.1 Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY sunday, December 2,1M913 r BOOKS PRESENTS ' A SHAW FESTIVAL PRODUCTION MURDOCK You cAN PAXTON WH ITEHEAD IN NEVER TELL by BERNARD SHAW WITH PATRICIA JAMES SHELIA GAGE VALENTINE HAN EY directed by EDWARD GILBERT ". the effervescent Shaw Festival Company. " -DETROIT FREE PRESS "An enormously winning, refreshingly civilized delight." DETROIT NEWS DECEMBER 6-9 8 P.M. (Sat. & Sun. Matinees 3 P.M.) Ticket Information available at PTP Ticket Office 764-0450 Presented in MENDELSSOHN THEATRE 'N /, OATES & AWARENESS Love: The ultimate but rocky journey to personal liberation DO WITH ME WHAT YOU WILL By Joyce Carol Oates. New York: Vangurd, 561 pages, $7.95. By KARL POHRT DO WITH Me What You Will is a catalogue of disturbance, an exploration of the subtle, com- plex, often terrifying edges of the human soul. It is a danger- ous book, a gun pointed in the reader's face. I continually felt myself slid- ing towards panic as I read this book. The issues and states of consciousness that Oates articu- lates with the sharp clarity of an x-ray are ones that preoc- cupy and threaten to engulf us all. She has pulled out all the stops, snapped off the safety blinders, so that the novel rush- es out with a tremendous inten- sity. One feels an energy be- neath this book that must have been born of an almost obsessive urgency. Oates once said that she was "concerned with only one thing -the moral and social conditions of my generation." In her recent work it seems to me that she has expanded and deepened that con- cern into something much larger. In the current issue of the American Poetry Review she de- fines the writer's function as "helping to bring into total con- sciousness the unconscious; en- ergies of the void." That is a serious statement for a 35 year old writer to make but Oates already has behind her a sub- stantial body of very serious work. O ATES USES Do With Me What You Will as a vehicle to explore "the tension between two American 'pathways': the way of tradition, or Law; and the way of spontaneous emotion -Love." The way of the law is repre- sented as being absolutely dis- asterous in its consequences on the human personality. Oates sees the way of love as dislocating and chaotic but, ulti- mately, the only authentic pa'h to a personal liberation. One of her characters talks about a "heavy love" that "drags us down into the mud of self and the great mud of wars." But, he says, "the way down is the way up." The novel chronicles Elena Howe's j o u r n e y towards self- awareness. All her life she has been surrounded by people who suffocate her sense of self. She has been taught to mistrust and discount her own feelings. She defines herself only in terms of these other people. THE BOOK opens with Elena's kidnapping from a school play- ground by her father Leo Ross. He is half-mad, a victim of the courts which have separated him from his daughter. He drives her to California telling her that h,2r mother is dead. He falls apart finally and Elena almost dies. Her rescue by her mother Ardis is nearly as disastrous. She tells Elena as a child that she 1. "COUNTERPOINT" Musket's very own original Musical by AVI KRIECHMAN December 2, 3, 4-Sunday, Monday, Tuesday (EVENINGS) Sign-up and pick up audition music at UAC/Musket Off ice-2nd floor Union FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 763-1107 BITS & PIECES A Capote sampler: 1 l i i N I i C E t i i I G E 1-JOME MADE H OUSES A Guide to the Woodbutcher's Art by ARTH UR BOERICKE & BARRY SHAPI RO published by SCRIMSHAW PRESS } 4 i 3 if:ii:f,:: v.:::::::.:. . . .~~:?. r? 4f 3 if ot the CELLAR'S --ONE WEEK ONLY-DEC, 2-9- 20% OFF-ALL BOOKS 3 (except professional texts) POrtrait of THE DOGS BARK: PUBLIC P E O P L E AND PRIVATE PLACES. By Truman Capote. New York: Random House, 419 pages, $8.95. By