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Fiction Short Stories (single Author)

The Razor's Edge

by (author) Karl Jirgens

Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Initial publish date
May 2022
Category
Short Stories (single author), Literary
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889844506
    Publish Date
    May 2022
    List Price
    $18.95

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Description

'Unwillingly, I've become part of the story. Questions lie when reconstructing incomplete facts, half-truths, enigmas. What remains is incompletion, interruption. Only the dead know what happened.'

In The Razor's Edge, Karl Jirgens presents a collection of interlinked fictions that inhabit halfway worlds between past and present, dream and actuality, science and divination. Ordinary daily activities and events lead to unexpected slides into lucid dreams and flirtations with the edge of madness. Drawing on literature and pop culture (from Cinderella and Hamlet to Vladimir Mayakovsky and Anthony Bourdain) as well as the history of twentieth-century genocides (including the Holocaust and the Gulag), these complex, magic realist stories suggest that what seems separate is really interconnected, that the distinction between past, present and future is illusion, and that we might all die of the truth if the truth were truly known.

About the author

Karl Jirgens is the author of several books, including the short story collections Strappado (Coach House Press, 1985) and A Measure of Time (Mercury Press, 1995), as well as the editor of a number of works of literary criticism. From 1979 to 2016, he edited and published Rampike, an international journal of art, writing and theory. He is also a grandmaster of the Korean martial art of TaeKwonDo (8th degree black belt). He lives in Windsor, Ontario.

Karl Jirgens' profile page

Awards

  • Long-listed, ForeWord Indies Book Award

Excerpt: The Razor's Edge (by (author) Karl Jirgens)

From "The Freshness of a Dream"

My mother and I are sitting at her kitchen table. Through the glass door behind her, I gaze at the tangled garden. My mother is quietly crocheting a hat for my son. She peers through her glasses. Her old fingers nimbly turn the wool strands on light metal crochet hooks. It's time for another tea, but I'm held in place by a strange inertia. I ask her about what happened to her brother during the war, my uncle Joe. She has fed me small pieces of this story before, but I'm hungry for more.

I've learned that he was tossed into a mass grave, only to be retrieved. The entire nation had been forcibly 'occupied'. I remember that the bulldozer driver was ordered by a Soviet commander to cover up dozens of bodies. The bulldozer driver refused. He'd witnessed several fingers moving on my uncle's left hand. They threatened to kill the dozer driver. He rejected their threat. 'I'm the only bulldozer driver for hundreds of kilometers. If you kill me, you'll have mass contagion.' My uncle had been fighting with the partisans, first against the Nazis, then the Soviets. The commander shrugged, relented. Pissed off, he ordered a pair of soldiers to haul my uncle's body out of the trench. The dozer driver ensured they hospitalized him. I'm told that my uncle was among several partisans sitting in the back of a resistance truck, the kind with a canvas tarpaulin covering the back. The truck driver inadvertently trundled up to an unexpected military check-point. Realizing the danger, the driver stomped on the gas, swerved past the checkpoint barrier, but one of the ground-troops managed to lob a grenade. My uncle was near the back. Knocked unconscious, he was bloodied, blinded, and crippled on his right side. The bodies of the other partisans shielded him. I wanted to know more. My mother kept crocheting. 'What happened to Uncle Joe, later on?' This fall it's been unseasonably warm. A reprieve. Sun dances lightly on shifting shadows beneath the backyard maple. I watch yellow leaves swirl across the lawn. There is a light breeze, and I really should be outside raking. But it is so comfortable in this kitchen and I don't want to miss what she will say when the spirit moves her. 'Today is the first of the month.' 'October is veļu mēnesis, the spirit moon, the time when they return among us.' I nod and sip my lukewarm tea. 1If you like, I'll read your cards.' I nod again. She puts down the crocheting and clears the table. I think today we should light a candle. She hands me the cards. 'Shuffle the deck and think about what was behind you.' I've had these readings since boyhood. They always start the same way and are almost always right. It's uncanny but I no longer question it. When I was younger, I thought she was eavesdropping on my conversations over the phone, or learning of my activities some other way, and as a devoted mother was using the readings to warn me of my own stupidity. It drove me crazy. I surreptitiously hid magazines under the mattress, foolishly forgetting that she was the one who usually changed the sheets. Now, she's old, lame in one leg, her one good ear is almost deaf. I have to find the right frequencies when I speak, so that her hearing-aid picks up my words. I know she can't overhear any of my conversations, so I reason there must be something else to her card readings. I let her talk. The hearing aid never seems to work correctly, but I've learned that silence and simple gestures work as well as words. She lights the candle and we begin. 'Now cut the cards three times towards yourself.' I know this without her saying it, but sometimes she uses a different approach, so I quietly follow directions. She observes the cards in three piles and says, 'It's good. You are no longer dwelling on the past, but there is an open space before you. You don't know what to do yet. Give it time.' We begin. She starts laying out cards on the table. I remember the day she told me about how she learned this ritual. I was only half-paying attention, mildly intrigued and slightly bored during that ordinary summer day. I remember her words, about how it was, back in the old country, on the farm they used to have. Gypsies coming from the south would visit them in Daugavpils, on route to Riga. There were so many stories about those strange visitors. Daugavpils, sometimes called Dvinsk is near the Russian, Polish and Lithuanian borders. Her neighborhood was mostly Roman Catholic and Jewish. Earlier during the war, the Nazis rounded up the Jews, and my mother visited her former neighbours in the prison camp. It was dangerous. Had the guards known she was bringing food, they would've shot her. A blithe smiling girl of fifteen smuggling dark rye bread and other goods in her school bag. She was 'just visiting'. They indulged her. What could such a young girl do? Sometimes they questioned her on the way out. 'What did you talk about?' 'Not much, the weather, how long they've been here. How long they might have to wait before they get out.' She knew the right answers.

[Continued in The Razor's Edge]

Editorial Reviews

'[In the story "Understanding the Sounds You Hear"] Jirgens's distinctively matter-of-fact delivery allows us to revel in the pathos, and the strangeness, of this story, without ever allowing the tale to turn maudlin.'

Carousel Magazine

Pursuing the interlinked and intertwining narrative threads in Karl Jirgens 'story' collection, The Razor's Edge, can be an intoxicating experience as the various themes range and curl around each other, folding back on themselves to spring fresh sprouts that constantly engage one in a tangled garden of memories and metaphors that cannot be hacked through for anything approaching meaning, you know, the independently verifiable kind, only admired for the brilliance of their subtle and hypnotic elegance. Prepare to be dazzled.

Blending the modernist and post-modernist approaches with the mundane, the mystical, high and low culture, the brutalities of war, the sensual pleasures of food preparation and the ruthless incisions of language unchained from common usage is a high wire act reserved for the star performer poised in perfect balance. Jirgens adopts that role with an ease that belies the discipline of long practice, producing for the open minded reader a dazzling play of narratives, all of which seem to agree on the many nuances of knowing that take their place in the playground between author, reader and text. It is a book that calls out for several re-readings as the magic of its tellings pass like clouds through the reader's imagination. Such is the artful interweaving of themes and variations, almost symphonic in its intricacy, it would, I fear, be ruinous to extract quotes and risk disfiguring the whole.

WordCity Literary Journal

'Time isn't lost. It's coming back around, the past laid out for us like a wide open, four-lane highway north. Or, in Karl Jirgens's line of thought, time is the recovered-and-aching movement of an earth-bound clock hovering from the Pantheon over Paris. That is time's measure at the heart of Jirgens's recent stories in The Razor's Edge, a wondrous collection where time itself is held up at the world's edge. Jirgens's perspective arises from that of the Aymara people of the Andes for whom it is not the future, but the past that lies before us. "Words stagger under the weight of time," Jirgens writes. In these stories, moments circle and meander back around with that weight, felt deep in a plotted heart. He explores the spaces on time's edge-his uncle sentenced to life in the Soviet gulag, a man's life unwound in photocopying appliance instruction manuals, or Anthony Bourdain's life remeasured to its end. All these lives swirl in time-remeasured and circular, seeking to be unbound.'

The Typescript

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