by Douglas Messerli
Jess Row Your Face in Mine (New York: Riverhead Books/Penguin, 2014)
Having so many things on his mind—the fiction is also a kind of
encyclopedic cataloging of various musical songs, a compilation of
international languages, in some instances a menu of world cooking, as well as,
at times, a somewhat academic recounting of Chinese poetry—Row also creates
characters who are variously attracted to other cultures and people of other
races, most of them also having dark secrets which they are attempting to hide.
On top of this, the author employs various genres of writing, including satire,
the critical essay, quasi-scientific disquisitions, taped interviews, dialogues
with the dead, computer chats, travelogues, cultural op-eds, and foreign
intrigue. Incredible coincidence is attributed to the Buddhist notion of the
inevitability of meeting everyone at least twice in your life. In short, this
literary stew ought be a kind of unholy mess, and, at moments in its ambitious
reach, it almost plunges into narrative chaos, particularly when we are
expected to be engaged with long passages concerning characters (a teenage
friend, Alan and the narrator’s wife, Wendy) who are dead even before the work
begins. Yet Row has somehow managed to create a work that feels torn from the
pages of today’s headlines, which makes this fantasy, in turn, nearly
impossible to put down.
Even more startling, Row could never have entertained the idea that a
seemingly black woman working for the NAACP, Rachel Dolezal, would be
discovered to be of only white ancestry, expressing that she identified as a
black woman in much the same way as a central character in Row’s book, Martin
Lipkin (later known as Martin Wilkinson) describes his condition: “Racial
Identity Dysphoria Syndrome.” His Johns Hopkins doctor denies that such a
condition might even exist.
Could Row have guessed that his fictional Bangkok doctor, Silpa, who had
previously operated on transgender individuals, might be a symbolic topic of
national discussion after the less radical transformation of super-athlete
Bruce Jenner into Caitlyn? Might Wilkinson’s gay father been saved from his
death by the marriage this year made legally possible for all gays and
lesbians? If nothing else, one has to admit that Row had his finger on the
pulse of issues of identity that would surface in the American consciousness in
2015.
I won’t even begin to attempt to relate
the fiction’s various intertwined threads of plot. Let us just state that,
years after growing up in Baltimore, and after living in New England, China,
and elsewhere, the work’s narrator Kelly Thorndike returns to work in his home
town of Baltimore at a dying radio station. Soon after he accidentally (?)
reencounters a former school mate, Martin, with whom he had once played in an
amateur band. The shocking thing about their encounter is that Martin, once a
white man, is now thoroughly black, a man well ensconced in city politics with
a beautiful doctor wife (also black), lovely children, and an obviously wealthy
lifestyle.
Martin, it appears, is determined to now reveal to the world that he has
undergone months of surgery, dialect study, and cultural assimilation to attain
his new identity, and chooses his former high school friend Kelly to write up
the narrative. Gradually, Kelly and the reader together discover that behind
Martin’s personal messianic-like zeal for the possibilities of a new life, his
real goal is not only to offer a service to wealthy customers throughout the world
that would allow them their personal decisions regarding race, but to make
millions of dollars in the process. Accordingly, although we may first hope
that Martin sees his own transformation as a kind of moral position which might
ultimately change everyone’s notion about race by offering nearly anyone who
might afford it the possibility of racial transformation, we soon grow to
perceive that behind any socially beneficial pretensions, he is simply a
voracious entrepreneur.
Gradually Kelly discovers that his “friend” not only has no moral
compunctions, but is subtly bribing him through Martin’s knowledge that on the
day their mutual friend, Alan, overdosed with drugs, that Kelly himself was
with his friend, and, therefore, might be subject to possible imprisonment as
an accessory to the death. Shockingly, even when Kelly discovers that he
himself may be part of a larger plot in which Martin will encourage the
Chinese-speaking Kelly’s own transformation into a Chinese exemplar of Dr.
Silpa’s surgical skills, he, nonetheless, maintains his relationship with the
now clearly evil entrepreneur, the novel ending with Kelly’s joyful entry into
a new world of his own choosing.
In other words, Row clearly realizes the moral and ethical arguments
that are sure to be raised (and in Dozeal’s case already have been raised), but
suggests that when desire is involved, even these barriers will ultimately be
overcome. There is, accordingly, a kind of strange cynicism in this work, mixed
with an even odder sense of hope and possibility. And although some of the
issues Row raises seem nearly absurd, they also appear to be almost prophetic.
One can surely see a time, in a world in which gender has already become a
choice, and in which numerous countries have come to accept same-sex marriage
and other gay and lesbian equalities, that the final issue, perhaps, will be
race, and that, ultimately, the possibility of transformation may be a reality.
How will our culture react to that? And with that possibility, what
might our culture be like? Might it even break down the barriers more
thoroughly than interracial marriage already has? In Row’s fiction, wherein
nearly all of the characters have already been involved in interracial
marriage, the next step, perhaps, can only be their attempt to become that “other” they have already
embraced.
I find Row’s work funny at times, outrageous at moments, troubling, even
disgusting, but yet—utterly fascinating and oddly appealing. What might it mean
to us if race were a choice instead of simply a fact of birth? While Row’s work
might remind one of other dystopian works such as Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, Orwell’s 1984, and Len Jenkin’s New Jerusalem, Your Face in Mine ends, instead, on an entirely positive note, with the reconfigured Kelly, now a Chinese
man, arriving on Chinese soil.
You’re here now, right?
You’re home.
I’m home.
Even the idea of home, we are
reminded in this brave new world, is a human construct.
Los Angeles,
July 3, 2015
Reprinted from Rain
Taxi [on-line edition] (November
2015)