10/13/14

Jason Hrivnak -After the suicide of his closest childhood friend, a man attempts to compose a document capable of driving from its reader all trace of the self-destructive impulse. Part love letter, part crucible, The Plight House is a literary fever-dream




Jason Hrivnak, The Plight House, Pedlar Press, 2009.


Excerpt

plighthouse.ca/


The unnamed narrator of The Plight House receives a letter: his childhood friend Fiona has committed suicide at the age of thirty-three. As children, he and Fiona had constructed a dark and violent fantasy world, an imaginary network of laboratories where they performed experiments upon their neighbours, families and friends. Now, aware that Fiona had used a document from their shared world as her suicide note, the narrator becomes obsessed with the possibility that he unknowingly held the key to preventing her death.
Invoking the half-forgotten methods of his childhood, he begins to compose a test. Intimate and unrestrained, the test is designed to drive from Fiona all trace of the self-destructive impulse. But by devoting himself to a project that can never bring about its desired effect, the narrator has opened the door to a new frontier of grief. And as he pushes the test yet further into realms of decadence and fever, he precipitates a crisis in his own deeply troubled life.
Part love letter, part elegy, The Plight House chronicles one man's obsessive attempt to resurrect the image of a lost friend.

"Heartbreak, horror, and impossibly brutal choices may all be yours in The Plight House. This first novel by Jason Hrivnak is like nothing I’ve ever read, and still troubles me." --  Creffield, Dead Clothes Sing

"First Rule of The Plight House: everyone talk about The Plight House. Hrivnak writes like a crazy angel in this addictive, astonishing debut." -- Lynn Crosbie
"Hrivnak succinctly posits a triple-barrelled theme: grief bound tightly with innocence and guilt ... [He] is an elegant and often incisive prose stylist, skilled at image-making and intent on exploring difficult questions of personal and societal responsibility." -- The Globe and Mail

After the suicide of his closest childhood friend, a man attempts to compose a document capable of driving from its reader all trace of the self-destructive impulse. Part love letter, part crucible, The Plight House is a literary fever-dream in the tradition of J.G. Ballard’s The Atrocity Exhibition and Mark Z. Danielewski’s House of Leaves.

Type of Book: Fiction, experimental, borderline ergodic
Why Do I Consider This Odd: This book is a test to see what you know about the depths of human despair and it’s also a distraction you can use, reading it to the despairing one until he puts down the gun or she hands you the bottle of pills.
Availability: Published by Pedlar Press in 2009, you can get a copy here:
Comments: I have a strong feeling that this may be a book that requires a certain level of experience to understand. Of course, feelings of misplaced responsibility and grief are common enough, so I don’t want to discourage anyone from reading The Plight House. But I do think that unless you have tried to end your life or tried to prevent someone from ending his or her life, this may not have a certain resonance. I say all of this because, as I indicate above, this book is borderline ergodic. The way Hrivnak constructed his book forces you to interact with the text in a manner that forbids passivity and can defy understanding unless you are willing to work hard. The content is also so very specific and tied to an extremity of experience that could, for some readers, be alienating.
That having been said, I think you should read this book. This isn’t House of Leaves level ergodic. This is a book that can be completed in one sitting, if you don’t mind the feeling of being flayed now and then. But fair warning: this is definitely not a book for those who prefer linear narratives.
Brief synopsis: The protagonist met his friend Fiona when they were nine and they became inseparable. They created a strange otherworld they called the “Testing Range” wherein they created trials for the people they knew, trials that verged on torture but had a specific end and meaning. An untalented violinist who loves her music but is afraid of rats would be put in a cage full of rats for a night. If she survived, she would have the talent of a virtuoso for a year. At the end she would have to make the choice to expose herself to rats for even longer in exchange for another year of talent or she would lose her talent forever. The protagonist and Fiona create these trials for everyone around them. Fiona has a neurological condition but as she gets older she also seems like she has some sort of personality disorder. When Fiona’s family moves, the protagonist tries to keep in touch with her but eventually he can’t find much to say to her anymore.  They’ve become too different.
He attends college and gets a job but his friendship with Fiona has left him avoidant and near schizoid, craving solitude to the point that he lives his life in a darkened room, sleeping only to dream and waking only to record his dreams. He manages to hold a job but one day receives a letter from Fiona’s father. Fiona has broken into the grade school she had attended with the protagonist. She slashed her wrists and died. In her belongings, her father had found a page from the “Testing Range” notebook that she carried with her and he contacted the protagonist and asked him if he could explain what was written on the page. The protagonist, racked and wrecked with grief, decides to write The Plight House, a test for Fiona and a chance for him to achieve a sort of redemption in the face of crushing sorrow.
Using the magical thinking that we all engage in, the super-powerful what-if we practice when the unthinkable happens, the protagonist imagines what would have happened if only the Plight House had existed before Fiona made the decision to kill herself.
The Plight House is the missing element from the night Fiona broke into the school, its failure to appear there no different from the absence of a stolen property or a garment devoured by moths. I picture the manuscript sitting ready on a clean, well-lit desk, a batch of sharpened pencils at the side. I picture Fiona noticing it in the course of her wanderings and stepping cautiously into the light, aware of a twist in the game.
She would have understood within the first few pages that the test was not written by a doctor or a parent or, even, fundamentally, by a friend. And its coldness would have come as a great relief to her. I knew from the outset that the test’s chance of success would inhere in its refusal, first, to sing her back toward a world that she despised, and, second, to use guilt as a straitjacket. My only hope was to create a resonance , duplicating both in myself and in the text the particular frequency of despair that was driving her toward suicide. I’m not sure what, if anything, it would have meant to her to experience that resonance. But so long as she understood that she had been seen, and therefore accompanied, in that worst of all possible moments, I could have lived with her decision.
Of course, that’s not true. One does not write a book like the tests in The Plight House, an exercise to prevent the worst, if one is going to be sanguine if the worst actually does happen.
In fact, the final words of the last paragraph make it clear that the narrator means very much for this book to be used as a means to prevent the worst, with no eye to any other alternative but salvation and preservation.
If it becomes necessary to administer The Plight House, do so without apology and without expectation of thanks. Her tears of protest may rend your heart, but remember the alternative. She stands to lose everything, and so, therein, do you.
The synopsis and quotes I produce above are contained in the first 29 pages. That’s the only linear part of this book. Then the Plight House begins.
The Plight House reproduces the cage of rats for Fiona, a series of tests for her tounderstand herself and for the narrator to understand her, but at times I read this as a distraction, a distraction that is ultimately deep but a distraction nonetheless. Section I is multiple choice, section II is full of essay questions and section III is a series of interconnected essay questions. Well, the questions are essays. One can answer them however one sees fit.
I almost think it is folly to try to reproduce any of the Plight House sections because I don’t think small samples can give anyone any idea of the power of these tests. But being who I am, I will try anyway. I’ll just pull a few of the sections that meant the most to me.
Here’s a question from Section I.
13. You have a migraine, the aura cuts glasslike into your field of vision and the pain, once entrenched, lasts for more than a week. Upon recovery, you find your bedroom filled with strange pilgrims. Your caregivers explain that these pilgrims have come to your bedside from distant lands after hearing word of your special powers. What wonders have you allegedly performed whilst incapacitated?
A. You have spoken in tongues.
B. You have levitated.
C. You have belched forth a rare and poisonous snake.
D. You have built a cathedral.
Here’s another question.
8. As you enter your teenage years, your imaginary friend with the amethyst eyes remains your only worldly companion. Concerned by your lack of interest in kinship of the flesh-and-blood variety, your parents take you on a trip to the lake. A small sailboat sits tied to the dock. Your parents raise the sail and set the empty boat adrift on the waters. They tell you that your imaginary friend is in the boat and that he is going away forever. They tell you to wave goodbye. What action do you take?
A. Jump into the water and swim after your friend, with the aim of bringing him back.
B. Jump into the water and swim after your friend, with the aim of joining him in exile.
C. Hide your face in your hands and weep.
D. Wave goodbye, as instructed.
I sense my answers would be D and B. But they may also be D and C. Sometimes it’s hard to know but trying to find the answers forced me to wonder how much defiance, talent and willingness to engage in a life of the mind despite the influence of others I actually possess. And that is the point of the Plight House. Forcing one out of current thoughts, even if the new thoughts are difficult to process.
It was Section II when I began to feel uncomfortable.
1. You are standing in line outside a healer’s tent. It is winter. There are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people in line and they keep unwaveringly to their places despite the bitter cold. As the line inches toward the tent, you notice that each healed person bears a freshly-drawn tattoo: an old man who had entered the tent confined to a wheelchair emerges some five minutes later walking fully upright, his neck tattooed with a black spider; a blind girl emerges with 20/20 vision and, upon her belly, a tattoo of a burning boat. What is your ailment? With what figure will the healer mark your body and why?
My ailment is a lifelong inability to sleep. I would have a tightly-coiled spring tattooed on my left leg because my early nightmares, as a very little girl, featured a coiled spring. The spring is linked in my mind with my REM disorder because of those early nightmares. My left leg is often the part of my body that aches the most and takes the brunt when lack of sleep manifests itself physically.
Another.
22. I find work in a slaughterhouse. I perfect the techniques of killing with blade and bolt gun alike and soon I can dress a fresh carcass faster than any of my peers. In a bid to outmanoeuvre the slaughterhouse’s competition, management begins to purchase a new kind of livestock. The animals in question are small, doglike creatures with tawny hair and wide, nocturnal eyes. Management warns us to wear earplugs whilst slaughtering them, as their song has been known to unhinge the human mind. From the moment that I start practicing my trade upon these creatures, I begin to suffer from terrible nightmares. My nights become a hell of strange and vivid horrors and within three weeks time I am legless with fatigue. One day, acting on a sudden and uncharacteristic impulse, I rescue one of the creatures from the killing-room floor and hide it in my coveralls. I bring it home. Sitting on my kitchen table, scanning the room with its dark eyes, the creature looks innocuous and unafraid. I remove my earplugs. What does the creature say to me?
It says, “Fuck your sentimentality. You save me and think it means a goddamned thing as you kill others like me? I saw you kill my mother. She begged you to stop and you didn’t. I hope you die and that my voice is the last noise you hear when your soul leaves your body.” That’s what the creature says to me.
Section III is multi-part essay questions and there is no real way for me to produce one of the entire questions unless I reproduce a section that may be longer than this entire discussion. The first paragraph of the questions sets up a scenario and the following paragraphs expand the scenario and ask questions. But one of the first paragraphs stayed with me and is worth discussing. I’ll reproduce it and the first question in the series.
10. You are ninety-four years old. You have been hospitalized. Like a sere and broken bird, you lie alone in a dark corner of the palliative ward, your organs tottering on the verge of failure. Your mind has slipped into perpetual twilight, a frightened incomprehension like that of a caged or injured beast. Daytime is a gauntlet of rough hygiene and pain, the petty humiliation of caregivers who speak of you as if you were already dead. But the nights are far worse. As daylight fades, the stains of old effluvia bloom darkly on the crumbling walls and floor. Cribdeath and gangrene stride wraithlike through the wards. The darkness is a tactile thing. It weighs upon you like water pressure, it pools in your lungs like fumes from a distant star.
10a. In these last nights before your death, you become a sleepwalker. Like a common insomniac, you steal from your bed in the lifeless hours of early morning and go wandering through the halls. Your carriage is erect and your stride is true, your body completely and utterly beguiled by its dream of wellness. And you are lucid throughout. Is this your first experience with somnambulism? Have you in the course of your life been prone to seizures of any stripe? What is it like to relinquish authorship of your steps and do you long all the while for the safety of your bed?
I used to sleepwalk all the time when I was a girl and adolescent. My mother once caught me in the middle of making a sandwich out of cigarette butts. I was in late high school or early college. It ended but came back when I took a specific drug for insomnia. I was never lucid as I roamed in my sleep. I don’t think anyone is lucid when they sleepwalk or it would just be called walking. You don’t know what it is like to surrender control because you don’t surrender it – you are simply overtaken by movement when you are asleep. Overtaken and asleep do not lend themselves well to lucidity or will, but perhaps it could happen.
The first paragraph of question 10 is, minus the effluvia and sense of others speaking to me as if I am dead, a near-perfect representation of what life is like when I am in the middle of a sleepless fog. I think that is why it spoke to me so clearly.
It goes on for several pages until we reach the end of question 10F, and the book concludes:
Why do we devote more passion to the loves that destroy us than we do to the loves that heal us and make us complete? Is it inevitable that we should conduct ourselves thus? Imagine that your death brings no respite from desire, that it pitches you into wilder, more potent states of longing. Though they bury you alone beneath the cold and final earth, you shall burn for the touch of your every unsung love. Discuss.
I wonder if Hrivnak knew about my suicide attempt before he sent me this book because I am not shy about sharing my own experiences in this realm. I have cyclical depression but the older I get the less debilitating it is because I have had decades to understand how to know when it is coming and what I can do when it arrives. But in 2008 this depression merged with a terrible situational anxiety. I was misdiagnosed with a condition I do not have and was given medications that made me psychotic. I tried to kill myself. I spent some time in a locked down mental facility and I seldom discuss what happened afterward, but people who read my journal at the time know. I continued to suffer and the suicidal ideation continued until I detoxed from all the meds I had been prescribed. It was a terrible time but I am very lucky that my depression and anxiety do not organically manifest in suicidal thoughts or feelings that death would be better than continuing onward with my life.
But even though what happened to me in 2008-2009 was situational and I don’t see it ever happening again, once you’ve been there, you’re sort of marked. It doesn’t bother me much anymore. It doesn’t plague me. But I am a person who tried to take my own life and once you cross over that line, you are changed. For me the change is that I am acutely aware of what it means to be a burden, because no matter how much you love someone, being forced to stand witness to such horror kills a part of your soul. My dear husband was the one who watched as I came up for air again and again. He was the architect of my own Plight House. He would swim into frightening waters to drag me to shore, only to stand stunned as I flung blows and threw punches to get away and dive right back into what was drowning me.
I asked him once how it was he managed to live through it all and he said he could still see glimpses of me under all the medications and all the rage the medications caused. I was trapped in there and was fighting to get out. He said that as long as I was fighting, even if the person I was fighting was him, at least I had not laid down and given in.  Hrivnak’s Plight House is what my husband did, day after day, until I emerged as myself again.  It took me months to get off those drugs. It felt like years but it was only months and I mercifully only remember bits and pieces. But he remembers it all and that is far, far worse because he loves me and was forced over and over again into a state of powerlessness as he did everything he could to keep me from death. I suspect that those who succeed during their first attempt at suicide are spared the horrible reminder that they drove a dagger into someone else’s heart, but that’s also not for me, a person who survived and is no longer suicidal, to say.
This was a hard discussion to write. I don’t know if I should discuss such personal things about myself in a book review. I keep backing up and deleting because I don’t know if this is an appropriate way to discuss a book, yet I can’t think of another way to write it other than to react this way. Discussing this book is like I am filling in the blanks during all those times the drugs blunted my memory of what I was doing (toxic psychosis, it is called). I also think I felt strongly what my husband felt each time he kept me from the worst. But even as hard as it is to discuss this book, I am glad I read it. The past is the past but understanding things, even when they hurt, is why I read.
This book could make you very sad. It could open all kinds of wounds you thought had healed. For me, it opened wounds but the psychic blood I lost was rendered negligible as I looked upon the many fortunes I have in my life. As I read it, I remembered all of the ways my husband constructed Plight Houses for me when I was so low and it made me remember that in so many ways he is a much better writer than I am. He is succinct. He can cut to the heart of the matter without all the dithering I am prone to. In the middle of my time in hell, I woke one day to find this on my bathroom mirror. - http://ireadoddbooks.com/the-plight-house-by-jason-hrivnak/

This book changed me.
What’s so great about it? Well, it left me in tears, and kept me entranced for several hours while I greedily plowed through it. It’s the most unique thing I’ve ever read, and calling it a novel somehow seems wrong. It’s not structured like a novel, it doesn’t start or end like a novel. It starts rather slowly, actually, and when I went to pass on my tattered and tearstained copy to my partner, I almost wanted to tell him not to read the Prologue. Not because it’s poorly writing or anything like that, but because it’s ‘normal’, and unlike the rest of the book. It’s written with a voice that’s simple and gentle, just a man talking about a girl he used to know.
Once you’re through the Prologue and start your journey through The Plight House, there’s no turning back. Don’t read this if you have to be somewhere, if you don’t have time to just give it the undivided attention it deserves. It’s like a guided meditation, it’s like a lucid dream primer, and it’s like a nightmare.
And it’s wonderful. Hrivnak has such a beautiful command of the language, and is undeterred in his creation of The Plight House. Some passages cause you to sink, like entering the ocean with your clothes on. Others are hopeful and uplifting, carrying the reader to heights of imagination and love. This book requires your cerebral and spiritual participation. Once you’ve read it, you will want to give it to anyone you love. Simply flawless. - theonelinereviews.wordpress.com/expanded-reviews/


“This week’s inspiration is grief and strange beauty: Jason Hrivnak’s The Plight House, a stunning, deadly book. It’s just so sad and odd and gorgeous.
It is even pleasing as a physical object, all by itself. Published by Pedlar Press out of Toronto and with cover art by Tom Poirier — the book’s official website banner shows it off — it has high-quality, laid paper (with visible chain lines), and the layout of the book leaves plenty of negative space: a book design success.
The content itself is divine.” - Carrie Carm

“With this novel, Jason Hrivnak will reach inside you and pull your heart out. The unnamed narrator takes us on a deeply personal journey after learning of the suicide of his childhood best friend. This doesn’t read like a typical novel and therein lies its strength — Hrivnak doesn’t follow conventions of style or narrative and this allows him to reach new depths and heights of despair, hope, passion and pain.” — Mary-Ann

“Hrivnak succinctly posits a triple-barrelled theme: grief bound tightly with innocence and guilt … [He] is an elegant and often incisive prose stylist, skilled at image-making and intent on exploring difficult questions of personal and societal responsibility.”— Jim Bartley

Jason Hrivnak talks to Pedlar Press publisher Beth Follett about his debut novel, The Plight House. The launch for The Plight House is on Tuesday, October 6 at The Gladstone Hotel (event details can be found here).
The writing, the language, of your novel The Plight House is so polished, so keenly considered, it reads like the work of a more seasoned writer. I knew you before I knew your writing, knew you and had no idea that you wrote fiction. This hidden aspect — dedicated writer of sublime intelligence — do you keep your writerly self hidden for a reason having to do with the literary pursuit? Or are you one of those shy guys?
- I suppose you’re right: my writing life is indeed hidden. I don’t usually think of it that way — I’d probably say it’s “compartmentalized” or that I just try to keep it out of spheres where it doesn’t belong — but it amounts to the same thing: I spend a great deal of time working at something that I almost never talk about.
Much of that umbrella of privacy is instinctive, as I simply don’t have much desire to introduce the subject of writing into casual conversation. There’s also, however, a very functional side to it. I really do feel that something vital is lost when you start talking about a project that’s not yet ready to be out there in the open.
I’m very happy with my decision to maintain that silence even while working in the publishing industry. I know a lot of people say that networking is as important for writers as it is for anyone else, but I think that’s crap. Writing should stand on its own. Period. I’d hate for friendship to muddy the waters of a publisher’s decision to take on my work, even if — especially if — that muddying effect were to work in my favour.
Tell me about the writing of The Plight House, from inspiration to final manuscript.
- The manuscript came out in a white heat during the summer of 2006. I wrote early in the morning, logging perhaps an hour or two each day before work, and managed to complete the first draft in about three months.
I’d been sitting on the idea for about a year before I wrote it, so it had plenty of time to fester and make me uncomfortable. I find discomfort to be a great motivator. Fittingly, then, the months during which I did the actual writing were a terrible time for me on just about every front. That’s something about which I wonder a great deal when looking back on The Plight House: where oh where did I find the time and energy? In the end, the fact that I had neither was almost certainly vital to things having turned out so well. I’ve often, in the past, gotten caught up in preliminaries, wasting too much effort in trying to carve myself a quiet time and place. It was a real breakthrough for me to discover that, at least in this one instance, I could accomplish the task I’d assigned myself despite the presence of some very serious distractions.
Your earlier title — Evrsat — I fell in love with and urged you to keep. You said, however, that people in your personal life didn't know how to pronounce Evrsat, which was one of your most pressing considerations behind the eventual title change. Will you talk a little bit about how you wish to be perceived by your imagined audience of this book?
- It’s true, I was worried that we’d annoy readers with the unusual spelling. (On that front, I think “Hrivnak” is cruelty enough.) Evrsat was meant to refer to standardized tests like the LSAT and the MCAT, but that wee bit of cleverness wasn’t enough to bind me to the title, especially once I realized that it sounded like a coinage for having been placed forever in a sitting position.
Ideally, I’d like to be invisible to my imagined audience. Yes, we live in a world where it’s important for the writer to take part in the publicity effort, but I think that The Plight House (and other books like it) work best when the author remains somewhat faceless. In terms of the work itself, I’m reasonably satisfied by the extent to which my desire to disappear has soaked down into the deepest levels of the book. Yes, much of the story is very personal, but that material is so intermixed with pure invention that even readers who know me well won’t be able to “find” me there. I’m not invisible, but I’m next-best-thing-to-invisible.
The Plight House is a test, and you, according to Lynn Crosbie, are the crazy angel who penned it. If you were to teach The Plight House in a university English course, what would you most want to say about it to your students?
- Rather than talk about my own ideas regarding the book, I’d have the students undertake a similar exercise. I’d ask them to try writing an “inverted” love letter: “Attempt to woo the object of your affections using only images of bitterness and solitude, horror and disgust, any part of the emotional spectrum that we conventionally associate love’s ending or absence but not with love itself.”
And I’d make sure to assign the students some readings from Baudelaire. (He’s long been one of my favourite writers, and I’ve certainly felt, since completing The Plight House, that I’m seeing his work with fresh new eyes.) I’ve always felt that one of the great engines driving Baudelaire’s poetic vision is the hunger to see the love object in totality and, hence, across time. He seems to have felt a burning need to adore his love interest in youth and in age, in beauty and in ugliness, all simultaneously and in equal measure. Une charogne is a great, if literal, embodiment of this need and therefore a good introduction for students unfamiliar with his oeuvre.
I love this work. I wish I had been given such a book as this when I was a bright and alienated youth. How shall I attempt to reach the book's young audience, do you think? Where does this audience go to learn about books, in your opinion?
- Bright and alienated youths never really go away and neither, of course, do their scars. That’s the great thing about taking as one’s subject matter the experiences — sickness, insanity, violence, love — that nobody comes through unscathed. The readership of such material isn’t defined by conventional demographic criteria, but, rather, by each individual reader’s willingness to journey into a territory filled with peril, perhaps even pain.
My own favourite works have always been the ones that deal elegantly and intelligently with that kind of base material. There’s something about the pairing of stylistic excellence and dark subject matter that I find very, very compelling. And I know I’m not alone on that front. I see the book’s journey into the reader’s hands as being primarily a question of declaring intent. The book just needs a perch — in the bookstore, in cyberspace, who knows where else — from which to set out its very simple agenda: “I want to unleash from your deepest nightmares something that can never be put back.” - www.openbooktoronto.com/news/finding_perch_beth_follett_conversation_with_jason_hrivnak

Excerpt: In the pre-dawn hours of May 7, 2006, my childhood friend Fiona broke into the elementary school that she and I had attended more than twenty years earlier. She was dressed in layers of threadbare clothes and she carried with her, in a canvas duffel bag, the entirety of her worldly possessions. Fiercely independent and restless by nature, Fiona had spent most of the last decade drifting abroad. She had scrounged her way across three continents, always in search of of the strongest drugs and the bleakest, most ill-starred company. No one knew that she had come back to Toronto, I imagine her simultaneously beautified and burdened by that lack of accountability, the terrible freedom of someone who sleeps where she falls and whose whereabouts are a perpetual mystery.
----Once inside the school, she went wandering down the silent hallways, examining odd trophy cabinets and class photographs for a familiar name or face. In one of the upstairs classrooms, she stood be a window overlooking the schoolyard and for the better part of an hour wept quietly in the dark. Sometime before first light, she went down to the front of the building and locked herself in the anteroom that connects the administration area with the principal's office. She sat down on the little padded bench where generations of the delinquent have awaited their turn to see the principal. There, after smoking one last cigarette, she took off her coat, rolled up her sleeves and opened her wrists with a razor blade.

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