"Braille Tattoo"
Ideas issue of the New York Times Magazine, December 2007
"Arnold Odermatt: On Duty"
The Believer, December/January 2007 (about a Swiss police officer who photographed car accidents on the roads of Niwalden Canton for 40 years)
"Air-Index Impressionism"
Ideas issue of the New York Times Magazine, December 2006
"The Comb That Listens"
Ideas issue of the New York Times Magazine, December 2006
"Trust Spray" and "The False-Memory Diet,"
Ideas issue of the New York Times Magazine, December 2005
Voodoo Heart: Stories
by Scott Snyder, The Believer, June 2006
The Dead Fish Museum
by Charles D'Ambrosio, The Believer, May 2006
“Questions For Jhumpa Lahiri”
The New York Times Magazine, September 2003 (Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Interpreter of Maladies and The Namesake)
“Oldest Living Surrealist Tells All: A Conversation With Dorothea Tanning”
Salon.com, February 2002 (core member of Surrealist movement, painter, poet, wife of Max Ernst and author of Between Lives: An Artist and Her World)
A Supposedly True Thing or Two: An Interview with David Foster Wallace
Time Out New York, January 1997 (on publicaton of A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again)

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Case Histories: A Novel
By Kate Atkinson
Little, Brown

By John Glassie, The Believer, November 2004

Let's start the way Kate Atkinson starts her rich and tricky fourth novel Case Histories; that is to say, with the case histories of the title:

We have a woman who once thought she was marrying a "great mathematician" but now finds herself -- a mother of four daughters and pregnant again -- wondering what her glowering husband "would look like when he was dead." Her youngest daughter, Olivia, "was the only one she loved, although God knows she tried her best with the others." It is Olivia who, from a backyard tent one hot summer night, disappears forever.

We have another parent, a widower so in love with his university-age daughter Laura that he is morbidly fixated on all the bad things that could happen to her. (Of his other grown daughter, he rarely thinks much.) He worries her out of a summer job at a pub, and places her where he can see her -- in his own law firm as a temp. On her first day, a lunatic comes in off the street, and Laura is promptly stabbed to death.

And we have a newlywed mother, Michelle, who calls her new baby "it." This infant daughter keeps her from "drinking like a fish and taking drugs and handing in mediocre essays on the '1832 Reform Act.'" One day, after she has finally gotten her shrieking baby to sleep, her young husband wakes the child. And so Michelle splits his head open with an ax.

But hold on, as it soon becomes clear that the case histories of Case Histories include not only disappearances and murders, but all the old English detective novels Kate Atkinson has ever read and enjoyed. And just as the Whitbread-Award-winning writer has inventively conjured up Borges, Mary Poppins and Ovid in previous books (such as Behind the Scenes at the Museum and Not the End of the World), she begins to conjure up all manner of elements from the detective genre in a mix of (mainly understated) send-up and admiration.

So here comes Mister Jackson Brodie, the private detective who, years later, will bring all these cases together -- and who will ultimately reveal that none of it is as it seems! He's a "born-again smoker" with a tooth-ache, a country-music-loving resident of Cambridge, England, and a divorced father who, needless to say, hates his adulterous ex-wife, but seems to love daughter just right.

Detective Brodie's investigations show that the poor surviving family members of these old family disasters are variously pathetic, delusional, horny or hiding something. Lavender, old lace and middle-age underwear make an appearance. A clue is provided by a cloistered nun. International intrigue seems possible. ("And when you see your mother," Brodie tells his daughter at one point, "it might be a good idea not to show off your Russian.")

It's all tied up in the end, of course. The only question left is whether quite so much genre-related play belongs in a novel that is still at core about lack of love, and absence of love, and other kinds of absence. Normally not perhaps, but this kind of inclusive, plaintive and yet somehow rollicking work is also not normally produced.