Logo
OMSI
ISSUE #34.45 • BOOKS • REVIEW

Chuck Klosterman. Downtown Owl


Gonna die in this small town/ And that’s probably where they’ll bury me.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 0 comments
Recently in "Books"

November 19th, 2008
Is It Just Me Or Is Everything Shit? | Steve Lowe and Alan Mcarthur with Brendan Hay0 comments

November 12th, 2008
WEB Exclusive • Dangerous Women at In Other Words Saturday, Nov. 15. | Female stereotypes confirmed! Gypsy music to soundtrack.2 comments

October 15th, 2008
David Mura: Famous Suicides of the Japanese Empire | Love and loss in Chicago—and ancient Japan.0 comments

October 8th, 2008
Sarah Vowell. The Wordy Shipmates. | Of buckles and corn and hacked-off body parts.0 comments

September 24th, 2008
McCain’s Promise. David Foster Wallace | Saying farewell to ideals.1 comment

September 24th, 2008
Stephen Baker. The Numerati | Smile, you’re on PC.0 comments

September 17th, 2008
Paul Auster. Man in the Dark | Paul Auster builds an elaborate fantasy to reflect on real-life loss.0 comments

September 3rd, 2008
Nena Baker. The Body Toxic | A thin new book builds a thin, old case against the chemical industry.2 comments

August 20th, 2008
You Don’t Know Me1 comment

August 13th, 2008
Pharmakon1 comment


BY AARON MESH | 503-243-2122

[September 17th, 2008] “You know, people always say that nothing changes in a small town, but—whenever they say that—they usually mean that nothing changes figuratively,” a high-school principal in Owl, N.D., explains to his new history teacher at the outset of Chuck Klosterman’s debut novel Downtown Owl. “The truth is that nothing changes literally. It’s always the same people, doing the same things.”

This musing, the first of many in Downtown Owl, is an equally precise analysis of rock critic Klosterman’s infuriating and bewitching foray into fiction. The standard complaint about Klosterman as a pop-culture essayist is that he is a literary slacker, stubbornly quotidian: He can write about the familiar with fresh insight, but he refuses to write about anything other than the familiar. Downtown Owl takes Klosterman into his most well-worn territory of all—the Great Plains hamlets where he grew up listening to ZZ Top—but what the book reveals is that the writer’s deepest flaws are in the style of his individual sentences, which he is all but incapable of varying. Downtown Owl follows the mental life of three citizens in 1983: Julia Rabia, the new teacher who becomes the belle of the local bar; Mitch Hrlicka, an Owl High backup quarterback; and Horace Jones, a 73-year-old retired farmer. The episodic chapters alternate between their points of view, but the voice is permanently Klosterman’s: a mock-formal, digressive mode somewhere between David Foster Wallace and Dave Barry. A barfly prefaces a conversational point with “that wasn’t the crux of the issue;” when Julia is bored, her “words and sentences sounded like side three of Metal Music Machine, an album she had never heard of.” When in doubt, a novelist should trust his characters; Klosterman turns to Lou Reed.













icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

But Klosterman has one saving grace: He’s curious. He wants to know what’s going on inside his characters’ heads and, possessing no gift for the art, he works at it. (He even lists the internal monologues of all 22 students in Mitch’s English class.) The obvious effort allows Downtown Owl to expressly address the two questions all novels implicitly broach: Why do other people make the choices they do, and do those choices ultimately matter? These questions—which make life seem as improvised and accidental as a football Hail Mary—become urgent in the face of imminent death, which Klosterman provides in the form of a freak blizzard. When Julia, Mitch and Horace are faced with their final decisions, the observations of Downtown Owl take on a mature poignancy. “We are remembered for the totality of our accomplishments,” Klosterman writes, “but we are defined by the singularity of our greatest failure….We are what we cannot do.” What Klosterman can do is consider these mistakes with uncommon clarity. The book is a paradox that would likely please its author: It would be better if it had been written by someone other than Chuck Klosterman, yet only Chuck Klosterman could have written it.

ATTEND: Chuck Klosterman reads on Sunday, Sept. 21, at Powell’s City of Books, 1005 W Burnside St., 228-4651. 7:30 pm. Free.

 

Rate This Story
4.5 average/2 votes

 
read all 0 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Chuck Klosterman. Downtown Owl”

 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
November 20th 2008House Of Gain | Aleksey Kalenichenko’s real-estate schemes cost banks hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s still a mystery how he pulled it off.
November 20th 2008Just Add Milk | Director Gus Van Sant delivers the story of the gay-rights movement’s patron saint in his most political film to date.
November 20th 2008Core Issue | Barack Obama says the way we pay teachers is rotten. Does Bill Sizemore (Bill Sizemore?!) have the answer?
November 20th 2008Ad Nauseam | Do TV ads about hot dogs, golf clubs and rape work? We bring in the experts.
November 20th 2008WW Voters’ Guide, November 2008 | Tough choices, no brainers: Our endorsements for the general election.
November 20th 2008Unlucky Strike | The Oregon lottery is going into detox—and our state budget is along for the smoke-free ride.
November 20th 2008Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?
November 20th 2008Shipracked | Judy Shiprack wants to be your next county commissioner. Here’s what she doesn’t want you to know about a real-estate deal gone bad.
November 20th 2008Señor Smith | Low-wage Latino workers keep Sen. Gordon Smith’s family business humming. Not all of them are legal.