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Aaron Peck
Aaron Peck is the author of The Bewilderments of Bernard Willis and Letters to the Pacific.

Articles Available Online


The Abyss Echoes Back: Judith Schalansky’s ‘An Inventory of Losses’

Book Review

January 2021

Aaron Peck

Book Review

January 2021

Early in Judith Schalansky’s An Inventory of Losses, the narrator describes the way an ancient form of writing survived oblivion. The soft clay tablets...

Book Review

May 2018

Harry Mathews’s ‘The Solitary Twin’

Aaron Peck

Book Review

May 2018

Imagine a small fishing village on the edge of the world. Its inhabitants are progressive and content. The surroundings...

I’ve been looking for a way to describe the superabundance of sex in Garth Greenwell’s work, and I think it would be hard (impossible) to improve on what Elizabeth Hardwick once wrote about Philip Roth: ‘And sex, anywhere in every manner, a penitential workout on the page with no thought of backaches, chafings, or phallic fatigue Indeed the novels are prickled like a sea urchin with the spines and fuzz of many indecencies’   In Greenwell’s case, I would add: little fatigue of tongue, fingers or the blood throbbing always in our narrator’s groin and vast heart His mouths do not kiss or meet, but tend to greedily suck at each other, tasting themselves Windpipes are taut, anuses are silky, flesh is relentlessly sniffed, and pages are heavy with sweat    Cleanness is Greenwell’s second novel — or ‘lieder cycle’, as he’s called it — after What Belongs to You, his celebrated debut from 2016 The nameless narrator from the first book has returned: he is still in Sofia, Bulgaria, and remains a teacher at a prestigious American school, but he can no longer bear the rote work of teaching and his world has become much more sharply Manichean The bathrooms under the National Palace of Culture from the first book — where he goes to cruise and eventually meets the hustler Mitko, whom he adores and dotes on — appear in the second as an infernal temptation, drawing him back (‘Draw’ is a keyword in Greenwell’s universe; as in to be ‘drawn out of’,  ‘toward’ — the lure of something dark moving characters with a force that is not will or choice) But outside the subterranean bathrooms stand salvation and R: a Portuguese boyfriend who brings the promise, or taunting impossibility, of a health-giving wholesome love    The nine chapters in Cleanness never coalesce into a conventional plot Instead, each is a story sketched from a different coordinate inside a citywide memory theatre The narrator meets with students, attends a protest, loves and has sex, and periodically reminds you that this is what

Contributor

May 2017

Aaron Peck

Contributor

May 2017

Aaron Peck is the author of The Bewilderments of Bernard Willis and Letters to the Pacific.

Gloria

fiction

May 2017

Aaron Peck

fiction

May 2017

Bernard, whenever he thought of Geoffrey, would remember his gait on the afternoon of their first meeting. Geoffrey walked with the confidence of a...

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feature

Issue No. 10

Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism

David Harvey

feature

Issue No. 10

Prospects for a Happy but Contested Future: The Promise of Revolutionary Humanism   From time immemorial there have been...

fiction

April 2014

Chiral

Paul Currion

fiction

April 2014

I cough while the technician tinkers with the projector, although the two are not related, and I wonder why...

fiction

March 2014

The Nothing on Which the Fire Depends

Micheline Aharonian Marcom

fiction

March 2014

Friday 9 November 2009   The coffee is lukewarm, but she doesn’t mind to drink it this way. She...

 

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