binocular vision
also by edith pearlman
How to Fall
Love Among the Greats
Vaquita
binocular vision
edith pearlman
New & selected stories
lookout booksUniversity of North Carolina Wilmington
©2011 by Edith Pearlman
All rights reserved. No material in this book may be copied or reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage-and-retrieval systems, without the express written consent of the publisher, except for brief quotations in critical articles and reviews. Page 375 constitutes a continuation of this notice.
First printing, January 2011
Cover design by Claire Bateman and Emily Louise SmithCover photograph © Keith Brofsky / GettyBook design by Claire Bateman and Rachel Jenkins for The Publishing Laboratory
isbn: 978-0-9823382-9-2
library of congress cataloging-in-publication data
Pearlman, Edith, 1936–Binocular Vision : New & Selected Stories / Edith Pearlman p. cm. isbn 978-0-9823382-9-2 (alk. paper) I. Title. PS3566.E2187B56 2011 813'.54—dc22 2010033376
Lookout Books gratefully acknowledges support from the University of North Carolina Wilmington and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Printed in Canada by Printcrafters Inc., an FSC Certified company.
lookout booksDepartment of Creative WritingUniversity of North Carolina Wilmington601 S. College RoadWilmington, NC 28403www.lookout.org
for joseph
contents
Introduction by Ann Patchett / xi
selected storiesInbound / 3
Day of Awe / 13
Settlers / 25
The Noncombatant / 35
Vaquita / 44
Allog / 54
Chance / 69
ToyFolk / 83
Tess / 95
Fidelity / 106
If Love Were All / 112
Purim Night / 134
The Coat / 148
Mates / 158
How to Fall / 162
The Story / 174
Rules / 181
Home Schooling / 193
Hanging Fire / 205
Unravished Bride / 217
Binocular Vision / 223
new storiesGranski / 231
The Little Wife / 243
Capers / 259
The Ministry of Restraint / 268
On Junius Bridge / 282
Relic and Type / 295
Lineage / 306
Girl in Blue with Brown Bag / 311
Jan Term / 323
Elder Jinks / 332
Vallies / 343
Aunt Telephone / 354
Self-Reliance / 367
xi
To that great list of human mysteries which includes the construction of the pyramids and the persistent use of Styrofoam as a packing material let me add this one: why isn’t Edith Pearlman famous? Of course by not having the level of recognition her work so clearly deserves, she gives those of us who love her the smug satisfaction of being in the know. Say the words Edith Pearlman to certain enlightened readers and you are instantly acknowledged as an insider, a person who understands and appreciates that which is beautiful. Still, I think that Binocular Vision: New & Selected Stories should be the book with which Edith Pearlman casts off her secret-handshake status and takes up her rightful position as a national treasure. Put her stories beside those of John Updike and Alice Munro. That’s where they belong.
I first read Edith Pearlman when I was the guest editor for Best American Short Stories, in 2006. Somehow two of my favorite sto-ries in the more than one hundred I was given to choose from—“On Junius Bridge” and “Self-Reliance”—were by the same writer, a writer I’d never heard of. How was this possible? Katrina Keni-son, who was then the series editor, told me that finding new Edith Pearlman stories year after year was one of the greatest pleasures of her job. After a ridiculous amount of consideration, I decided to include “Self-Reliance” in the collection, only because taking two stories by the same author simply isn’t done. From there I went straight to her backlist: How to Fall, Love Among the Greats, and Vaquita. My transcendent love for Edith Pearlman was sealed.
introduction
xii ann patchett
But even when love is sealed, it can still grow. When Best Ameri-can Short Stories 2006 was published, there was a party for the book in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and for that party three actors were hired to do readings of three of the stories from the collection. It was going to be my job to do the introductions, except that two days before the event, one of the actors fell through. I was told it would be up to me to read “Self-Reliance.”
While I am no stranger to giving public readings, there’s a big difference between reading your own work and performing some-one else’s work alongside two professional actors. And so I locked myself in my hotel room and, sitting in the middle of the bed, I practiced. It is not a long story and I easily read it aloud twenty times before I was sure I had it. I am here to tell you: There are very few things that hold up to being read twenty times aloud, and very, very few things that improve with every pass, but the more I subjected “Self-Reliance” to repetition, the more it bloomed. I felt like a junior watchmaker taking apart a Vacheron Constantin. I knew the story was good when I first read it, but when I had read it twenty times I could see that it was flawless. Every word in every sentence was indispensable, every observation subtle and complex. The rhythm of the language carried the reader forward as much as the plot. Every time I thought I had mastered all of the nuances, the story offered up another part of itself to me, something quiet and undemanding that had been standing back and waiting for me to find it. This is not to say that the stories in this book need to be read repeatedly in order to be fully comprehended. It’s to say that there is such richness in them, such depth of spirit, that they are capable of taking you as far as you are willing to go.
It is without a trace of vanity that I tell you I brought the house down that night. Edith Pearlman herself was in the audience, which made me feel like I had the lead in Uncle Vanya on a night that Chekhov was in attendance. My only challenge was to keep from interrupting myself as I read. So often I wanted to stop and say to the audience, “Did you hear that? Do you understand how good this is?”
A year later, I was asked to give a reading at my public library in Nashville for adult story hour (grown-ups who come together at lunch to hear grown-up fiction) and I had the chance to read “Self-Reliance” again. A repeat performance! The considerable crowd
xiiiintroduction
went wild. They wanted to know how they had they never heard of Edith Pearlman before. I told them I understood their confusion. I had used less than half of my allotted hour and so I suggested a discussion of the story.
“No,” someone called out. “We want another Pearlman story.” “Read another story,” the audience cried. So I picked up one of her books (it was a library, after all) and
started to read aloud. And even though I wasn’t prepared, the brilliance of the work carried me through. It turned out to be the second -best reading I have ever given.
When I was asked to write this introduction, an invitation I leapt at, I sat down to read the manuscript with a pen in my hand. I thought it would be a good idea to underline some of the best sen-tences so I could quote them along the way, but I could quickly see the ridiculousness of that idea. I was underlining the entire book. Okay, I thought, just put a check by your favorite stories so you can be sure to mention them, but by the time I’d finished reading the book, every one of them was checked. Every story.
What you have in your hands now is a treasure, a book you could take to a desert island knowing that every time you got to the end you could simply turn to the front cover and start it all again. It is not a collection of bus crashes, junkies, and despair. Despair is much easier to write about than self-reliance. These stories are an exercise in imagination and compassion, a trip around the world, an example of what happens when talent meets discipline and a stunning intelligence. This collection offers a look at an artist at the height of her powers. Once you have read it, I hope you will go forth and spread the news. Edith Pearlman has been a secret much too long.
ann patchettAuthor of Run and Bel CantoNashville, July 2010