around: What then? There are several possibilities; they open onto their own clusters of new ones, and there's an end somewhere, I'm sure, but I'll never see it. I feel and remember my father's arms underneath me when I've come home from the hospital; he isn't strong enough to do this, but he is forcing himself to do it; I am heavy in his arms, and I feel safe there, but I am lost, and I need constantly to be shoring up the wall that holds my emotions at bay, or I will feel something too great to contain. I see the painting, those cowboy huntsmen at dusk, and they surprise me a little, and I feel my breath catch in my chest when I scan the bathroom; and then I arc my great head a little to the right toward my parents' room, which disappears from view as my father nudges at the base of my bedroom door with his foot and then turns jaggedly on his heels so we'll both fit through the frame. He lowers me onto my new bed, the one from the hospital-supply place on White, and I feel the hot egg crate mattress underneath the sheet. Dad squeezes my hand like I remember him doing when I was very small. We look at each other. Teamwork. This happens several times a day, or it's a single thing that's always happening somewhere, a current into which I can slip when I need to remember something. * * * I saw this kid playing on the big metal wheel with the soldered piping: the merry-go-round. The merry-go-round at the fair is for babies, but the playground kind can throw you into the air at high speed; they have to put wood chips around it to break your fall just in case. This happened twice while I was watching: the kid spun the wheel faster and faster, jumped on, tried to crawl in to the still hub and lost his footing, and ended up sailing into the air and coming down hard. He'd lie there and laugh, dizzy, and then punch reset on the whole scene. At my grandparents' place, after the last fish went missing, they filled the pond in with cedar chips: I used to play out there when I was little. It was a half-hidden spot between the house and the garage, too small a space to think of as a yard--three cypresses, some rocks here and there, and the former pond. I remember the changeover from water to wood, the shift in tone: that was how I ended up conjuring the place now. I lived whole lives out there back then. The day they drained the pond I'd gone out back by myself after dinner. This had been a lakeside clearing in a forest for me, a magic place of wizards and wandering knights. It was still magic without the water, but the magic was different now. I could sense it. I closed my eyes. When I opened them, I felt my mind working transformations. No lake but a cave floor. Not trees but torches burning with a mystic light. Behind them: the back wall of a cave. Before them, me, enthroned, my regal seat hewn from ancient rock, immovable, imperious. The throne was actually a single stone brought in by the crew that filled in the pond. But under the weight of my small body, I felt it sprout ornately decorated arms with claws at the ends, and a bejeweled latticework back that climbed up several feet above my head. Transformed, it now boasted four short, sturdy legs that terminated in great glowing orbs pressing hard into the earth beneath. I took control of the place, of the scene: I made it mine. Groans echoed in the cave. Brittle bones broke beneath the knees of my crawling subjects. We had moved from San Jose to Montclair a few months back; it had ruined something for me, I was having a hard time making new friends. I had grown receptive to dark dreams. I saw animal skins running down the cave floor, skull dust rising. Everyone in my orbit would have a terrible day: the arbiter of days had decreed it. From my increasingly improbable perch I looked toward the dark heavens somewhere up beyond the imagined cave ceiling, and I pantomimed the aspect of a man thinking hard about what he might want to eat. And then I looked back down to the present moment, and I spoke; "I am King Conan," I said. "I thirst for blood." Backyard Conan, thrown together from half-understood comic books only, took several liberties with the particulars. The Conan that the world knew didn't drink blood, wasn't ruthless and cold. In his original form, he'd lived to follow a warrior's code of honor: enemies met death at his sword, and fellow barbarians shared in the plunder, but they were all men who lived by a code. The code was cruel, but just, consistent: coherent. When I became Conan things were different; his new birth had left scars. I ruled a smoking, wrecked kingdom with a hard and deadly hand. It was dark and gory. No one liked living there, not even its king. It had a soundtrack. All screams. Small for my age, pants still too tight, enthroned atop the lone rock near the drained pond now stuffed with cedar, I looked out into green leaves drifting down and sought the far distance. In came men carrying prisoners, their hands and ankles tied to branches like hogs at a Hawaiian feast. They were yelling in unknown tongues. Their muscles strained. The fire pit before my throne had sprung up in full glaze. The screams of the condemned ascended to the stars. I couldn't fill in the finer points of the plot: what anybody'd done wrong, why they had to die. It didn't matter. I opened my mouth like a great bird. I was coming down to deal death: to the guilty, to the innocent, to anyone within reach. To you , before me, trapped in the cave above the fire. Flayed and roasted and shared out among the nameless. To die screaming reduced to smoke. Lost in some kingdom found by accident and never heard from again in this world. Eaten by forgotten warriors on unremembered quests for plunder now lost forever. I was in the park feeding squirrels when the memory crested, peeking out from behind a sort of interior immovable monument in my skull where all the old things lie. I couldn't put an exact date to it. Somewhere late in the early game, among the several moves from one house to another, my dad between jobs and trying to find his footing. The filled-in fish pond seemed like a giveaway, but it could also have been flown in from some other scene, pasted on. Still: it grew vivid. The ivy in the backyard turning to jungle vines. The ground parching itself, bleaching itself. The composite sky--Pismo, Montclair, San Jose, places we'd lived, lost transitions--cracking along its surface like an old painting in an abandoned museum. And me, in the middle, on a throne whose legs eventually solidified as human femurs bound together with thick rope. I spent several minutes in deep concentration trying to get the picture fixed, to spot clues that would give me some exact sense of when and where, but the edges kept blurring. Sometimes I have trouble finding the edges. * * * Presently the kid from the merry-go-round turned up in front of me--I'd gotten distracted by the squirrels while remembering my childhood, and I ended up lost. When I looked up, there he was--five years old, I figured, possibly younger. I used to be good at guessing things. I'm not now. He sat down next to me, a little distance between us, and his eyes went from my face to my hand, still casting out peanuts for squirrels or blue jays one at a time. And then he brought his gaze back to my face, where it rested. He was very quiet as he looked up at me: I was a kid once; I thought I recognized on this one the look of a child deliberating within himself. He pointed in the direction of his question when he finally said it: "What did you do to your face?" Well, I told him all about it. He listened while I spoke, while I explained what I had done, and when, and how, and he nodded at all the right places in the story. And then, of course, when I was done explaining, he asked "Why?" which is a tricky question for me, since the correct answer is "I don't know": and that's a hard thing to say once all the cards are right there on the table. But he pressed me on it: "Yes you do," he said. "You do so know." It was a surprising moment on a day I'd set aside for doing very little, in what I'd already begun to think of as the aftermath. When I'd gotten into the car to drive to the park, I'd thought to myself: You've earned an empty moment or two. Instead, here we were. I thought how there's always more to something than I usually think there is, and I said then that he was right; that I was the only one who could know why I had done what I did, and that I couldn't think of anybody else who'd be able to come up with any kind of answer. But it was still true that I didn't have any "why" for him; I just didn't have one. I had looked for one, and it wasn't there. I could see him starting to think, hard, during the little minute of quiet that followed. Wheels turning. I wondered if maybe something difficult was opening itself up to himthat maybe people do things for no reason, that things just happen, that nobody really knows much. "I don't believe you. You don't know," he said. He looked straight at me. "You are a fibber." "Am I a fibber?" I said, smiling, even though I feel ugly when I smile. I feel like I might have been good with children in a different life. He nodded his head fiercely. "You are!" I flipped my hands palms up, hip level at either side, sitting there on what I now thought of as our bench, and I shrugged. Inside my head I could see how I might have looked to some observer standing at a few paces, me and this kid pointing, and my face; and how we might again look to another observer, stationed at some slightly greater distance. To somebody waiting at the light across the street. How we'd look on film. Or from space. In a Kodak frame. All these ways. And I liked what I saw, when I took it all in. It was ridiculous. It had an air of the inevitable to it. My smile got bigger as I let the picture grow to occupy the fullness of the space inside my head, and I just let it happen, even though I know it looks awful. Too late to hold back now. I looked over at the kid's family, who were motioning for him to return to their fold, and I felt something inside, something fine and small and dense. I looked out across the park. Came all this way and now here I am. * * * At the apartment complex the Saturday gardeners were just finishing up. The grass was tight and clean. They'd trimmed back the gardenia hedge so severely in some places that the stalks looked like petrified bones, little hands reaching up from the earth. I went inside and I puttered around on the computer, trying to finish up something I'd been working on, a little corner of a detour hardly anybody ever cared about. Most weekends I try to put my work aside, but there wasn't anything else to do. Then I checked my bank accounts, a nervous habit: I'm not rich, or even that comfortable, but my grandmother opened up a savings account for me after my accident, and she kept putting a little into it every month for ten years until she died. It's a security blanket now. I look at what's in there whenever I start to worry that my own savings or the insurance payments or my work won't be enough. It's like checking a lock on a door: just making sure no bad guys are going to get in. And then I played some music, old music, and it sounded awful, and I loved it, I loved it so much. Later, the nurse from the VNA came by for my sinus irrigation and let herself in--it was Vicky, who I always call "Victory," because usually by the time she shows up I need a nurse so bad that I can barely breathe. "Victory!" I'll say then, raising my weak arms up champion-style. I sound hilarious when I try to pronounce the letter r . "Well, Sean, yes, Victory's here. Victory's here, all right," she said today, the way she does, responding to things she hears as if they were thoughts that occurred to her inside her head, volume dwindling as she goes, the folds of her neck shaking gently. She looked at me, taking stock. "And Sean's here, too. Sean's here, right? Just like always. How you doing?" And I started to say "fine," and I meant to say "fine," but I ended up saying that I felt my life was filled like a big jug to the brim with almost indescribable joy, so much that I hardly knew how to handle it. That was how I put it, what I said: "I feel like my life is filled," and then all the rest of it, one big exhale. I am not an eloquent person, and I was surprised to hear myself talking like that, but only a little surprised, because it was exactly the feeling I had in my heart. It was right there at the surface waiting to come out. No way of counting my blessings. No way for anyone to count that high. And so Vicky told me that Jesus always makes a Way, which is how visiting nurses often talk, I've found over the years, and I said yes, yes, yes that's true, yes that certainly is true. Copyright © 2014 by John Darnielle Excerpted from Wolf in White Van: A Novel by John Darnielle All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.