
Navaro,
J.L. The Blood Cake Vendor and Other Stories. New York:
iUniverse, 2004. 512 p. Paperback. ISBN 0595331955.
J.L.
Navarro’s latest book is an outstanding collection of
speculative fiction that features a diverse medley of stories.
Vivid, insightful, graphic and provocative, these stories fall
into a number of genres and recall the fiction of Barthelme,
Kafka, Borges, Gogol, Schultz, Beckett and other proto irrealists.
Unlike these authors, however, Navarro’s fiction has a
sharp, bloody, unapologetically irreverent edge — the
kind of edge David Lynch fans will find insatiable. As a disclaimer
on the back cover of The Blood Cake Vendor and Other Stories
forebodes: “Some stories may not be for the faint of heart,
squeamish, or prudes. Not recommended for immature readers.
Be warned.”
The
title story establishes the metaphysical scene for the entire
collection. Set in a vaguely mystical wartime city, it is narrated
by a self-employed businessman who owns a small shop that sells
religious and spiritual mementos alongside heavy artillery including
grenades, hand guns and automatic rifles. He resides above his
shop in an apartment with his wife and her sister’s ghost,
an arrangement he describes with a dreamlike matter of factness.
“I don’t mind her ghost living with us,” he
says. “She was always quiet and did not strain our resources
in the least.” Then there is the blood cake vendor, who
uses the “ingredients” of dead soldiers to bake
his cakes. As the narrator explains, these cakes are “an
acquired taste” that “some people refuse to eat
... on religious grounds.” Overall, the story expresses
the absurdity of human relations, which, contrary to all knowledge
and intellect, are inevitably subject to various forms of literal
and metaphorical violence. This is one of the book’s overarching
themes, and Navarro never fails to articulate it with flair
and perspicuity.
Navarro’s
prose oscillates between a Hemingwayesque simplicity and a Henry
Miller-like lyricism. Like Hemingway and Miller, too, he often
employs beat, shady, down-and-out characters. These characters
are uniquely oppressed and constructed by their diegetic mediatized
universes. Hollywood and the streets of L.A. recurrently function
as a stage for the sordid, schized masses, who, as the narrator
of “Baby Hulk” conveys, represent “a zoo of
humanity’s caprice and necessity reflected by the rags
that draped them” and “a cacophony of world tongues
streaming by with as many varied world faces.” Other,
shorter stories like “A Parable,” “Remembering
the Crucifixion” and “The Ancient City” probe
the vicissitudes and consequences of religious mania —
another dominant theme in the text. There are also stories that
treat drugs and hallucinations, Internet occultism, incest,
vampirism, zombiism and UFOs, among other oddities. What makes
Navarro’s narratives effective is his sheer originality,
attentiveness to detail, darkly satirical wit and bionic writing
style.
The
Blood Cake Vendor and Other Stories is suitable for leisure
reading as much as pop and scholarly criticism. Read it for
a laugh, read it for a wild ride, or read it to plumb the depths
of the human condition. There’s something here for everybody.
—
Hugo Weaving