"Townie" from Andre Dubus III

News cover "Townie" from Andre Dubus III
01 Mar 2011 03:14:23 What is the book in front of you? Who is the author, and what about it? Open book and you will find the answers on all yours questions. But, if you read this article, you will understand the book's basic idea.
Do you think that it is hard to write a book? Maybe you should try to write your things, and all that you need it is a computer or a list of paper with pen.
Andre Dubus III passes that test with the highest marks in "Townie." It's a searing memoir; a punch in the gut, literally. The son of acclaimed short story writer Andre Dubus II and the author of "House of Sand and Fog" strips away all pretense and writes with blunt honesty about how he became a writer and the things he regrets along the way.
The book's central theme is violence — its genesis, consequences and addictive nature. One of four children from a broken family in the mill towns of northeastern Massachusetts (dad leaves mom for a younger woman and a teaching job across the Merrimack River at the now-defunct Bradford College), Dubus witnesses fights in streets and bars from an early age. He and his siblings are picked on mercilessly.
Dubus captures the time with an assault on the senses: "Summer came and now windows were open there was the canned laughter and commercial jingles of six or seven TVs ... a bottle breaking, a drunk singing, a motorcycle or lowrider revving its engine ... the smells of hot asphalt, the dusty concrete of broken sidewalks ..."
When Dubus channels his teenage rage into bodybuilding, obsessively doing hard-core workouts from muscle magazines, joining a gym and then a boxing club, he becomes the perpetrator rather than the victim of violence. After his sister is gang-raped, he becomes obsessed with protecting his family, trying to fill a hole left by his absent father.
The book is filled with meditations on violence. Here's Dubus on what it feels like to punch someone in the face: " ... you have to move through two barriers to do something like that, one inside you and one around him, as if everyone's body is surrounded by an invisible membrane you have to puncture to get to them."
It's a wonder that Dubus' story didn't end in permanent incarceration or premature death. It's just about a miracle that he somehow replaced all the violence with writing. The passage when he picks up a pencil for the first time and feels the transformative power of storytelling is a marvel. When he's done, he observes the world with fresh eyes: "I blinked and looked around my tiny rented kitchen, saw things I'd never seen before: the stove leaning to the left, the handle of the fridge covered with dirty masking tape, the chipped paint of the window casting, a missing square of linoleum on the floor under the radiator."
Once he discovers the release of writing, the rest of the story spills out — there's Marxism, Boston's Fenway Park, reconciliation with dad, lots of carpentry and a powerful moment in a freshly dug grave, looking up at the sky.
 

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