Credit: Rob Penner

Thereโ€™s a high body count in David Meansโ€™s fiction. The Nyack residentโ€™s fourth story collection, The Spot (Faber & Faber, 2010), includes haunting descriptions of deaths by crucifixion, stabbing, strangulation, drowning, gunfire, and spontaneous human combustion. True, there are stories in which no one diesโ€”โ€œReading Chekhovโ€ is a delicate tale of a waning affair; โ€œA River in Egyptโ€ portrays a desperate father and son in a hospital testing room; โ€œThe Knockingโ€ is a comically stylized take on the noisy neighbor from hellโ€”but the book has a magisterial bleakness, leavened by prose of surpassing beauty.

In the title story, a man tells the underage girl heโ€™s pimping, โ€œThat little pucker on the surface out there is where the Cleveland water supply is drawn in, right there, and if you were to dump enough poison on that spot, youโ€™d kill the entire city in one sweep.โ€

The image recalls a story in Meansโ€™ 2004 collection, The Secret Goldfish, in which another small-time thug watches water sluice over the lip of a fish hatchery tank. โ€œHe liked how the glossy top, coated with algae and pollen dust, moved at a leisurely pace until it got to that little razor-blade spot where it roared over the edge. That spot. Thatโ€™s where he lived all the time.โ€

Itโ€™s an apt metaphor for Meansโ€™s work. Like his northern-midwestern compatriots Joel and Ethan Coen, heโ€™s a technical virtuoso who can jump-cut from harrowing cruelty to an image so gorgeous it makes you gasp. His humor is often pitch-black, as when a teenage hooker in โ€œThe Spotโ€ strangles a john with his bolo, then tries on the denture that pops from his mouth, intoning, โ€œWhatโ€™s up, Doc?โ€ The story ends on a note of compassion, as water released from a whirlpool flows โ€œinto the relative calm of the river as it headed toward the merciful breadth of Lake Ontario.โ€

Means published his first collection, A Quick Kiss of Redemption, in 1993, but Assorted Fire Events put him on the map in 2000, beating out Philip Roth for the Los Angeles Book Prize and garnering a National Book Critics Circle nomination. He has been teaching at Vassar College since 2001, and is reading tonight at the Campus Bookstore. He sits outside Babycakes Cafรฉ on a sunny fall day, discussing his craft between bites of a BLT.

Dressed in a dark blue shirt and jeans, Means has the kind of rumpled handsomeness that inspires undergraduate crushes. His manner is friendly, but far from relaxed; he rarely gives in-person interviews. Though he clearly enjoys talking about writing and literature, questions about his own life make him physically uncomfortable. He twists in his seat, eyes darting behind dark-framed glasses as he gauges exactly how much he wants to reveal.

Means grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan (โ€œGlenn Miller!โ€ he says with ironic glee), and majored in English at the College of Wooster, Ohio. Though he moved to New York in his twenties, receiving an MFA in poetry from Columbia, and has lived with his family in Nyack for nearly two decades, his Michigan roots have a powerful hold on his psyche. โ€œI donโ€™t think you can take the Midwest out,โ€ he says with a grimace, describing himself as โ€œan ex-patโ€ and โ€œa recovering ex-midwesterner.โ€

An eclectic reader, Means also cites photographers Steven Shore and W. Eugene Smith as inspirations, along with a lot of musicians. The album cover of Springsteenโ€™s Nebraska is framed above his desk. โ€œIโ€™ve loved Springsteen and Dylan my whole life,โ€ he declares. โ€œI come from a working-class town, near a paper mill. We thought Springsteen was ours.โ€

Means compares assembling a story collection to โ€œputting together an old-fashioned record album: slow song, fast song. I think thereโ€™s a resonance. The story you just read is still in your mind when youโ€™re reading the next.โ€ He writes stories one at a time, frequently setting them down for long stretches before going back to revise, which he likens to โ€œinterrogating the draft, putting it under a very bright light.โ€ He often holds back finished stories that donโ€™t seem to fit a specific collection.

Means is among an elite group of authors who specialize in short fictionโ€”Alice Munro, Raymond Carver, Grace Paleyโ€”and heโ€™s often asked why; the Paris Review once published a Q&A titled โ€œWhy David Means Is Not a Novelist.โ€ Still, thereโ€™s a long hesitation before he responds. โ€œI could easily say, โ€˜I always read short stories,โ€™ which I did. But I think itโ€™s more a matter of what tool I could find that I could work with to do what I wanted to do,โ€ he says. โ€œJust by virtue of being the length they are, whether they want to or not, stories remind us of our own mortality, of the fleetingness of things.โ€

In a New York Times blog, Means wrote, โ€œWe donโ€™t tell novels at the kitchen table, we tell stories. We carry them around, mull them over, twist them, pass them on to someone else, who, in turn, adds a few thingsโ€”and thatโ€™s what interests me: the magic of how a small story grants us an enormous amount of grace.โ€
Heโ€™s made two abortive attempts at writing a novel, which he finds โ€œhugely different. Itโ€™s like swimming out into a lake until you canโ€™t see the shore anymore; youโ€™re completely surrounded by it.โ€ He may revisit one of the manuscripts someday, but has abandoned the other. โ€œWhen you throw out 700 pages of something, itโ€™s brain-numbing and sad. But nothing goes to waste as a writer. A lot of times you have to write one thing in order to write another,โ€ Means explains, adding, โ€œItโ€™s easy to go into a defensive crouch about short stories versus the novel.โ€

Especially when your best friend is Time-anointed โ€œGreat American Novelistโ€ Jonathan Franzen. Means admits to โ€œa couple of weird momentsโ€ over Franzenโ€™s meteoric rise, especially during the frenzy over The Corrections. โ€œJonathan came over to play tennis the day he was picked for Oprahโ€™s Book Club. I can tell you he was extremely happy, and also a little dazed.โ€ Both were relative unknowns when they met in New York in the late 1980s; Franzen is still Meansโ€™s first reader, except for his wife, who often reads stories aloud to him.

Means writes first drafts longhand, and encourages students to do the same, saying, โ€œThereโ€™s less distance between yourself and the page.โ€ Thereโ€™s also a visible record of changes, and the opportunity to see the work fresh when itโ€™s typed and printed. Itโ€™s also nice reaching the end of a page. โ€œThe scrolling screen is really dispiriting. I mean, infinity? Nothing like knowing you can write forever.โ€ He laughs with a warmth that seems out of joint with his storiesโ€™ dark preoccupations. Talking with Means is a little like meeting a character actorโ€”say, Steve Buscemi or Christopher Walkenโ€”who specializes in portraying twisted souls. Though he may be a prince of a guy in his offscreen life, thereโ€™s an uneasy sensation of โ€œWhere did that come from?โ€

Means isnโ€™t telling. โ€œI do have a backstory, intimate personal things in my history that Iโ€™m totally unwilling to talk about right now,โ€ he says bluntly. โ€œWhy would I use that fuel up?โ€ If, as Socrates noted, the unexamined life is not worth living, the overexamined life may not be worth writing about. Meansโ€™s art seems to flow from its own hidden vortex, the razor-blade spot just before something painful roars over the edge.

โ€œSometimes I have the urge to go on Oprah and unburden, confess,โ€ he admits, leaning back in his chair. But he cherishes privacy. โ€œThereโ€™s an element of this country that can devour and destroy you. I write about people in really dire circumstances, and Iโ€™ve seen it, Iโ€™ve lived it.โ€ Thatโ€™s all he will say on the subject. The rest is for fiction.

Asked how heโ€™d describe his work to a neophyte, Means responds, โ€œI donโ€™t know. Fun? Cheery?โ€ He laughs, then offers, โ€œTraditional. At the same time, pushing the envelope formally. Iโ€™m always trying to do something new. And Iโ€™m trying to engage with the reality of America right now, of poor people being tucked into certain corners and hidden. Iโ€™m not concerned with people who arenโ€™t in some kind of predicament. I know thereโ€™s a lot of people out there who actually canโ€™t afford cell phones.โ€

Like all writers today, Means wonders how new technologies will affect reading habits. Heโ€™s just recorded a podcast of โ€œThe Tree Line, Kansas, 1934,โ€ the freshly edited New Yorker story heโ€™ll read at the bookstore tonight. โ€œIf you donโ€™t keep rotating in this culture, you will disappear. The Internet is a portal that takes us away from loneliness. Writers used to sit around waiting for the mailman, or even the morning newspaper in its little tube. Now thereโ€™s an infinite mailman arriving all day long.โ€

Not long ago, Means rode home on the train across from a family whoโ€™d obviously just been to visit Vassar. It was one of those autumn days when traveling alongside the Hudson feels like a gift from God. โ€œTheyโ€™d never been up here before, but they werenโ€™t even looking outside,โ€ he says, incredulous. โ€œLook out the fucking window!โ€

He gives the same advice to his writing students. โ€œLook out the fucking window. Stop walking the same route every day to the same place, pick yourself out of your rut. I think thatโ€™s what art does. It pushes us to see something.โ€

What does David Means see? From his story โ€œThe Gulchโ€:

There wereโ€”any policeman could tell youโ€”those who were preordained to fiery deaths, those most certain to be found in a ditch outside of town, those whose future lay out there like a bear trap, ready to snap shut when just the right amount of pressure was applied to just the right spot.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *