Page 8--Sunday, October 16, 1977--The Michigan Daily the Michigan Daily-Sund FS / BRID-GE ken parsigian Sex and cold cuts:*It's .DeVries By Jeffrey Selbsti T HE MASTER of wacky comedy is back, with a slightly subdued but nonetheless devastating opus. DeVries, who imbues logical se- quences with an extrapolative mad- ness, has returned to tell the story of repressed free-lance writer Bob Swirling. As the book opens, we see Swirling caught'up in what psychiatrists call a "fugue" (a state from which a subject will later emerge, with no conscious recognition of what oc- curred during that time), prowling about the grounds of Silver Slopes sanitarium, under the care of a Dr.. Josko. Swirling is under the delusion that he is Groucho Marx. How he came to be there under such a delusion is the subject of Madder Music. The book traces Swir- ling through a number of entangle- ments - marriage to prim Enid, who wants an "open" marriage and finally cannot forgive Swirling for forgiving her for something she didn't do in the first place; marriage to Becky Tingle, who brings her witty, effete brother Pomfret to live with them and ends up in an incestuous affair; an affair with Pauline, a beautiful black militant who forces him to the ideological wall - or wants to THINK she has. Swirling's troubles really begin when he runs across Enid's note of condolence to a.recently-widowed friend. By coincidence, both Swirling. and the deceased hail from Kalama- zoo; consequently Swirling thinks he's run across his own eulogy. Believing that he has little time left, he decides to have flings. On the way, he perfects his Groucho impersona- tion, conceived for charity benefits that he never seems to attend. As always, the side characters in DeVries' stories have the best lines. Pomfret, for instance, spouts off on theater ("With a little more work out of town this could have been whipped into a bit of inconsequential fluff"), food ("There are few things more degrading to the human spirit than Brussels sprouts"), art (The Night Watch is eleven inches too wide") and psychoanalysis ("A per- sistent appetite for cold cuts is almost certainly indicative of latent necrophilia.") 1D EVRIES' caricatures are fierce. Swirling's father, a church-elder, is angling to move in with his son. Swirling pere lives in an old-folks home which, by dint of his church membership, costs Swirling fils only $25 per week. Non-church members pay $200. Fils, drawn into theological argument (as usual) by pere, con- See DeVRIES, Page 9 Jeffrey Selbst is the Daily Arts Editor. AS THE MATCH went into the last round. Steve was finally breathing easy. His team had been heavily favored, but was trailing by 2200 points' at the half-way mark. Mark's team had been incredibly lucky, and at times seemed on the verge of putting it all away. But the superior skill and ex- perience of Steve's team began to sur- face, and they picked away at Mark's lead throughout the second half. Finally, on the penultimate hand of the match, Steve's team took the lead for the first time (by 500 points), and ap- peared to be headed for victory. As they picked up their cards for the hand that would decide the match, I thought back to the origin of this strange challenge event. ,It all started some two months ago, when Steve was launching into another of his daily attacks on Mark's admit- tedly limited bridge playing abilities. "If I'd known you were planning to misplay the hand so badly I'd have stopped in 4 hearts instead of 6," Steve moaned. "How could you have finessed for the club queen when the club diamond squeeze was marked on the bidding? You might as well simply toss cards out of your hand at random-if you're lucky you might pull the right card, but given a chance to think about it you'll surely go awry." None of us at the club was unduly disturbed by this diatribe since we had come to expect suoh behavior whenever Steve and Mark play together. But the usually complacent Mark was deeply offended by the verbal assault, and he lashed back at his peremptory partner. "This time you've gone too far," screamed a rattled Mark. Most of us are used to your antics, and we tolerate your pomposity only because you are such a fine player. But there are a few players, myself included, for whom you hold particular enmity, and for us your vituperations are much less than tolerable." We were all taken aback by Mark's4 uncharacteristically stinging repartee, and while we sat there stunned, he con- tinued. "I've discussed the matter with Jim, Bruce, and Greg, and we all agree that something must be done. We demand a chance to defend our honor." "Are you suggesting," Steve snickered, "that I duel each of you separately?" "No" Mark replied calmly. "I propose a bridge match to settle our dif- ferences. My friends and I challenge you and any three teammates you choose to a team match, the winner to be determined by total points over 48 hands." And that was the origin of today's contest, which was rapidly approaching its climax. I was seated behind Steve, whose par- tner was Frank-a fine player with considerable tournament experience. Their opponents at their table were Mark and Greg while in the other room Jim and Bruce squared off against Mike and Alan-a well-seasoned pair that was consistently in the running for top tournament honors. Steve, North, was the opening bidder, and picked up this hand: S J10987 H. D C A 865432 WAS " OATHE to preempt in clubs with a five-card spade suit, but'he was feeling mischievous on this final hand, and he decided to throw a wrench in the works by psyching 1 heart. Mark passed, and Frank raised to 2 hearts. Greg cue bid 3 hearts to show a big hand, and after Steve passed, Mark bid 4 hearts. Frank doubled, and Greg paused to consider Greg grimaced when he caught sight of dummy, but there was no way to change the contract now, so played to give himself the best chance. He won the spade lead with the queen, cashed the king and ace of spades, and led the six of spades to Steve's seven. But Steve, who had been smiling in an- r, r led the been s( But b player everyc result'( "We contra "4 sF "Wk mean in 4 spx "No South spades "Bu Steve. "We said Ji wrote: N 3C 4S "I w Alan(E covere Mike(N also vo spade: cashed clubs i hand f three queen t Whil totallir see if point d last hai "Let double( 290, an means he turn But Ste his leg freak h 4 spade Two sides of the American black SONG OF SOLOMON By Toni Morrison Afred A. Knopf, 333 pp. $8.95 T THE NOVEL'S end, Pilate Dead is sixty-eight years old. She has endured. She is a country woman id the city. While she has made a home for herself which would not be considered comfortable by most standards, it more than meets her needs. As a bootlegger, she has, without a husband or son-in- law, raised a daughter and grand- daughter. They live, in a word, primitively, disdaining all modern con- veniences. Pilate's family lives "pretty much like progress was a word that meant walking a little bit further down the road." Macon Dead is four years her senior. After Pilate and Macon witness their father's murder, they soon part ways. He moves to Michigan. Macon begins to buy up housing in the slums, marries into a respected, yellow-skinned family and fathers three children. His son describes him as a man "who acquired things and used people to acquire things," a man who loved property to an excess. Perhaps not surprising, sin- ce Macon's father was killed over a , land "dispute": "he distorted life, bent A~i ianesreg. of. kwsnatdrig By Frank James father's death." Macon marks time by the. number of keys he has at a par- ticular moment; he remembers that he had two keys when he courted his wife. His son is "deep" and his daughters "dry." Blackfolks around town refer to his only-on-Sunday Packard his hearse. He fits his surname as well as can be imagined. Macon and Pilate represent two sides of the same persona. Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon beautifully illustrates the schizophrenia that accompanies being black in America, through characterizations of the brother/sister. Macon's son, Milkman, is awed when he first meets Pilate, to finally encoun- ter someone who can physically and mentally stand eyeball-to-eyeball with his father. The similarities are over- whelming; the differences are equally obvious. Pilate, unlike her brother, is very much alive. She is overflowing with love and generosity and demon- strates no use for uniecessary zi1ateripl goods. Because she refuses . to coir- passed between her and Macon for the better part of fifty-five years. Morrison compares, contrasts and plays these two halves off of each other as they engage in a psychological tug of war over Milkman's soul. THE NARRATIVE picks up the day before Milkman's birth in 1931 and progresses quickly through his early life, while at the same time flashbacks show glimpses of how Macon Dead climbed the socio-economic ladder. ' Herein lies one very glaring weakness in the movement of the novel, that essentially the reader is not given a sense of the time and community. Various dates-1931, '45, '53, '63-are all marked, but with little more than a per- functory mention of famous names and events. The question which remains unanswered throughout the novel's first part is, where, in what type of city, is all of this happening? There is never any exposure to elements outside of the cen- tral characters; one wondersif all-offth'- As Milkman grows older he apparen- tly grows no wiser, at least until his thirty-second birthday, when he sud- denly decides that he doesn't want to be his father's office boy for the rest of his life. He must choose between carrying on in his father's footsteps and sear- ching for something more substantial, though less tangible than real estate. Up to this point he has allowed others to make decisions for him, and has only reluctantly taken responsibility for preserving his own life. His buddy Guitar says that everybody wants a nigga's life; Milkman has been more than happy to accommodate anyone who wants a piece of his., Disturbing to Milkman is the fact that he is his father's son. And despite his superficial attempts:to mark, differen- ces, the similarities between the two become frighteningly real to him. Not only is he practically reliving his father's work experiences, but he also has his father's desire for yellow, near- white women. And in a very effective, almost eerie passage, lie speaks of Macon Dead in the same terms with which his father would have described See MORRISON, Page 9 the bidding. Surely, he reasoned, Mark's heart bid didn't show hearts (after all, the opponents had bid and raised that suit), so he must be cue bidding toward a slam, and promising the other major suit (spades). Since his partner had to have spades for his bid, Greg decided to set spades as the trump suit by bidding 4 spades. He expected Mark would now show the club ace if he had it, and they would wind up in either 6 or 7 spades. But Mark had different ideas. He passed, and Frank doubled, and now it was up to Greg again. He still didn't consider the possibility of Steve having psyched, so he continued to place his partner with a shortness in hearts. Since Mark had passed, Greg assumed that he had almost no points, but had good distribution, and simply wanted to play in the best game con- tract. Since 4 spades requires one lessr trick than game in- the minors, Greg decided he was probably in the best spot, and unabashedly he passed. Jeff lead the spade jack, and these were-the four hands: ticipation of a big set, suddently stop- ped since he realized the contract was now unbeatable. He could cash one more trump trick, and the club ace, but since he couldn't get to Frank's hand, Greg would take the remainder in the minor suits to make his doubled game. - "Nice play, partner," said Mark. "I knew from the start, of course, that Steve's heart bid was fictitious, but there was nothing I could do but pass on the first round. When you cue bid 3 hearts, I thought you probably had a heart void, but even if I had three losers in the heart suit, there was still a chance for 4 hearts, so I bid it. When you bid 4 spades, I pictured you with a long solid suit, and since I knew 5 hearts would be defeated, I took a chance that 4 spades would make." STEVE, WHO WAS fuming, was about to launch into a sob story of how unlucky he had been, when Frank in- terrupted him. "Actually," said Frank, "we could have murdered this hand if you'd only Unive Oct. 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