FICTION
BY THE SHORES OF GITCHEE GUMEE by Tama Janowitz (Crown: $23, 288 pp.).
OK. Call Longfellow’s poems
19th century soaps or sitcoms;
Then it makes some sense for Tama
(“Slaves of New York”) Janowitz to
Parody them in this novel--
Hiawatha’s Big-Sky-Water
Now a stinking, buggy cesspool;
Dwelling in a trailer near it
Evangeline and her five children
(Born of five itinerant fathers):
Maud, our cynical narrator;
Leopold, age 6, the sous-chef;
Pierce, the dim-bulb would-be actor;
Marietta quoting verses;
Theodore aspiring to songwrite.
Noble savages? No way. A
Minne-haha! to that idea.
Grunge they are, a pack of hustlers
L.A.-bound (by way of Florida);
English lords and vacuum-cleaner
Salesmen rue the day they meet them. . . .
Some sense, we said. Yet “Gitchee
Gumee” paddles its canoe on
Little more than nonstop wisecracks--
Cultural satire, yes, and funny;
Still, it vanishes behind us
Like a wake on water’s surface,
Leaving us amused but chilly.
Maybe novels are like mittens--
Best not made with a thin side inside
When they’ve got the snide side outside!
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