海角大神

"Art in America"

A sweet, scruffy antihero uses drama to heal a town.

Art in America By Ron McLarty Viking 366 pp. $25.95

When it comes to writing, Steven Kearney is the Cal Ripken Jr. of literature 鈥 or perhaps he鈥檚 the North鈥檚 answer to Ignatius J. Reilly.

Having filled some 18,000 pages (epics, poems, free verse, plays) since 1978, the New York writer just might have outproduced Joyce Carol Oates. Of course, there is the small matter of his having never been published.

Kearney, like the heroes of Michael Chabon鈥檚 鈥Wonder Boys鈥 and John Kennedy Toole鈥檚 鈥A Confederacy of Dunces,鈥 is in the grip of whatever the opposite of writer鈥檚 block is. Writer-actor Ron McLarty鈥檚 Art in America opens with a summary of Kearney鈥檚 oeuvre, which includes such gems as 鈥淭he Lensman of Holland,鈥 1,821 pages on 鈥渢he adventures, successes, and tragedies of the fabulous Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, father of protozoology.鈥

When we first meet him, Kearney is undergoing a bit of a personal crisis 鈥 he鈥檚 just been run over by a cab, after having been evicted from his apartment and dumped by his foul-mouthed girlfriend (who also drained his checking account for good measure).

Despite the opening, 鈥淎rt in America鈥 isn鈥檛 a bitter satire. In fact, at heart it鈥檚 downright optimistic. But sweetness and optimism are a little difficult to graft onto the New York art scene (at which McLarty pokes some obvious fun), so he gets his hero out of town as soon as possible.

Kearney is offered the unlikely position of playwright-in-residence for Creedemore, Colo., where he is expected to write and direct a play about the history of the town. Once the no-longer-young-man heads west, 鈥淎rt in America鈥 really takes off.

Creedemore is undergoing its own existential crisis, courtesy of a court case brought against a nonagenarian rancher, Ticky Lettgo, who shot up the rafts of a white-water expedition that cut through his land. Also, the local sheriff has just gotten out of the hospital after having been involved in a much less comic shootout with two criminals. Both cases made headlines, and the news media and environmental and land rights activists have descended en masse.

The town itself is divided between the ranchers and folks involved in the new tourist trade. 鈥淢ake no mistake, friends, the fabric of community has been worn thin in the great Weminuche wilderness,鈥 warns Historical Society member Wilma Kirk, Kearney鈥檚 patron.

Steven arrives to find that he鈥檚 not only expected to make sense of the whole mess, but that members of the Historical Society are counting on his play to restore harmony. (Rehearsals start in three weeks. The seats already have been borrowed from the high school football stadium.) Oh, and local poet Cowboy Bob Panousus isn鈥檛 pleased that the job鈥檚 been farmed out to an outsider.

At heart, Steven鈥檚 a sincere guy with the spaced-out gaze of a daydreamer and the persistence of a day laborer. 鈥淚鈥檓 kind of a failure, although I still write, and I guess that I still write means I鈥檓 not a failure. I tell myself that,鈥 he explains.

His take on art is so gentle and inclusive, it鈥檚 enough to send a hardened CPA running for his paintbrush: 鈥淭he theory is that art, any art, is an infinite thing. There鈥檚 no time limit. Nobody to say, 鈥楾ime鈥檚 up, you fraud, you phony, you talentless piece of nothing.鈥 鈥

Possibly to disguise the essential sweetness of his tale, McLarty swaths his comedy in yards of profanity. (The sheriff, in particular, is impressively inventive.) And some of his comic characters 鈥 a priest who doesn鈥檛 believe in God, a radical activist who seduces college girls 鈥 aren鈥檛 exactly original.

But after the first couple chapters, 鈥淎rt in America鈥 finds a charming groove with plenty of chuckles. Those turn into snorts of hysteria once the curtain opens on Kearney鈥檚 Creedemore epic, which is of a scale and lunacy deserving an honorary Tony for funniest play never staged in real life. If you enjoy your antiheroes scruffy and your comedy topped with a dollop of Americana, buy a ticket for 鈥淎rt in America.鈥

Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews fiction for the Monitor.

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