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Rumble, Young Man, Rumble: Stories

di Benjamin Cavell

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“I never killed anybody,” he whispers. “But I could. I’m sure I could.” Rumble, Young Man, Rumbleopens in a sporting goods store, owned and operated by the members of an amateur paintball team. Logan Bryant, its self-professed star--as politically incorrect as he is knowledgeable about athletic equipment and barbecue grills--guides us through this world of barbells, guns and protein supplements. And by the end of “Balls, Balls, Balls,” we see that it is his insecurity and doubt, not his brawn and confidence, that have shaped him into the sort of man he is. “Real emotion makes people nervous. . . . Passion is too Mussolini.” "The Art of the Possible” puts us into the mind of an up-and-coming congressman making a bid for a second term. As we follow him from one photo op to another, we see firsthand what he must sacrifice of himself to please the many--from sleep to kindness to integrity. And in a final, heart-wrenching scene, the snapshots line up to reveal a particular truth--that these sacrifices are not borne by him alone. “All you need to learn is that you can hit him and he can hit you and that it might hurt but you’re not going to kill each other.” “Except sometimes,” she said. I nodded again. “Except sometimes.” In “The Ropes,” Alexander Folsom spends a summer with his father on Martha’s Vineyard, getting his strength back after his last boxing match, in which he fared the worse. Trying to work, trying to play, trying to flirt with the soon-to-be-married daughter of a well-to-do family on the Vineyard, Alex finds himself floundering in most every way as he attempts to reconcile the ends of both his athletic and his college careers—and to find a new, more personal form of discipline. Throughout his debut collection of nine powerful stories, Benjamin Cavell shows us the darker side of being a “real” man. Along with the machismo, the self-assuredness and power comes a heightened sense of fear and mortality, and ultimately a deeper search for comfort, for someone or something to rely upon. Funny and smart, urgent, fearless and emotionally rich, these are stories without an ounce of fat on them. Though his literary forebears may be Ernest Hemingway and Norman Mailer, Benjamin Cavell speaks in a voice entirely his own.… (altro)
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way too much testosterone for me. ( )
  thatotter | Feb 4, 2014 |
Rumble Young Man, Rumble shows a lot of promise, but doesn't yet deliver. Most of Cavell's stories show an eye for interesting characters in interesting circumstances. More often than not, though, he seems unable to convert the interesting scenarios into interesting stories. Too many characters don't quite make sense. Too much of the sex and violence is perfunctory. Too many endings are faux-shockers that fail to earn their shock. Too many of the writing flourishes are transparent imitations of the techniques of those manliest of 80s writers, Bret Easton Ellis and Jay McInerney.

"The Art of the Possible" is the best-conceived story in the collection. It's about a politician infected by the superficiality he projects. For some reason, Cavell writes the story in the second person-- a technique that, post-McInerney, almost inevitably comes across as an undergrad creative writing assignment.

"Balls, Balls, Balls," which opens the collection, has the strongest finish of any of the stories, achieving a comic universalization of the cartoonish narrator. The narrator, though, is such a caricature of the dysfunctional angry-man that the story is, at points, uncomfortable to read.

Cavell, apparently a boxer himself, brings a lot of interesting detail to the boxing stories. The boxing passages are a pleasure to read, clear as it is that we are in the hands of an expert. These stories, even though they don't pay off, are much more fun to read than the gun stories. In the gun stories, I worry that we are in the hands of a posturing twenty-something.

The fundamental problem is that, after finishing the book, I'm not sure Cavell has anything to say. There's a pervasive stink of cliche masculinity throughout. All the stories touch on competition, or sex, or violence, or the mysterious expectations of manhood. But I don't see much in the way of insight. These stories grapple with masculinity in the same way daytime TV grapples with marital fidelity.

Though I found this collection frustrating, I'd read another, hoping that as he gets older the substance will grow to match the interest of his scenarios. ( )
  goodmanbrown | Oct 28, 2008 |
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“I never killed anybody,” he whispers. “But I could. I’m sure I could.” Rumble, Young Man, Rumbleopens in a sporting goods store, owned and operated by the members of an amateur paintball team. Logan Bryant, its self-professed star--as politically incorrect as he is knowledgeable about athletic equipment and barbecue grills--guides us through this world of barbells, guns and protein supplements. And by the end of “Balls, Balls, Balls,” we see that it is his insecurity and doubt, not his brawn and confidence, that have shaped him into the sort of man he is. “Real emotion makes people nervous. . . . Passion is too Mussolini.” "The Art of the Possible” puts us into the mind of an up-and-coming congressman making a bid for a second term. As we follow him from one photo op to another, we see firsthand what he must sacrifice of himself to please the many--from sleep to kindness to integrity. And in a final, heart-wrenching scene, the snapshots line up to reveal a particular truth--that these sacrifices are not borne by him alone. “All you need to learn is that you can hit him and he can hit you and that it might hurt but you’re not going to kill each other.” “Except sometimes,” she said. I nodded again. “Except sometimes.” In “The Ropes,” Alexander Folsom spends a summer with his father on Martha’s Vineyard, getting his strength back after his last boxing match, in which he fared the worse. Trying to work, trying to play, trying to flirt with the soon-to-be-married daughter of a well-to-do family on the Vineyard, Alex finds himself floundering in most every way as he attempts to reconcile the ends of both his athletic and his college careers—and to find a new, more personal form of discipline. Throughout his debut collection of nine powerful stories, Benjamin Cavell shows us the darker side of being a “real” man. Along with the machismo, the self-assuredness and power comes a heightened sense of fear and mortality, and ultimately a deeper search for comfort, for someone or something to rely upon. Funny and smart, urgent, fearless and emotionally rich, these are stories without an ounce of fat on them. Though his literary forebears may be Ernest Hemingway and Norman Mailer, Benjamin Cavell speaks in a voice entirely his own.

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