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Margaret Atwood's Latest Novel Pieces Together A Compelling Collision Between Science And Mysticism.
By Alison Moore
Alias Grace, by Margaret Atwood (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday).
Hardcover $25.
IN 1970 MARGARET Atwood, known only in small, mostly Canadian
circles for her poetry, published a book entitled The Journals
of Susanna Moodie, a persona poem sequence written from the
point of view of a legendary 19th-century Canadian pioneer who
had encountered the notorious murderess Grace Marks on a visit
to a lunatic asylum.
Grace had been alternately institutionalized and imprisoned for
the brutal murders of her employer Thomas Kinnear and his lover/housekeeper
Nancy Montgomery, spared from the sentence of hanging her accomplice
James McDermott because of a shadow of doubt about whether she
was temptress or victim. Out of this rich documented history,
Atwood, 26 years after publishing the book of poems about Susanna
Moodie, returns to the character of Grace Marks in her 26th book.
Alias Grace is the retelling of the events that convicted
Grace, at age 16, for a crime about which she claims to have no
conscious memory.
Structured in alternating sections told from Grace Marks' point
of view as well as that of an omniscient narrator, this blend
of fact and fiction is pieced together like a quilt (a deliberate
metaphor established from the novel's divisions or chapters, each
named for a particular pattern of quilting). The events leading
up to the murders are revealed through narrative, letters, newspaper
accounts, excerpts from Susanna Moodie's journal, notes by doctors
and wardens and poems by Robert Browning, Emily Dickinson, and
Alfred Lord Tennyson.
Atwood maintains an ironic distance that manages simultaneously
to reveal the character of Grace in her own words and to paint
a broad picture of mid-19th century Canada as a nation experiencing
the passionate explosions of science colliding with spiritualism.
This is the age of scientific disciplines and unbridled mysticism--studies
of the brain and drawing room table-rapping seances, electromagnetic
therapies and mesmerism. This is a novel about gender and power
and the upheaval of superstition in the face of what may or may
not be provable theory.
Grace Marks provides the catalyst for the mysterious alchemy
of these forces and becomes the focus of a nation, embodying the
projections of the age-old paradox of woman as either Nurturer
or Sorcerer. Atwood provides no easy alliances; the deeper she
delves into Grace's story, the less the reader's convictions as
to innocence or guilt can be formed. She provides the perfect
agent for the provocation of Grace's story in the enthusiastic
but hopelessly naive young American doctor Simon Jordan, who takes
a clinical interest in her case, hoping to map the unconscious,
discover the roots of madness, and make his mark on the burgeoning
field of psychology.
The interviews start well enough--Grace, having spent nearly
two decades in one institution or another with no pardon in sight,
is more than agreeable to the daily visits. After all, she's bored
and is not immune to the stirrings such male attentions evoke.
She has an uncanny eye for detail, even if she does have amnesia.
But when Dr. Jordan's arsenal of root vegetables fails to provoke,
by association, memories of the cellar where Nancy Montgomery's
body was found, Grace is off and running, weaving a skein of stories,
and like any Scheherazade worth her salt, delays the ending. She
quickly learns which details excite him and does her best to provide
him with as much material as he can handle.
Dr. Jordan thinks privately, "What is perceived as being
known is only a small part of what may be stored in this dark
repository. Lost memories lie down there like sunken treasure,
to be retrieved piecemeal, if at all; and amnesia itself may be,
in effect, a sort of dreaming in reverse; a drowning of recollection,
a plunging under."
The problem is, Dr. Jordan, a mama's boy with rather thin boundaries,
is increasingly bewitched and bewildered, plunging into his own
conflicting fantasies of Grace as the personification of feminine
innocence or as calculating seductress.
The transference is complete when the dreams he wants Grace to
remember so that he can record and analyze them become dreams
from his own suggestible unconscious, and the sexual dominance
he fantasizes coming from Grace he finds himself literally enacting
upon the willing surrogate of his cunningly frail landlady. Grace
Marks, whether she is mere serving girl or clever manipulator,
sends everyone around her into a freefall into the unconscious.
Female madness is an old story that persists, in spite of efforts
to explain it, and prejudices abound today about the accuracy
of memory. False Memory Syndrome is heatedly debated in the courtroom.
The 19th-century outrage of Canadians about Grace Marks was no
less than the recent hysteria regarding the infamous Susan Smith,
who drowned her children in a car she deliberately rolled into
a lake. Women, it would seem, should be governed by some biological
instinct that prevents them from inflicting harm. But if they
do harm, well, how utterly, horrifyingly tantalizing, as Atwood
herself might intone, holding up the mirror of this novel to the
face of the age-old Madonna/whore.
As Grace Marks says privately to herself, "...Murderess
is a strong word to have attached to you. It has a smell to it,
that word--musky and oppressive, like dead flowers in a vase.
Sometimes at night I whisper it over to myself: Murderess, Murderess.
It rustles, like a taffeta skirt across the floor. Murderer is
merely brutal. It's like a hammer, or a lump of metal. I would
rather be a murderess than a murderer, if those are the only choices."
As I read this book, I couldn't help but picture Atwood as a
magician, mixing potions of emotional chemistry--wishful thinking,
outrage, lust, laudanum-laced delusions, grim determinations.
She is an astonishing stylist, her "temperature" range
cool, ironic, detached and very controlled.
Although I would admit this book is a fascinating read and found
myself consistently impressed with Atwood's precision, I wasn't
as emotionally invested in the characters as I wanted to be. The
book lags in the middle, the pacing slowed by an overly long delay
in getting to the murder scene. But ultimately, Atwood's strategies
pay off in bringing all the disparate pieces of the book to bear
upon a larger pattern. Choosing to fictionalize a true story gives
her a lot of liberties, and she takes every last one. The precedent,
as she states in the afterword, is that the written accounts are
so contradictory that few facts can be unequivocally known, and
she therefore felt free to invent.
But it is the particular beauty of invented truth that it can
become metaphor in the grand scheme of things. "What really
happened" is exchanged for the mystery of "what if,"
and in that exchange a third thing arises--the paradox of knowledge
that quantum physics has revealed in this century--the more that
becomes evident, the less is actually clear; in spite of what
can be mapped and known, there is untold wisdom in the random.
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