Strong female characters feature in Bitch Planet ... what more could you want? Nicola West reviews a comic that pulls no punches

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Strong female characters feature in Bitch Planet ... what more could you want? Nicola West reviews a comic that pulls no punches

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"Stone Animals" by Kelly Link, recommended by Lincoln Michel for Electric Literature.
Issue No. 142
EDITORâS NOTE
Since her debut collection in 2001, Link has blurred genre boundaries, mixed YA and adult literary fiction, and published stories about zombies and witches in mainstream literary magazines. This genre-mixing is increasingly popular in the literary world but few, if any, writers are able to mix these elements into fiction as startlingly original as the stories of Kelly Link. And sheâs been doing it since before it was cool.
This week sees the release of Get in Trouble, Linkâs first adult book in nearly a decade (she published a YA story collection, Pretty Monsters, in 2008). You should, of course, buy it and devour. However, the story Iâm recommending comes from her second collection, Magic for Beginners. Like most of her stories, âStone Animalsâ is hard to classify yet impossible to forget. Itâs a ghost story without any ghosts, domestic realism in which the domestic is unreal.
Ostensibly, âStone Animalsâ follows a husband, a pregnant wife, and their two children as they settle into a new house in the suburbs. Henry still has to commute to the city to work, and Catherine is left at home to fix up the house while Carleton and Tilly run wild. There are dinner parties, late work hours, and unending paint options for the walls. There are no murders or monsters. Nothing explicitly horrifying happens.
And yet.
âStone Animalsâ is brimming with Gothic terror and uncanny unease. Link immediately sets the reader on unsure footing. We do not even know the question that starts the story, though we can guess:
Henry asked a question. He was joking.
âAs a matter of fact,â the real estate agent snapped, âit is.â
As the family explores their new life, Linkâs writing recalls the films of David Lynch in its ability to imbue everyday objects with terror. If the house is haunted, the haunting is not found in grand, Gothic architecture or secret chambers. The haunting is in the banal objects of everyday life. The TV, the car, even bars of soap. Itâs an American dream turned dark and strange: Kafka in Cheeverâs clothing.
What entities are haunting or what this haunting entails, is, like so much else, unclear.
Reality itself is unstable. Dreams blur into waking life. Objects become other objects. Are the titular stone animals dogs or lions or rabbits? The family is unsure. Drawings of trees turn into rabbits, and in dreams the rabbits become skyscrapers. Even the bossâs rubber band ball looks âlike some kind of eyeless, hairless, legless animal. Maybe a dog. A Carleton-sized dogâŚâ
âStone Animalsâ is thick with meaningâpsychoanalytically inclined readers can have a field dayâyet resistant to simple interpretation. The story transforms as you look at it, in the same way that Linkâs fiction expertly moves between genres and resists simple forms.
Is the house haunted? Is Tilly becoming a rabbit? Is Henry going to war with the neighbors? The reader is left with many questions and only one answer: Kelly Link is magic.
Lincoln Michel Online Editor, Electric Literature
Support Recommended Reading
Stone Animals
by Kelly Link Recommended by Electric Literature
Henry asked a question. He was joking.
âAs a matter of fact,â the real estate agent snapped, âit is.â
It was not a question she had expected to be asked. She gave Henry a goofy, appeasing smile and yanked at the hem of the skirt of her pink linen suit, which seemed as if it might, at any moment, go rolling up her knees like a window shade. She was younger than Henry, and sold houses that she couldnât afford to buy.
âItâs reflected in the asking price, of course,â she said. âLike you said.â
Henry stared at her. She blushed.
âIâve never seen anything,â she said. âBut there are stories. Not stories that I know. I just know there are stories. If you believe that sort of thing.â
âI donât,â Henry said. When he looked over to see if Catherine had heard, she had her head up the tiled fireplace, as if she were trying it on, to see whether it fit. Catherine was six months pregnant. Nothing fit her except for Henryâs baseball caps, his sweatpants, his T-shirts. But she liked the fireplace.
Carleton was running up and down the staircase, slapping his heels down hard, keeping his head down and his hands folded around the banister. Carleton was serious about how he played. Tilly sat on the landing, reading a book, legs poking out through the railings. Whenever Carleton ran past, he thumped her on the head, but Tilly never said a word. Carleton would be sorry later, and never even know why.
Catherine took her head out of the fireplace. âGuys,â she said. âCarleton, Tilly. Slow down a minute and tell me what you think. Think King Spanky will be okay out here?â
âKing Spanky is a cat, Mom,â Tilly said. âMaybe we should get a dog, you know, to help protect us.â She could tell by looking at her mother that they were going to move. She didnât know how she felt about this, except she had plans for the yard. A yard like that needed a dog.
âI donât like big dogs,â said Carleton, six years old and small for his age. âI donât like this staircase. Itâs too big.â
âCarleton,â Henry said. âCome here. I need a hug.â
Carleton came down the stairs. He lay down on his stomach on the floor and rolled, noisily, floppily, slowly, over to where Henry stood with the real estate agent. He curled like a dead snake around Henryâs ankles. âI donât like those dogs outside,â he said.
âI know it looks like weâre out in the middle of nothing, but if you go down through the backyard, cut through that stand of trees, thereâs this little path. It takes you straight down to the train station. Ten-minute bike ride,â the agent said. Nobody ever remembered her name, which was why she had to wear too-tight skirts. She was, as it happened, writing a romance novel, and she spent a lot of time making up pseudonyms, just in case she ever finished it. Ophelia Pink. Matilde Hightower. LaLa Treeble. Or maybe sheâd write gothics. Ghost stories. But not about people like these. âAnother ten minutes on that path and youâre in town.â
âWhat dogs, Carleton?â Henry said.
âI think theyâre lions, Carleton,â said Catherine. âYou mean the stone ones beside the door? Just like the lions at the library. You love those lions, Carleton. Patience and Fortitude?â
âIâve always thought they were rabbits,â the real estate agent said. âYou know, because of the ears. They have big ears.â She flopped her hands and then tugged at her skirt, which would not stay down. âI think theyâre pretty valuable. The guy who built the house had a gallery in New York. He knew a lot of sculptors.â
Henry was struck by that. He didnât think he knew a single sculptor.
âI donât like the rabbits,â Carleton said. âI donât like the staircase. I donât like this room. Itâs too big. I donât like her.â
âCarleton,â Henry said. He smiled at the real estate agent.
âI donât like the house,â Carleton said, clinging to Henryâs ankles. âI donât like houses. I donât want to live in a house.â
âThen weâll build you a teepee out on the lawn,â Catherine said. She sat on the stairs beside Tilly, who shifted her weight, almost imperceptibly, towards Catherine. Catherine sat as still as possible. Tilly was in fourth grade and difficult in a way that girls werenât supposed to be. Mostly she refused to be cuddled or babied. But she sat there, leaning on Catherineâs arm, emanating saintly fragrances: peacefulness, placidness, goodness. I want this house, Catherine said, moving her lips like a silent movie heroine, to Henry, so that neither Carleton nor the agent, who had bent over to inspect a piece of dust on the floor, could see. âYou can live in your teepee, and weâll invite you to come over for lunch. You like lunch, donât you? Peanut butter sandwiches?â
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