The Lady of Situations | |||||
Stephen Dedman | |||||
Ticonderoga Publications, 256 pages | |||||
A review by Seamus Sweeney
The stories remind me of the story collections of other authors published by Ticonderoga and reviewed by
myself on this site, Lewis Shiner's Love in Vain
and Steven Utley's Ghost Seas. There is the
same range and sense of controlled exuberance. There is the same disregard for easy genre
categorisations. For instance, the title story is pretty much a mainstream literary piece about a lady
with an eidetic memory, while the immediately following "Ever Seen By Waking Eyes" is a vampiric twist on
Lewis Carroll's much-analysed and much-debated interest in young girls. Two very different "genres," yet both
have the same tone and emotional impact, and share a concern with the horrific realities of child sexual abuse.
"The Lady of Situations" is a good example of Dedman's story telling technique. Essentially it is a
narrative told by a character within a fictional framing vignette. This kind of technique reminds me of
the Marlow of Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim, and allows the writer in an unforced,
even rather traditionalistic way, to allow a character to show their revealing elisions and hesitancies,
with a group of listeners whose reactions and preoccupations reflect on and deepen the story itself. It
is a technique which can have radical narrative implications; done badly it can just seem arbitrary
and pointless, done well it profoundly alters our reading. "The Lady of Situations" will reward study
by writers themselves as rich example of the type.
Dedman's spins on the alternate history format -- "Amendment," with Lee Harvey Oswald working at a
Texan sci-fi convention, and "The Godfather Paradox," which brings together Alan Turing, the Mafia,
and time travel -- are particularly well done. Too many alternate history stories simply have a twist
on history as we know it, and that's all. The secret of any story is that through embodied action, some
kind of reaction -- usually emotionally, but it can be intellectual or even visceral -- is evoked in the
reader that is stronger than the explicit content of the words themselves.
The book has a witty introduction-in-dialogue by Sean Williams and Mark Radium, which manages to say many
acute things about Dedman's prose along with various gross out jokes. There are various themes and
tropes that recur, and Williams and Radium identify many -- but the real strength of Dedman's work is a
power far beyond didacticism. Dedman's stories have an evocative life beyond what is simply
written. His style -- engaging, lucid, never obscure but nevertheless allusive and richly evocative -- is
perfectly suited to a range of themes, genre tropes and structures. All these stories insinuate themselves
into your consciousness slyly and irrevocably. Someone once wrote that the cinema of Stanley
Kubrick "is not about things, it is things," and something similar could be said about The Lady of Situations.
Seamus Sweeney is a freelance writer and medical graduate from Ireland. He has written stories and other pieces for the website Nthposition.com and other publications. He is the winner of the 2010 Molly Keane Prize. He has also written academic articles as Seamus Mac Suibhne. |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
If you find any errors, typos or anything else worth mentioning,
please send it to editor@sfsite.com.
Copyright © 1996-2014 SF Site All Rights Reserved Worldwide