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Ottessa Moshfegh is only human |
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The author Ottessa Moshfegh at her home in Los Angeles, Feb. 25, 2020. Just when the author-provocateurs latest novel, a loneliness story, was scheduled to come out, isolation became the new normal. Jessica Lehrman/The New York Times.
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LOS ANGELES, CA (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- It was the spring of 2015 in Oakland, California, and Ottessa Moshfegh was all alone. She had published some short stories and a novella, but it would be months before her first novel, Eileen, would earn her a living, a place on the Booker Prize shortlist and a name.
After completing an MFA at Brown and a fellowship at Stanford (where she never felt she belonged), the native New Englander was now living friendless across the bay from San Francisco, on the cusp of completing a story collection, Homesick for Another World. Letting go of it, though, she was afflicted by a grief so intense she could only overcome it through more writing.
It was almost like someone had died when I finished that book, Moshfegh, 38, said in early February over lunch at her favorite hole-in-the-wall Thai restaurant in Los Angeles, where she now lives. My future was so terrifying, she said, I needed to write something to get me onto the other side of an experience.
So she forced her mind into the present using a strict regimen: Shed get down 1,000 words a day, without looking back, until Id reached the conclusion of something.
Once she had, she immediately abandoned it in a drawer, only to rediscover it four years and three books later. That manuscript will be published later this year as her third novel, Death in Her Hands. An eerie tour through an aging womans psyche as it loosens its grip on reality, the book reads as a noir, a riff on the tropes of detective fiction. But for Moshfegh, its simpler than that and more personal. I wrote it for myself, she said. Its a loneliness story.
The book was originally scheduled to come out this month, followed by an international publicity tour. In a cruel irony, the reason all thats been postponed the social distancing required to contain the coronavirus is the very reason readers might find this loneliness story more relatable than ever.
Moshfeghs publisher, Penguin Press, has not yet specified the new publication date, but it will likely be later this summer. I hope that when people read this book, Moshfegh said over the phone in late March after the change in plans, theyre not like, Oh God, its another Ottessa book about this woman in isolation.
Its a fair concern. Six years into the game, Moshfegh knows you might already have an opinion about her. Shes built her reputation on characters who exist on the margins of society. They are murderers, substance abusers, deadbeats, pervs. She reveals them at their least refined: They fantasize about being raped or are themselves violent; they vomit; they release torrential, oceanic excrement.
Moshfegh has been called superabundantly talented (by Dwight Garner, in The New York Times) and easily the most interesting contemporary American writer on the subject of being alive when being alive feels terrible (by The New Yorkers Jia Tolentino). To others, like critic Sam Sacks, her writing is dead-eyed and apathetic, her crudeness a dubious trademark, amounting only to hokum.
But perhaps no one puts it more directly than the author herself, in pithy quotes of offhand self-congratulation that are like catnip for her interviewers: I dont know anyone like me.
If you are put off by her candor, by the impression she gives of being sure of her own skill, oh well. Modesty is a luxury Moshfegh cant afford; life is too short. She knows when shes going to die (she wont say, too private), so until then shes going to focus on accessing the spiritual corners of her being through narrative, and not on whether or not you like her.
Are people reading because they dont have friends? she asked between mouthfuls of duck soup, sounding genuinely puzzled. She hopes Death in Her Hands wont inspire the conversations about attractiveness and geniality that have surrounded her previous work. People dont want to talk about how they relate to a characters more unsavory qualities, she said, so theyre like, God, she was really gross. Everybodys so obsessed with being liked.
Not Moshfeghs protagonists. McGlue, the title character of her 2014 novella, is a drunk sailor, imprisoned for killing his best friend. Eileen is a solipsistic, laxative-addicted prison clerk turned accessory to murder who enables her fathers alcoholism as much as she suffers from it.
Frustrated with readers fixation on Eileens ugliness, Moshfegh gave the self-harming, unnamed heroine of her next novel, My Year of Rest and Relaxation, the looks of a supermodel. It required me to imagine what its like to not be an outsider, she said. Here instead was an insider who wants out: a beautiful, tormented 20-something trying, with the help of prescription narcotics, to black out of life altogether.
Whereas that unnamed protagonist escaped into oblivion, Vesta Gul, in Death in Her Hands, escapes into delusion. Mourning her controlling, Mr. Casaubon-like husband, Walter, Vesta lives in a secluded lake cabin inspired, the author said, by an abandoned Girl Scouts camp in Maine that her mother bought in the 1990s. Since adolescence Moshfegh has spent long stretches of time there, by herself, frightened. Its like, The call is coming from inside the house, she said. Thats the scary thing.
Vesta knows paranoia all too well. The novel opens with a cryptic letter, which she discovers while walking her dog in the woods: Her name was Magda. Nobody will ever know who killed her. It wasnt me. Here is her dead body. But there is no body, no evidence at all that any of this is real. Yet Vesta proceeds to spin an entire life for Magda in her mind, itself unraveling. This amateur criminal investigation becomes so absurd it verges on comedy. (Is Magda dead? I Asked Jeeves.
Well, that didnt help me.)
But Moshfegh doesnt find it funny at all. What kills me about Vesta, shes really trying so hard, she said. Shes done everything her whole life just to keep it together and do the right thing, and then she cant hold it together anymore. The death in Vestas hands is not just Magdas or even Walters but the prospect of her own. Her insanity like the narrators chemically induced hibernation in My Year of Rest and Relaxation is not a surrender but a means of survival.
As unreliable as Moshfeghs narrators are, as unstable, insecure and full of hate, they are also hellbent on pulling themselves out of their wretchedness, on saving themselves. What makes Moshfeghs characters most human is that they dont give up.
Sound familiar? On that February afternoon, Moshfegh, a self-described workaholic, reported she was already halfway through her next novel, about a woman who emigrates from China to San Francisco in the early 1900s. And shes come up with a concept for the novel after that, which she plans to write in several years. In the meantime, there are multiple film projects she cant yet speak about. (Is she adapting one of her novels for the screen? I might be doing that, she replied coyly. I might be doing a lot of that.)
So is she as self-assured in person as she comes off in print? Yes, but if there was anything that I would want to correct for the record, she emphasized, it would be that I never said it was easy.
It takes hard work, she said, to find that deeper connection to myself and to the greater power out there. Quarantined or not, that need makes my work really specific. Like, Im not finger painting with my eyes closed.
Her editor, Scott Moyers, says its this control that sets Moshfegh apart. Other authors will turn in something not feeling themselves as if its quite fully cooked, he said. Thats not Ottessa.
Moshfeghs intense concentration requires a degree of insulation. All the work that I do is a performance, she said, a deliberate distancing intended to preserve who I am. As her friend, writer Patty Yumi Cottrell, put it, Moshfegh doesnt participate in the literary machinery, declining to write reviews or blurbs or to engage on social media. Those who know her say her aloofness is a reflection of sensitivity, not egotism.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
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