The Commercial Appeal

With ‘Dead Girls,’ Alice Bolin navigates fantasy and reality

- Erica Ciccarone Chapter16.org

“Dead Girls,” the debut essay collection by Memphis nonfiction writer Alice Bolin, trains a feminist lens on a diverse array of cultural and artistic works.

From “Twin Peaks” to “Pretty Little Liars,” Phillip Marlowe to Stieg Larsson, Joan Didion to Britney Spears, Shirley Jackson to “The Big Lebowski,” Bolin grapples with an enduring question: what do we learn from pop culture about how to be women and, more complicate­dly, how to be men who respect women?

Bolin, whose work has appeared in Elle, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and Paris Review Daily, among other places, finds a jumping-off point in what she calls the Dead Girl Show, a cultural fixation on narratives about murdered women that plays across genres. “In the Dead Girl Show,” writes Bolin, “the girl body is both a wellspring of and a target for sexual wickedness.”

Dead Girls are wild and vulnerable. Their absence fills their hometowns with both despair and sexual energy. The sinister fact underlying these narratives is that Dead Girls don’t even play the leading role in their own deaths — they’re simply a narrative device that allows the men who would save them to be vulnerable.

The Dead Girl’s body, in other words, “is a neutral arena on which to work out male problems.”

Thus, the flip side of Twin Peaks’ dark, sexy Laura Palmer is not her boyfriend, Bobby Briggs, or even her secret boyfriend, James Hurley. It’s Special Agent Dale Cooper, the investigat­or who sacrifices his own soul in pursuit of her killer and then travels into another dimension to rescue her 25 years after her death.

The inverse of Laura’s darkness is Special Agent Dale Cooper’s innocence, and her body is the battlefiel­d on which he performs his own sorrowful war dance.

Notably, Bolin doesn’t deliver her missives in a way that’s shaming. In fact, where “Dead Girls” is most moving is when it describes the way Bolin and her loved ones navigate art and pop culture, even at their own expense.

Bolin and her best friend in college compulsive­ly watched the teen-werewolf movie Ginger Snap, the unhealthy codependen­cy of the protagonis­t sisters mirroring Bolin’s relationsh­ip with her friend.

Despite Bolin’s sharp criticisms of Stieg Larsson’s “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” books, she finds her father’s Alice Bolin will discuss “Dead Girls” at 7 p.m. Thursday at Novel in Memphis. love of the books, and even his “abiding love for any book, movie, or show with sexy parts,” problemati­c but charming.

She sees Larsson as exploiting the worst of the “Dead Girl” trope: “that women are problems to be solved, and the problem of absence, a disappeara­nce or a murder, is generally easier to deal with than the problem of a woman’s presence.”

“Dead Girls’ ” second subject is the city of Los Angeles. Believing Joan Didion’s seductive descriptio­n of the city, Bolin moved there after college. This part of her story feeds into another cultural preoccupat­ion: the American West as the great unknown, where people act unpredicta­bly, and lawlessnes­s is law.

The hard drinking, trigger-happy Western stereotype may be passé, but the region still captures the contempora­ry imaginatio­n as a place of rejuvenati­on, where one can start over and build a brand-new life.

But that city is hard on dreamers. The connection Bolin draws between L.A. and the Dead Girl Show isn’t clear until midway through the collection, but it’s worth the wait.

Our cultural obsession with the Dead Girl is based on an impulse to explain something that’s beyond understand­ing — that 73 percent of sexual assaults

By Alice Bolin. William Morrow. 276 pages, $15.99

are committed by someone the victim knows, and seven percent are committed by family members.

“For better or for worse,” Bolin writes, “narrative is a tool that the system uses to deliver justice,” and the cheapness of these narratives is akin to the glitzy promise of Hollywood.

Bolin’s writing is great fun, but you have to be willing to follow her down some sand dunes. What may initially come across as tangents weave together with her themes — eventually. A familiarit­y with the texts she analyzes isn’t necessary — she provides enough summary to contextual­ize her points — but an acquaintan­ce with Didion, Baldwin, Britney Spears and other characters from high and low culture will make for a more compelling read.

Bolin’s honesty is a chief reward of this book, as when she admits that teenage depression made her feel unique and brilliant, and when she admits that the Dead Girl syndrome is even more disempower­ing for women of color.

More than anything, “Dead Girls” is a book about fantasy and reality — and where we find ourselves when neither measures up.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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