
Steven Hall
The Raw Shark Texts [Cannongate U.S.]
(page 2) Writer: Veronique de TurenneBookends, Issue 33, Published online on 27 Jun 2007 Page 2 of 2 < Previous
Hall is clearly having the time of his life with this book. He’s jazzed about the concepts of memory and death and self that he’s exploring, and he carries us in a headlong rush to test the very edge of what a novel actually is.
There are familiar touchstones—a beautiful techno-geek named Scout for a love story, a mad scientist to invent stuff and explain it and a crabby cat named Ian as comic relief. There’s myth and movie, classic novels, philosophy and psychology, all served up with a hefty dose of past and present pop culture. You’ll find DNA from Moby Dick and Philip K. Dick, Being John Malkovich, Ursula K. Le Guin, Vanilla Sky, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and, in the exuberant climax, of course, Jaws. It’s a frightening, funny and daring mess, sometimes earnest, occasionally pompous and always wildly original.
Here’s Hall, giving us the creeps with a slithery, snake-like parasite of the mind:
It was small, maybe nine inches, maybe the length of a worry that doesn’t quite wake you in your sleep—a primitive conceptual fish. I backed away slowly. The creature had a round, sucker-like mouth lined with dozens of sharp little doubts and inadequacies. I could feel it just downstream from me, holding itself in place with muscled steady swimming against the movement of time.
The writing is sharp, a relief when so much experimentation is going on. But there’s also a charming romanticism, an honest-to-goodness love story. That it plays out so sweetly—sincere but not sentimental—against the backdrop of conceptual sharks and mental annihilation is a credit to Hall’s many remarkable gifts. Here’s Eric, mourning the way time decays memory:
I’m always remembering details. Just a second ago it was how we finally managed to cook ourselves a full English on our little camp stove the night before we packed up the site on Naxos and headed for the boat. All these memories, they all hurt so much and each in a different way so I don’t think I’ll be able to stand it without tearing open and spilling the aches out all over the floor. What’s even worse, what drives me sick is this: none of the things I think I remember about her are all-the-way true or complete.
The text itself tells the story. But there are also drawings, ink blots and pictures made from vowels and consonants strewn about—a mosquito caught in amber, a fossil fish. The series of riddles and puzzles Eric tries to solve are certain to keep busy, for months to come, the cult that’s likely to spring up around the book. And if that’s not enough originality, the climax comes to life in an unnerving 50-page flip book of a shark racing right at you. This kind of typography proved so complex that the book’s print run had to be sent to a company in Italy, the only place with a press nimble enough to do the job.
The Raw Shark Texts is indeed a kind of Rorschach test—the book you see depends on where you’re looking. Is it a thriller? A love story? A philosophical quest? Yes, yes and yes. Plus, it’s a big-fish story. Thanks to Hall’s skill and daring, this is one that didn’t get away.
