TOM HIBBARD Reviews
Back to the Garden by Clara Hume
(Moon Willow Press, 2015)
ECO-FICTION
THE
INVISIBLE PARADISE:
BACK TO THE GARDEN BY
CLARA HUME
“There is no immobile absolute, no spiritual ‘beyond’.”
-Henri Lefebvre
Mary Woodbury, a Vancouver publisher, editor and writer—under
the nom-de-plume of Clara Hume—is a
person absorbed in environmentalism and most certainly is a writer of some excellent
variety of eco-fiction. Her 2015 novel Back To The Garden from Moon Willow
Press is a good starting place for a definition of eco-fiction. Her episodic tale begins in the mountains of
northwestern United States, ventures to the Atlantic coast in search of
relatives and roots and then returns again to the mountains—as a vague sort of “homeland.” It’s told in a fairly straightforward manner,
without fantastical worm hole leaps into the future or past, rather in a time
supposedly in the not-too-distant future—indeed, generally based on types of
incidents that appear in today’s news.
However, like science fiction from the 1950s, out of Galaxy magazine, from writers such as
Ray Bradbury, or Gene Roddenberry’s 1960s allegories, and/or radio shows such as X Minus
One and Dimension X, or like
Cormac McCarthy’s more recent novel The
Road; in Back to the Garden, the
familiar U.S. landscape is transformed into a desolate wasteland of life
reduced to a few survivors performing, of necessity, the most rudimentary functions. Yet, unlike much science fiction, the cause
isn’t an unavoidable apocalyptic uncontrollably destructive nuclear war. Rather, the cause is a disintegration of
society, government, civilization, infrastructure due to gross insensitivity
toward fellow man and the environment. At
one point, one of the characters says that the problems of society were caused
by people ignoring the warnings. One of
the main problems is that the heat of global warming has turned everywhere
(except higher elevation mountains) into desert.
Consequently, famine, from burnt fields and impossible
growing conditions, and disease, from contaminated water, take their toll. The stench of dead bodies is everywhere. Two members of the core group die from influenza. Others are raped and mangled in gun
skirmishes with marauders. The book
begins with an unfolding description of a small somewhat random and lost group
of outcasts and their tenuous interactions—with each other and their natural
surroundings. They are so distant from
governments and cities that they aren’t at first aware of the extent of the
conflagration.
In the book’s style of the writing, each chapter is told
from the perspective of a different one of its characters—using the same
technique as William Faulkner’s novel, The
Unvanquished. Back to the Garden is like The
Unvanquished in that a group of backwoods people encounter life’s trials as
it journeys on its own along an unpopulated—and one might add
“primal”—countryside. Other books that Back To the Garden remotely suggests are
William Golding’s Lord of the Flies
and, especially, J.M. Coetzee’s The Life
and Times of Michael K. Hume’s (Woodbury’s) writing has a sketchy
simplicity that suggests a glowing Surrealism in everything, just as in the
writings of Franz Kafka. This is what I
mean in saying that environmentalism is contained in the style of fiction. The characters are sensitive and meaningful. But their interactions are generally
childlike and subdued, expressed in small gestures, a tear, a smile, a hug, a
token. Though allowed, rationality is
secondary. The characters know each
other; they know each other superficially and, because of the travels, they know
each other to some degree in their past.
But Back to the Garden takes
place in an immense and immensely uninhabited landscape.
The minimalism of the writing style makes the humans seem
like pastoral people, experiencing life on very fundamental levels and in very
fundamental feelings—happiness, sadness,
horror, wonderment, fear, hunger, interdependence, helpfulness toward each other
as a means of protective strength. One
of the defining facets of eco-fiction is that the human perspective is only a
small, subservient part of the wider, global perspective. The
characters are portrayed factually but incompletely, as part of the ecological
picture. This is a different sort of
realism, a lighter, less ego-based realism than the probing, heavy, psychological
torment of so-called modern realism.
Books that are definitely unlike Back
To The Garden would be Salinger’s Catcher
In the Rye or Thomas Mann’s Death In
Venice. “We craved the cold,” says
one character, the cold of sparseness rather than the heat of crowded close
contact. Though the characters gain
their strength from each other, they gain it more from the mystery of nature. Books that are referenced in the text itself are
Melville’s Moby Dick (“It is not down
in any map; true places never are.”), the Poems
of Mao Zedong and Rachel Carson’s Silent
Spring
Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves
of strength that will endure as long as life lasts. There is something infinitely healing in the
repeated refrains of nature—the assurance that dawn comes after night, and
spring after winter.
“Way up there the mountains stood as heartily as ever.” There is a spiritual source to life in the
garden, but the spirituality, the “dream,” is derived from a direct contact
with nature. The sprawling cities are
deserted; only unfathomable space remains.
“I shook off the old icons. They
meant nothing anymore.” As pretense
crumbles in its own instability, the real pleasures and rewards of life are
brought forward. They are brought forward
in their essential spontaneity and singularity.
The patchwork presentation of a world that has radically fallen to
pieces, as happens many times, in the Great Depression for instance, uncovers
life of our species and planet on a level that reveals the paradise in which we
have been dwelling all along.
*****
Tom
Hibbard has had many reviews, essays, poems and artworks published online and
in print publications. He had many
reviews and articles published in the early version of Jacket Magazine. Other
publications where his reviews and poems have appeared are Word/ For Word, Big Bridge, Galatea Resurrects and Solitary Plover. With Washington D. C. poet Buck Downs, this
spring Hibbard read his poetry at Myopic
Books in Chicago and Woodland Pattern in Milwaukee. He has written extensively on “visual
poetry.” A long piece on Existentialism
and Michael Rothenberg appeared in John Tranter’s Journal of Poetics Research. His poetry collection Sacred River
of Consciousness is on sale at Moon Willow Press in Vancouver and
Amazon.com. And his poetry collection Place of Uncertainty is on sale at Lulu
online.
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