Temper

Layne Fargo

Book - 2019

"A debut workplace noir novel of female ambition about what happens when fake violence draws real blood, for fans of Mrs. and Tangerine" --

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Subjects
Genres
Noir fiction
Published
New York : Gallery Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Layne Fargo (author)
Physical Description
342 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982106720
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

It is perhaps not a major publishing plot twist that, almost two years after the #MeToo movement burst into public consciousness and began to change the conversation around gender, power and who gets a seat at what table; a year and a half after women in pop culture, sports and Hollywood began speaking up about equal opportunity; and at a time when there are more women in Congress than ever before, proving they can be just as belligerent and forceful as their male colleagues, the traditionally male-dominated world of the thriller has been ceding ground to a different kind of hero(ine). For so long, after all, the most chart-busting thriller novels were the province of the robotic but moral special ops guy, the dissolute unshaven detective, the beefy brawler with a soul. For so long the ads in the subways and in newspapers touted boldface names like Jack Reacher, Gabriel Allon and Harry Bosch. Even J.K. Rowling adopted a male pseudonym, Robert Galbraith, to write her post-Potter adult thriller series, which centers on a disabled male private eye called Cormoran Strike. There have always been exceptions to this rule, of course - women who broke through and became part of the canon, like Agatha Christie's Miss Marple and Patricia Cornwell's Kay Scarpetta. But they were the minority, at least until the Girl books, Gillian Flynn's "Gone Girl" (in 2012) and Paula Hawkins's "The Girl on the Train" (2015). Since then the movement has turned into a bona fide trend, and plenty of authors are riding the wave into summer. Some of the women at the heart of these books are old, some young (some very young); some educated, some not; some violent, some not; and some more fully, and convincingly, rendered than others. They're as varied and unpredictable, as compelling and flawed, as women in the real world. The sheer fact that one of the most anticipated of them, the first book from Thomas "Silence of the Lambs" Harris in almost 13 years, is called cari MORA (Grand Central, $29) after its 25-year-old mysteriously competent and self-contained female main character pretty much says it all. Caridad Mora is a Colombian refugee, a child soldier survivor with blood and death in her past who now lives with her aunt's family in Miami, works at a bird and small animal refuge, and moonlights as the caretaker for a mansion once owned by Pablo Escobar. She is delectable, in both the traditional and Harris sense of the term (meaning actually edible), as well as smart and tough and emotionally and physically scarred, all of which makes her a worthy adversary for the various monsters Harris stews in the Southern Florida soup. The worst of these is Hans-Peter Schneider, a hairless fetus of a man with the requisite Harrisian tastes and a liquid cremation machine. His path collides with Cari's when the interests of two South American criminal organizations converge on her mansion in search of an Escobar legacy. Machine gun mayhem ensues. No character is guilt-free, and they reek of a moral ambiguity that is mirrored in the sense of place Harris creates. That makes them more interesting (except Hans-Peter, whose gruesomeness reads as more dutiful than shocking at this stage in the author's career). Especially Cari Mora herself, whose special skills and ability to ignore introspection derive from her own painful history, and who proves a woman to chew on. Metaphorically speaking, of course. she's tougher than she first appears, as is Sophia Weber, the lawyer at the center of beyond all reasonable doubt (Other Press, paper, $16.99), a somewhat arid, if absorbing, legal thriller from the Swedish writer Malin Persson Giolito that's translated by Rachel Willson-Broyles. It pivots on the question: If a bad person is accused of a crime he did not commit, is justice for the accused the same thing as justice for society? Sophia wrestles with the issue after a former professor brings her the case of Stig Ahlin, a doctor who has been imprisoned for years for brutally molesting and then stabbing a 15-year-old girl. Painted during his trial as a monster who, rumor had it, abused his own 4-year-old daughter, and convicted immediately in the court of public opinion, he has always protested his innocence. On examining the evidence from his trial, Sophia is inclined to believe that the law was not entirely served. Most of her friends and family (and partners), however, are not so convinced and Sophia is left largely to her own intellectual and emotional reserves, which are not limitless. She is troubled by insecurity, making her quest less like a march to righteousness than a battle that no one entirely wins, whatever the outcome in court. It is both a strength and a frustration of "Beyond All Reasonable Doubt" that the author does not feel the imperative to explain too much or to tie her ending up in a neat bow. Instead, while by the end of the book the central question has been answered, even more have been posed - and not in the way that sets up a sequel (though that could happen), but in the way that imitates life, in all its messiness and obfuscation. You kind of want to throw it against a wall. And you want to meet Sophia Weber again. If sophia is forced to separate her emotions from her work, however - her distaste for her client from her obligation to him - the parents at the heart of a nearly normal FAMILY (Celadon Books, $26.99), another Swedish legal thriller, don't even try. M.T. Edvardsson's page-turner, which is also translated by Rachel Willson-Broyles, is told in three parts, three voices and three perspectives, one for each member of the titular family, and it peels away the compromises we make with ourselves to be the people we believe our beloveds expect, revealing just how flimsy those pretenses can be. This isn't exactly a surprise when it comes to teenagers such as 17-year-old Stella, who is much more volatile and complicated than her parents want to admit (also more engaging), and who is accused of murder as the book begins. Her story is sandwiched by those of her parents: her father, a pastor and something of a weak link who spends a lot of time bemoaning the choices between God and loved ones, and her mother, a buttoned-up criminal lawyer. Their professions heighten the stakes in a muddy story of good and evil. As each family member chronicles his or her side of the situation, the Rashomon-like prism of expectations and assumptions builds to a blunt-edged revelation, one where the ability to face danger, and family, without illusion comes from the least expected place, and there is no room for existential angst about the angels of our better nature. Another child, an even younger one - Dolly, 7 - is the narrator of Michelle Sacks's all the lost things (Little, Brown, $27), a slim road trip into mystery firmly in the vein of Emma Donoghue's "Room," with all the magical mundanity that implies. Precocious, with an advanced vocabulary, Dolly wakes one morning to find her father is taking her on a drive away from her home in Queens. Bringing only her favorite toy, a plastic horse called Clemesta who serves as a kind of Jiminy Cricket to her Pinocchio, she hops into the car, but the farther they get from home, the clearer it becomes that perhaps the trip, and her father, are not exactly what they seem. Using the illogical chronology of childhood, where ignorance is the status quo and all knowledge, whether of ice cream or tragedy, qualifies as discovery, the road south itself becomes a metaphor for a highway into the past, complete with detours and potholes and danger signs ignored. It's a risky technique to place such adult issues in the hands of a child; not every grown-up reader wants to spend a couple of hundred pages in the mind of a kid, a character who can easily become cloying and fall into the category of plot device as opposed to real person. But Dolly is a funny and surprisingly substantive little girl, and an acute observer of human behavior (though the author's tendency to have her speak in capital letters as a signal of her age, an affectation that was more successful in "Room," here is largely annoying and unnecessary). At the end, when she has to face the tragedy that started it all, it's not exactly a surprise, but it is still surprisingly emotional. Dolly has inner resources she did not know existed, like Lily, the protagonist of into the jungle (Scout Press, $27), a hardscrabble 19-year-old refugee from the foster care system who answers an ad for a teaching job in Bolivia that turns out to be a scam, leaving her to scavenge work and food and friends on her own in Cochabamba. She does so, along the way meeting Omar, a local motorcycle repairman who was raised in the Amazon rain forest. She falls for both his self-possession and his ability to introduce her to a feral baby sloth (yes, that's a seduction technique); when his brother shows up to tell him his nephew was eaten by a jaguar, and he needs to return to their village to join the hunt, Lily decides to go with him. And that's just the setup. Erica Ferencik paints a picture of a jungle ripe with the amorality of nature, where dropping one's guard or losing focus means death from any number of sources - enormous water snakes or minute poisonous frogs or flesh-eating parasites - and the humans, be they gun-toting poachers or antagonistic villagers, are actually the least frightening forms of life. Indeed, the ripening natural horrors are by far the most compelling characters in the book; neither Lily nor the men and women who surround, ignore, help and threaten her (including an ancient witch with telepathic powers) can quite match the jungle's vivid danger. The real thrill of the novel lies in the question of how Lily - physically frail, but with the strength born of the stubborn refusal to give in or give up - will make it through each day, as opposed to the nominal plot, which has to do with different interest groups on the hunt for a hidden mahogany forest. Just as the real question of the book is what "civilization" actually means. As the greenery flowers and bursts and rots from within so, too, does the prose, culminating in a clash of birth, death and fluids of all kinds. Even more overheated, however, at least metaphorically speaking, is Lauren Acampora's the paper wasp (Grove, $26). Take "The Talented Mr. Ripley," cross it with "Suspiria," add a dash of "La La Land" and mix it all at midnight and this arty psychological stalker novel is what might result. Abby Graven, an anxiety-ridden 20-something, once the smartest girl in her high school class, now given to vivid dreams that she believes foretell the future and that she captures in the form of fevered drawings, has become practically housebound by her inability to cope with real life. Dragging herself to an alumni gettogether, she comes into contact with her ex-best friend, a beauty called Elise who has left Michigan behind to become a budding starlet in Hollywood. Joyful reunion and corrosive obsession ensue, and Abby abandons her stagnant life to become a handmaiden to Elise, though her delusions about who exactly is saving whom have a hysterical undertow. Elise is too self-absorbed (and often too drunk) to see it, however, and as Abby gradually infiltrates and undermines her friend's life, relationships and career, resentments fester and rise and the tension builds - especially when an experimental director and his EST-like cult of creativity become part of the picture. When life imitates perfervid art, Abby proves a fantasist with a powerful sting. THOUGH FOR POTBOILERS, nothing comes close to TEMPER (Scout Press, $27), by Layne Fargo, a bodice-ripper set in the downtown Chicago theater world that also features a Svengali figure and the woman, or women, in his thrall. Chief among them is Kira Rascher, an actress with an Ava Gardner allure and the usual insecurity about being taken seriously. When the man of her stage set dreams - Malcolm Mercer, lead actor and artistic director of a high-concept, low-budget company - has her audition to be his co-star (against the wishes of his business partner and platonic roommate, Joanna Cuyler), she does what it takes to get the part. And then some. Like a black hole of charisma that crushes all in his orbit, Malcolm pushes his people to their boundaries and beyond, erasing the line between acting and being. There's violence here, but it's not only physical; it's emotional and psychological - even intellectual. And it leads exactly where you think it will. Mai gets what's coming to him, but the plot moves so quickly, and the breathing gets so heavy, even as you roll your eyes at the predictability of the denouement, you find that you've been sucked into the muck and you're wallowing there amid the words. When you finally climb out, though, and calm the heavy breathing, another realization may wash over you: The gender of their protagonists is not the only thing these books have in common. There's also a notable lack of tanks, nukes, scientifically engineered disease, computer viruses and other 21st-century weapons. These are low-tech nailbiters. In a world where we are increasingly obsessed with the tyranny and horrors of the small screens to which we are all teth-ered, the reminder that peril comes from all sorts of places and actual people may be the most thrilling development of all. VANESSA Friedman is the fashion director and chief fashion criticfor The Times. Women in these thrillers Eire as varied and unpredictable, as compelling and flawed, as women in the real world.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 2, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

Temper is a twisted tale of what happens when violence, ambition, and the taste for blood take center stage. Kira is a young actress who has caught the eye of notorious bad-boy theater director Malcolm Mercer, landing her first starring role in his latest production. Malcolm's business partner, Joanna, has suffered for years from his capricious sexual pursuits and selfish refusal to allow anyone else the chance to shine. Joanna, threatened by Malcolm's new interest in Kira, begins to look for ways to undermine both of them in pursuit of her own chance at the spotlight. As the story ominously intensifies towards the play's opening night, Malcolm's behavior generates animosity and passion from Kira and Joanna, and it's clear their stories are quickly spinning out of control. Temper alternates narrators between Kira and Johanna and builds a sense of danger and suspense that will keep readers guessing, literally until the last page. Fargo's first novel features complicated female characters and will be well received by fans of Gillian Flynn and Tana French.--Margaret Howard Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

Actor Kira Rascher's life changes forever when she takes a leading role in Temper, a play put on by Chicago's Indifferent Honest Theater Company, in Fargo's page-turning debut. Kira is thrilled at the prospect of working with the famous director and actor Malcolm "Mal" Mercer. But she's not prepared for his toxic coaching techniques, which happen to include inviting her abusive ex-boyfriend to rehearsal to help Kira tap into her darkest emotions and deliver them on stage. Despite this experience and warnings from other actors and her roommate and stunt coordinator, Kira is convinced she can handle Mal. As she slips deeper into Mal's world, Kira becomes desperate for his approval and starts to lose control of herself, even hitting him while rehearsing a fight scene. The tension rises as the narration alternates between Kira and the company's executive director, Joanna Cuyler, who's desperate for Mal's affection and views Kira as a threat. This intense psychological thriller builds to a devastating, if somewhat inevitable, climax. Fargo is definitely a writer to watch. Agent: Sharon Pelletier, Dystel, Goderich, & Bourett. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The theater is a tempestuous, bloody place to be in Fargo's prickly debut.The struggle is real for 30-something stage actress Kira Rascher. She lives hand to mouth with her best friend (with benefits), Spence, works a day job she hates, and auditions for theater roles every chance she gets. She longs to star opposite the enigmatic Malcolm Mercer, who runs Chicago's Indifferent Honest Theater Company alongside his partner, and platonic roommate, Joanna Cuyler. Auditioning for Malcom for a new two-person play called Temper is a visceral experience, but not just for Kira. Joanna hates Kira on sight, pointing out that "she's beautiful, to be sure, but in an obvious way. Nearly vulgur." Kira gets the part, opposite Malcolm, and to say the two have chemistry would be an understatement. The script is very physical, and Malcolm is a merciless taskmaster willing to go to ridiculous lengths to squeeze the best from his actors, including inviting Kira's horrid, simpering ex-boyfriend to rehearsal as a tactic to stoke her rage. Meanwhile, the self-contained Joanna stews in a brew of jealousy and wasted opportunity, doing all the grunt work for the company while the odious Malcolm stirs the pot and beds his co-stars. All this tension would drive anyone crazy, but for these two women, it's bound to get messy. Fargo's propulsive writing style and Joanna's and Kira's dueling narratives drive the increasingly frenzied chain of events that play out in the lives of two very different women who find themselves at an inevitable breaking point. While certainly effective, the finale isn't shocking, especially after getting an eyeful of two otherwise intelligent women seething under the toxic spell of such an insufferable man.This caustic passion play may not knock your socks off, but Fargo is an author to watch. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Temper 1 KIRA THE ACTRESS EXITS THE THEATER in tears. It takes her a few seconds to realize she has an audience. My audition is the last of the day, so I'm the only one left waiting in the row of mismatched chairs set up against the lobby wall. When our eyes meet, she takes a small, hiccuping breath, choking back her emotions like vomit. I don't remember her name, and I'm not sure she ever knew mine, but we did a play together once. Years ago, one of my first jobs in Chicago. She was the heroine, and I was the slut who seduced her boyfriend. (It wasn't a very good play.) I've seen her a few times since then, on posters for shows at Lookingglass, the Goodman, Steppenwolf--the type of theaters I can't afford to go to unless I know someone who can hook me up with comp tickets. She was always so poised, one of those classic ingenues with perfect ballerina posture. But right now she's a wreck: shoulders hunched and shaking, lightning-strike lines of mascara cutting down her face. She didn't just lose it on the way out, after the audition was over. No, she's been going for ten minutes, minimum. Which is about the same amount of time she was inside the theater. What the hell happened in there? Before I have a chance to ask, she hurries toward the door, ducking her head so her hair sweeps across her cheekbones like closing curtains. Even the sweltering wind blowing in from the street outside can't stop me from shivering. As if I wasn't already nervous enough about this damn audition. The door separating the lobby from the theater swings open again, and a dark-haired young girl wearing crooked cat-eye glasses comes out. She stops on the threshold, holding the door ajar with her hip, and looks down at the clipboard in her hands. "Kira Rascher?" Here we go. Whatever went down in that room, it's my turn now. I hand her my stapled-together headshot and résumé, and she stacks them on top of the clipboard. Her fingernails are bitten down to the quick, what's left of them covered in chipped black nail polish. "After you," she says. The temperature inside the theater is at least a ten-degree drop-off from the lobby. All my exposed skin--arms, shoulders, the sliver of leg bared by the slit in my long skirt--prickles with goose bumps. The lights are on full, but the black paint on the walls swallows up their brightness. The Indifferent Honest Theater Company is a typical Chicago storefront theater: a former retail property hollowed out and turned into an intimate performance venue. Intimate, of course, meaning claustrophobic. The space holds fewer than fifty seats, and the stage is just a scrap of bare floor in front of them. Sitting dead center, a few rows up, is Malcolm Mercer--the man I'm here to see. It's so surreal to be standing here in front of him, for him to play the role of spectator. We've spent hours together in this room, but this is the first time I've ever seen him out of character. Last time I saw him perform, he had his hair buzzed short to play a soldier with PTSD. It's growing back in now, long enough to show the curl in it again, but he used to wear it even longer, skimming his jaw. He'd use it almost as another prop, raking his fingers through it, flipping it out of his eyes, seizing it at the root. In addition to directing, Malcolm plays the male lead in every Indifferent Honest show--the perks of being artistic director. The play I'm auditioning for is a two-hander, so if I get the part, he'll be both my boss and my sole costar. Intimate indeed. Only his eyes move, tracking me as I take my position at center stage. You'd never guess he'd just witnessed--or maybe caused--an emotional meltdown. He seems entirely at ease, legs crossed at the knee, steepled fingers resting on his thigh. The clipboard girl tries to hand him my headshot, but he ignores her. The blond woman sitting next to him--Executive Director Joanna Cuyler, the other half of Indifferent Honest--takes it instead. Joanna is intimidating in her own way, with her razor-sharp bob and wide-set feline eyes. She spends a few seconds glancing from the picture to my face and back again, like she's checking my ID at airport security, before tucking it under the spiral-bound notebook in her lap. Malcolm's lips are slightly pursed, as if he's on the verge of speaking, but Joanna is the one who prompts me to begin. "Whenever you're ready, Ms. Rascher." There's a certain facial expression I'm used to seeing in audition rooms: a mask of polite detachment, not quite bored, but not too interested, either. That's the way Joanna looks at me when I start my monologue. But that's not how Malcolm looks at me. I'm being ridiculous. Of course he's staring at me, I'm standing on a stage doing a monologue. He's paying close attention to my audition--it's his job, for fuck's sake. But I've done hundreds of auditions, far too many of them for creepy assholes who leered at me, asked me to twirl, bend over, take off my top. And none of them ever looked at me the way Malcolm Mercer is looking at me right now. His gaze is hard. It has weight and heat, and it seems to touch my whole body at once. I've known since I was thirteen what it feels like when a man mentally undresses me, and this is something else. It's like he's stripping off my skin instead of my clothes, peeling it all away so he can see the blood and bone and sinew underneath. So he can expose every piece of me. I reverse two words of one line and stutter over another. A drop of sweat traces a jagged path down my back despite the chill. My voice is getting higher, smaller, a tremor under every syllable knocking the words off-balance. The pressure of his stare feels like fingers around my throat. This fucking bastard. I had him all wrong. When I walked in here, he wasn't relaxed. He was coiled, lying in wait. He must enjoy this--making people uncomfortable, pinning them down like specimens in a display case and watching them squirm. Well, if this is how he made the last girl cry, it's not going to work on me. Crying is easy. Anyone can cry. Hell, I've been able to make myself do it on command since my first acting class. The more he stares, the more I want to get through my monologue just to spite him. So I do the one thing you're never supposed to do during an audition: I stare back. At least it's in character, since my audition piece is a blistering speech given by a woman who just found out her lover has been cheating on her. I look Malcolm dead in the eye and pretend he's every man who's ever pissed me off. Soon I've lost track of where my simulated rage stops and my actual anger begins. But it doesn't matter, because with each line I'm gaining strength, shaking off his grip. The air between us seems to crackle. By the time I reach the end, the words are spilling from my mouth like they're my own, raw and real rather than rehearsed. I let a beat go by after the last line, then drop character and lift the corners of my lips, the way I practiced in the mirror at home. My natural expression is the kind that inspires passing strangers to tell me to cheer up, so I have to rehearse my smiles almost as much as my lines. For the next few seconds, the only sound in the theater is the scratch of Joanna's pen in her notebook. She draws a long line across the page, emphasizing something or striking it out, I don't know which. Malcolm doesn't move, doesn't speak, doesn't even blink, so neither do I. I want to look away from him--to look anywhere else, really: the floor, the emergency exit sign, my own feet--but breaking eye contact now would feel like conceding territory, admitting defeat. It's Joanna who interrupts the silence. She seems to do all the talking around here. "Thank you very much, Kira." She glances over at Malcolm and raises her eyebrows. He leans back a little in his seat. Not a word spoken, but something has clearly passed between them. Finally--finally--his eyes move away from mine, and I feel like I've won whatever strange game we were playing. But my triumph is short lived. His gaze slides down my neck and along my collarbone, coming to rest on the swell of my chest, and I can feel my smile decomposing. He's not evaluating my talent or weighing whether I'm right for the part. He's trying to decide if he's interested in sleeping with me. Fuck this guy. I should tell him off and storm out. I've wanted to do that every time this has happened before. Now is my chance. When Malcolm lifts his eyes to meet mine again, I'm ready, a whole battery of retorts locked and loaded. But before I can unleash them, he disarms me completely. "You're bleeding," he says. Excerpted from Temper by Layne Fargo 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.