Attrib. and other stories

Eley Williams

Book - 2021

"A literary sensation in the UK, this prize-winning collection of dazzling short fiction showcases a bold new talent in the vein of Lydia Davis, Deborah Eisenberg, and Amy Hempel. AN ANCHOR ORIGINAL. Lauded as "elegant" (The Guardian) and "exhilarating" (Vanity Fair), When I Find I Cannot Kiss You presents a cast of unforgettable characters standing at the precipice of emotional events (a disastrous breakup, a successful date, an unexpected arrival) and finding it fiendishly impossible to express themselves. In "Attrib," an audio-visual artist who is hypersensitive to sound is commissioned with writing the score to a Michelangelo exhibit's audio guide, trying to find the right sounds to accompany the ...paintings by experimenting with everything from cat litter to a rib gnawed to the bone from last night's takeout. In "Spines," a family vacationing in France finds themselves at odds with what to do about the hedgehogs enjoying a lengthy swim in their pool. "Alphabet" begins with forgetting the word "hairbrush" and becomes an elegy for the beautiful face the aphasic narrator remembers clearly but to which she can no longer attach a name. With intimate, irreverent, and playful prose, Eley Williams rejoices in both the possibilities and limitations of language, as well as the very human need to be known and understood--despite our own best efforts"--

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
New York : Anchor Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Eley Williams (author, -)
Physical Description
ix, 148 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780593312353
  • The Alphabet
  • Swatch
  • Attrtb.
  • Smote
  • Bs
  • Alight at the Next
  • Concision
  • Fears and Confessions of an Ortolan Chef
  • Synaesthete, Would Like to Meet
  • Bulk
  • Platform
  • Rosette Manufacture: A Catalogue & Spotters' Guide
  • Scutiform
  • Mischief
  • Spines
  • Spins
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Booklist Review

A boy who collects color names. A Foley artist (someone who re-creates sounds for film). The trainer of a rat searching for land mines. In this artfully crafted short story collection, Williams has created a memorable set of characters obsessed with or defined by language. There are those with conditions that affect their experience of language, such as the person with aphasia who loses the ability to understand words, and another suffering from synesthesia who goes on a date with someone who brings relief from constant sense overload until an explosive end to the day is so overwhelming that a second date seems impossible. The poignant beauty of these stories is how language, in its imprecision and history, its specificity and memories, can build or break relationships. From small moments in time, considering a kiss in a gallery, letting a bee out of the window, or confronting a beached whale, Williams pulls readers into a universe of personal meaning for each narrator. Put under a microscope, even the smallest moments loom large.

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

British writer Williams's diverting collection (after The Liar's Dictionary) combines wordplay and narrative to chart her characters' attempts to find meaning. In "The Alphabet," flirtation, romance, and memory are explored through each letter's attendant associations as the narrator, addressing her partner, loses her ability to express herself because of worsening aphasia (" 'You can't spell aphrodisiac without aphasia,' you said later, trying to make a filthy joke out of it and holding me"). In "Concision," the narrator, while on a silent phone call with an erstwhile lover, meditates on words in other languages that have no analogue in English, such as the Finnish word löyly for a sauna's steam. "Spins," set during a London gloaming, demonstrates the author's acute powers of observation: "clouds make a candy-colour of the evening, the passers-by have conversations that marble together like endpapers." Williams is strongest, however, when she diverts from rhetorical games. In "Spines," a vacationing family notices a distressed hedgehog treading water in a pool. The question of whether to save it reveals the lesson-focused cruelty of the family patriarch: "If it thinks we'll scoop it out each time, it won't learn." Williams explores pathos and the dictionary with aplomb and a fresh voice. Anglophiles and linguistic schemers will savor this. Agent: Lucy Luck, C&W Agency. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A jewel box of 16 stories. "The Alphabet" sets the tone for Williams' verbally dazzling collection: The narrator, suffering from aphasia, struggles to describe what's happening to her. She is losing her ability to retrieve the words for things. More tragically, she may have lost her lover: "Forgetting hairbrush became forgetting our address became forgetting dates became figmenting became fragmenting, became I remembered your beautiful, beautiful face but could not quite place it." With her verbal mastery loosening, the narrator improvises. Though her condition is rare, she's not alone since the following stories suggest that language's riches and its imprecision are another source of slipperiness as well as creative potential. These pieces often take the form of one-sided conversations, allowing Williams' first-person narrators to riff on finding the perfect backdrop for a kiss in a gallery ("Smote") or choosing the right words to shout at a lover storming away after a tiff ("Spins"). Time stands still, it expands luxuriously as is possible only in fiction, giving characters all the time in the world to muse. This is certainly true in "Alight at the Next," which alights on this image and that idea while the narrator constructs and deconstructs the significance of her physical proximity to her date and what she should do to the man who has stepped onto the Tube and threatens this magical moment of intimacy: "I am certainly braver than before, when the pre-you afternoon got jumbled with you-evening at rush hour, where throats squirmed with the old smoke and stream of tunnels: a world pinstriped by eyelashes, uproarious with the need for a Friday, downroarius with lost cards." These stories are not for those who relish plot, but they will please daydreamers and lovers of verbal wizardry and wit. A work of linguistic exuberance and lyrical meandering. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The Alphabet (or Love Letters or Writing Love Letters, Before I Forget How to Use Them or These Miserable Loops Look So Much Better on Paper Than in Practice) The plot of this is not and will not be obvious. I'm pretending that this is not important. It is quite likely that I have lost it anyway. The plot. Related--where are my glasses? For some reason I find that if I say, "Glasses. Glasses?" in an authoritative way while searching for them it seems more likely that I shall find them or that I will somehow invoke them into being. This is a strategy that does not work for finding one's dignity nor for finding you but glasses--possibly. Announcing my intention to find them at least conveys a sense of control as I dither around picking up ornaments and looking under curtains. There is a paper published online that sets out this thesis, and I shall quote it aloud to make it real: speech can alter "ongoing cognitive (and even perceptual) processing in nontrivial ways" effectively allowing one to concentrate better. Say it ain't so--announce, with an ounce of courage and conviction and the world's your-- your-- the world's yours for the mistaking. For what it's worth, concentrating, I can say that you altered me in nontrivial ways. The pursuit was anything but trivial, at least. I remember that. "Glasses?" I completely lost it (the plot, not the glasses--they're only mislaid) about two weeks ago around the same time that I mislaid you. If you were here you would make a filthy joke about my use of that word, about you being miss laid. Scratch that, then. Screw it or unscrew that word out of place. Two weeks ago is when I lost it--the plot--round about the same time that you were not mislaid by me but were misplaced. When you misplaced me. Two weeks ago is when we ceased to converge by the bedside table, beneath the sofa, by the fridge. I have realised with some embarrassment that the reason I could not find them is of course because I am wearing my glasses. This is like that time someone (I am being coy-- I mean you) complemented no complimented my eyes and suddenly I wished that I could pop them out onto your palm and say, "Hey, damn right, they're the best thing about me; not, you know, functionally, of course, hence the glasses, but in terms of form; want to swap? I wanna see you in 'em," which would of course be impossible for three reasons and horrible for about twelve, but --what was I saying?-- even though I now know the whereabouts of my glasses the feeling of lack remains. I have lost something else so here I must remain, poised to retrieve. If I say, "Something else. Something else?" in an authoritative way perhaps it is more likely that I will find it, whatever it might be. We looked up my condition after coming home from the doctor's the first time where it had been explained to us in a pale room with a ticking light. We had looked the word up in the dictionary. I did not tell you, but I had imagined using my plucked-out eye's optic nerve as a bookmark to save the definition's place. We also searched online to make sure that our Internet history was keeping up with our life events. I spelt the word with an f at first and, sighing, you took control of the keyboard. A P H A S I A, you typed. It required both of your hands in the same way that origami might or the act of unwrapping a parcel. We browsed. Aphasia: a disturbance of the comprehension and formulation of language caused by dysfunction in specific brain regions. "You can't spell aphrodisiac without aphasia," you said later, trying to make a filthy joke out of it and holding me. "Yes you can," I said into your jumper after a while. This gave me time to work it out. "Well, I can't," you had said, not letting go. And I, not giving up, had said, "You'd have a spare A." And "Gimme me an A!" you had said in your cheerleader voice. I cannot remember what happened next. I probably did give you something. After all, your innuendo-led ears would probably not let me get away without giving you one but it is impossible to recall. I have forgotten, basically, and now I have misplaced you. I have swept so many words under my tongue and out of the porches of my ear, out of sight and out of mind. Over the years your ears must have become spoked and fairly bristling with my Xs and Ks and Ts and teasing. The plot, yes--the condition of its being lost. I have a great deal of nostalgia for having the plot and a full vocabulary. Both have been lost gradually, along with the--what is it--marbles. My marbles, specifically. We have come to specific marbles. I have lost it, I have lost my marbles and I have lost the plot--the Holy Trinity of losing I have lost my faith in--wham bam thank you m'--ma--mate. Maybe the plot was connected with my marbles in some way. Maybe one plays marbles on a plot, plot being synonymous with pitch or field or court. I lost them all long ago is what's important. Two weeks ago. You took my marbles and it with you and I appear to have mislaid the plot. In the film-of-the-musical-of-the-play, in Hertford Hereford and Hampshire Hurricanes Hardly Ever Happened but Eliza Doolittle was fed marbles in order to improve her diction not to lose a good thing she had going, and no doubt if you were here you would make a dirty joke about that word too. I shall shun diction, then; a cunning stunt. Spoonerisms, tongue-twisters--I remember that you could make those words affectionate and filthy as soon as you found them and me in close confines. One cannot spell eyes without having to also spell yes. This was always especially the case with you, and with yours. Incidentally, my dictionary is definitely getting smaller. This might be because I am moving away from it or because it is shrivelling. "What's your favourite word?" you asked me on our first date. I said something obvious like pamphlet. "Excellent," you had said. You may have even clapped. "Favourite letter?" you continued without offering your own answer. You tended to take charge like that. A waiter was sizing-up our shoes, and handing you the bill. I was trying to seem interesting, so I replied, Q. "Q?" you echoed, somewhat accusingly, as you pressed your PIN code into the machine. Yes. "Q needs U to be useful," you had said, and I remember that I rolled my eyes out of my head and you winked in a pantomime way and touched my wrist with your hand. "And yours?" I think I asked. I must have done. I should have. I hope I did. "I consider favourite letters to be a better indicator of personality than star signs," you had said, and I had thought, oh great this person's a massive weirdo and is going to try and inculcate me into a reiki-practising cheese-cloth wearing bewhiskered cult or sect, because I used to use words like inculcate without thinking twice even though I knew at the time that it was unadvised. Inadvised. But by God you were charming, said the other half of my brain. Cult leaders often are, replied the first half. GO ATROPHY ON A STALK, said the second half, and it did, I think. Thank goodness. You had evaded my question, I couldn't help but notice. "A is a snapped Eiffel Tower. The shape of it. If you were interested in A as a letter I'd assume that you were only interested in half-finishing projects," you said. "Is that right?" "H is for rugby fans, and penalties. F and E and Y are all prongs." And prongs are for stabbing at something, I thought: letters as stabs in the dark. I do not know why you picked these letters as examples. You were misspelling the alphabet. "What does Q imply?" You had cocked your head as if the answer might slide out of your ear onto the table. "Upper case or lower case?" you asked, gravely. "That would be telling," I said, pretending that I knew how to flirt. "It stands for questions, often, doesn't it?" you said, and I'm sure that I did not know how to answer. We went to a bar. Excerpted from Attrib. and Other Stories by Eley Williams 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.