A review by glenncolerussell
What a Man Can See by Russell Edson

5.0



This collection gathers short pieces of sentence pie where Russell Edson stretched language as if words were made of silly putty, as if words were the silly puddy neck of a silly puddy language goose. Here are two of my favorites from the book. And at the very bottom, below the illustration of a man all dressed up in coat and tie, is one of my own microfictions. Enjoy.


WHAT A MAN CAN SEE
There was a tower where a man said I can live. After grief it can happen that he comes. Then he saw summer its field and its tree. He heard the wind and he saw a cloud.


THE FALL
There was a man who found two leaves and came indoors holding them out saying to his parents that he was a tree.

To which they said then go into the yard and do not grow in the living room as your roots may ruin the carpet.

He said I was fooling I am not a tree and he dropped his leaves.

But his parents said look it is fall.

NO SHILLY-SHALLY
Mr. Snorkle cuts a grapefruit in half and presses each half against his ears. “I want to hear what it sounds like to squeeze a grape.”

“You’re all mixed up, Mr. Snorkel.”

Mr. Snorkle squeeses harder. “I hear it! I hear it! It sounds like wet water.”

“You’re completely and totally mixed up, Mr. Snorkle.”

“I never shilly-shally. My ears hear the sound of wet grape. I squeeze, therefore I am.”