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Flight
by Sherman Alexie
Grove/Atlantic, 2007
Paperback, 181 pages, $13
Fuck neutrality. I love everything Sherman Alexie
writes. I’ve got eight and a half inches of Sherman,
not including the poetry, sitting right on my top shelf.
Nelson Algren lives next to him. He was a prose poet
too, before his writing went all to hell in a puddle
of scotch. Algren’s career spans just seven and
three-quarters inches.
But Sherman’s sober. Before he’s done,
I’m hoping for a good ’nother foot.
Flight is Alexie’s second novel, the
first in more than a decade. Indian Killer
came out in ’96, and I loved that one, too.
Lots of people didn’t. I gave it to my mother-in-law
and it freaked her out. Novels about guys who scalp
people are not for everyone. Sherman’s issues
were less resolved in those days. Since then, his work
has grown.
Shockingly, I loved Flight too. When Sherman
read the first chapter at Town Hall, I heard the reason
why. He writes for the ear. He inhabits the lines. He’s
what happens when a natural poet who possesses a deep
understanding of the spoken word decides to do prose.
It lands as poetry. Words remind us that life is beautiful.
Many of Flight’s reviewers sound like
my mother-in-law before she’s had her coffee.
The Village Voice calls it a simplistic teen
novel. The Seattle Times deems it “self-important.”
The L.A. Times whines that Flight
is “thin and disappointing.” Our good friends
at the Seattle Weekly say it “barely
deserves to be called a novel.”
The New York Times, The Washington Post,
and The New York Review of Books liked it just
fine. They’re smart. Let’s hear it for East
Coast elitism!
Who can explain? Maybe it’s just garden-variety
literary bitchiness. Or maybe they just don’t
get it.
By happy accident, I’d reread Kurt Vonnegut’s
Slaughterhouse-Five just months before. Flight
inspired me to re-reread Slaughterhouse, and then return
once more to Flight. And then Vonnegut died. So it goes.
Flight pays homage to Vonnegut’s masterpiece
by giving us the awkward outsider’s view of a
world that is both awful and sublime. While Alexie’s
touch is grounded in his trademark humor and appreciation
for the absurd, the material, like Vonnegut’s
treatment of the bombing of Dresden, is deadly serious
and never lapses into cynical farce. Flight’s
protagonist careens through time and space to participate
in the various highs and lows of which humans are capable,
and in the end finds a version of acceptance and peace.
Alexie is, first and foremost, a storyteller, and
the time-traveling format allows him to piece together
a variety of vignettes, any one of which could have
developed into a short story of its own. In some ways,
this novel isn’t so far off from Ten Little
Indians, his last collection of stories. We have
a range of characters who hop across class and race
and, now, time itself, to offer multiple points of view
on the human condition.
We are reminded that, yes, people suck, but at the
same time, love transcends. There are a thousand instances
of horrible cruelty in any given moment, but there are
also epic acts of love and kindness between strangers.
There is abandonment and heartbreak, but we also see
everyday rituals of affection and the eternal possibilities
of redemption.
The climactic scene, which involves a drunken Indian,
a harried professional, and a parboiled parakeet, is
top shelf Alexie, pulling the best of which we are capable
from the wreckage of everyday failure and disappointment.
Flight may not, like Slaughterhouse-Five,
be an enduring work of genius. But it’s a damn
good book, worth reading at least twice.
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