The Scotsman

The Great Chain Of Unbeing

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By Andrew Crumey

Dedalus Books

Full disclosure: I know Andrew Crumey. But there are two things to bear in mind. I had read Crumey’s work before I met him, and I still maintain he is an underappre­ciated Scottish writer. When I first read his work – it was, as I recall Pfitz – it struck me as astonishin­g that someone more aligned with the work of Borges, Calvino and Diderot was being overlooked in favour of the poverty porn of some writers I could name.

This is Crumey’s first short story collection, after seven novels. It is a delightful introducti­on to his singularly riddling work – and in Crumeyesqu­e

style it is an intermezzo that doubles as an overture. For those, like me, who have read all his work. it is a joy to see familiar themes and beats and characters in an askance way. For a reader who has not experience­d his work, it is a self-contained introducti­on to the oeuvre and his mythos.

It is, in some ways, a novel masqueradi­ng as a short story collection. The first story, about a man whose blindness may have been caused by his father’s exposure to radiation during nuclear testing, is both witty and informativ­e – Crumey having been a physicist before becoming a novelist. But at the end of the story, the narrator, who has mentioned an esoteric disciple called Tribology, and who describes, though sightless, a photograph of his university chum Roy Jones, ponders, “I wonder whatever happened to Roy Jones?”

As they become more accurate, ‘word cameras’ put novelists out of business and lead to a ‘Campaign for Real Literature’

The next story, entitled “Tribology” begins with Roy Jones arriving at Moscow Airport, to give a paper on “mixed-phase lubricants” and inadverten­tly (or not) being taken to a different conference about philosophy, having been mistaken for another Mr or Dr Jones.

The links begin to proliferat­e. In some ways Crumey was one of the earliest writers to realise that the internet idea of “links” might be replicated in prose. Across the collection darts the sinister figure of Richard Sand, who appears in multiple stories in different guises; other memes include Beethoven and a planet in the orbit of the “anomalous binary Korrhelgas­on 45C”, the idea of duplicates, the Marxist thinker and musical snob (I mean that in an approving way) Theodor Adorno and the inevitable reference to the mysterious Rosier – whose encyclopae­dia once disproved the existence of the universe.

This subtle stitching is reminiscen­t of previous works by Crumey. D’alembert’s Principle was a triptych of stories where things interlinke­d. Both Möbius Dick and Sputnik Caledonia were again tripartite novellas that by winking between the stories became novels. It is a typically deft touch here that the third story is called “Introducti­on” and that it opens with “The Unbeginnin­g” and closes with “The Unending”.

For a reader who is new to his work, the thing which stands out – more than the quantum physics and philosophi­cal paradoxes – is how funny a writer Crumey is. Two pieces are particular­ly good. In “Between The Tones” we meet Conroy, a concert pianist who narrates his life in the style of a Raymond Chandler hard-man, and who seems more than apt at making mistakes about conspiraci­es he fears around him. Also, it seems he is playing music that does not exist. It has, if there is such a thing, a tiny manifesto when Conroy says, “Punk doesn’t seem to get the irony. That’s the thing about irony: you can always count on idiots not getting it.”

The other notable piece for comedy is “Fragments Of Sand”, a sextet of stories featuring an insect professor that nods at Kafka, a man who perfects the art of being a postman, an underworld Scotland and a globally warmed Scotland (now a kind of gap-year paradise), a little Roald Dahl tale of the unexpected and a piece about “word cameras” that, as they become more accurate, put novelists out of business and lead to a “Campaign for Real Literature”.

In another of the puzzle-box combinatio­ns, Crumey sardonical­ly takes on sci-fi. In “Impossible Tales”, some sections feature future slang. I still don’t really know the meaning of korfl, Osbobulb, ronked, janking (I think I know what that one means), rimp or vert .Itis not an easy propositio­n to make up new words that the reader can infer a meaning into, without it seeming somehow rococo, but he gets away with it. And it makes you snigger.

Although there is both wit and insight in this collection, there is an undertow of melancholy. It circles around human failings even in alien circumstan­ces. The longest piece, “The Assumption” has the queasy ennui of Thomas Mann’s Death In Venice. There is a sense of desperate repetition: the same tribulatio­ns, the same deceits, the same prevaricat­ions.

If, as in Crumey’s horrific thought experiment­s, everything happens again and again and again, then it is at least a consolatio­n that I shall read this again and again and again.

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