A novel by Stephen Beachy
Harrington Park Press, 2000 Originally published in San Francisco Bay Guardian, 29 November 2000
Choose one of the following books to take to that proverbial desert island:
A. Naked Lunch
B. Anna Karenina
C. The Stand
D. The Bridges of Madison County
If you answered D, I’m truly sorry. But if A was your first or second choice, then chances are you’ll appreciate and enjoy Stephen Beachy’s latest novel, Distortion. It’s definitely not for everyone. In fact, I imagine casual readers posting rants on Amazon.com to warn others that this disturbing, densely poetic, and apocalyptic novel is a waste of their time.
Distortion is an ambitious and complex work that, at it’s simplest level, tells the tale of a young racially mixed hustler named Reggie, who crisscrosses America by Greyhound bus, becomes an MTV rap star, then returns to the streets. Around Reggie is a huge, tangled web of interrelated characters, all carefully and affectionately drawn. There’s Geena, the punk rock go-go girl baby dyke; Marvin Mason, Reggie’s fabulously wealthy, yet sinister Svengali; Roz/Rolanda, down and out actress/model and fellow bus passenger; Ruth, Reggies’s almost catatonic sister; Am, Ruth’s Laotian neighbor who proposes marriage to her; David, the HIV-positive avant-garde filmmaker with a fetish for black men; Lucas, the angelic, corruptible Guatemalan boy; and Aaron, a strange disembodied character who is presumed dead in a plane crash. As an added service to his readers, Beachy provides a prose snapshot of each character on the book’s Web site (www.Distortionthebook.com).
Reggie is also addicted to speed, so his travels and escapades are accompanied by paranoia and wild scenes of depravity (real and imagined), all rendered in some of the most volcanic and gorgeous stream of consciousness writing to grace the printed page in many years. Beachy is obviously in love with words and he goes for broke with long, elaborate passages tied to the narrative and characters by threads of shared imagery.
Yet dismissing these word poems as filler is shortsighted. Distortion works on a different wavelength from most fiction being published today. It gets you initially at an unconscious level, infiltrating your thoughts and presenting a world where the constant drone of TV news and MTV mixes with the hopes and demons of the disenfranchised. Like most of the characters in this novel, the reader has a hard time distinguishing reality from fantasy. Don’t fight it. Go along for the ride and sort it all out when it’s over.
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