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- <text id=92TT0250>
- <title>
- Feb. 03, 1992: 1-900-AURAL SEX
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 03, 1992 The Fraying Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 59
- 1-900-AURAL SEX
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Nicholson Baker explores the nature of arousal in his dazzling
- and erotic (but not pornographic) novel Vox
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Stengel
- </p>
- <p> Artists who work on a small scale have traditionally been
- known as miniaturists. The term has a kind of pat-on-the-head
- condescension about it, a sense that the miniaturist is forever
- relegated to the artistic minor leagues.
- </p>
- <p> But just as quantum physicists have revealed that the
- world inside the atom--with its whizzing elementary particles
- and clouds of electrons--is just as grand as the big,
- blooming universe outside, artists who construct a magnum opus
- out of the microscopic have become major-leaguers.
- </p>
- <p> Nicholson Baker is a subatomic physicist of fiction, a
- quantum suburban Proust. He is a wizard at anatomizing the
- micromechanics of mental life, at charting the quicksilver
- zigzags of decision and indecision, a writer who can spin out
- a mock epic from a pair of broken shoelaces.
- </p>
- <p> His first novel, The Mezzanine, takes place in the time
- its protagonist ascends an escalator, but it is a dazzlingly
- dense journey into the mind of a man who meditates on subjects
- like the delights of perforated paper. His second novel, Room
- Temperature, occurs during the 20-minute reverie of a young
- husband feeding his six-month-old daughter, but it explores, in
- droll, Andy Kaufmanish detail, the history of a marriage. U and
- I, Baker's third book, is an extended brooding on a single
- self-mortifying question: Is John Updike a better writer than
- I am?
- </p>
- <p> Baker's new book, Vox (Random House; $15), should vault
- him out of the anteroom of cult writers. Vox is not a voyage
- into the deep time of interior thought but a story that takes
- place in the time it takes to read it. Vox's 165 pages consist
- of a single telephone conversation between a man and a woman,
- strangers who have both called an adult party line and then
- decided to have a private conversation. We never find out what
- they do, how old they are or what they look like, but by the end
- of Baker's brief novel, the reader knows these two characters
- inside, if not out.
- </p>
- <p> The sexual encounter in Vox is the very opposite of
- another contemporary landmark of literary eroticism, the zipless
- sex of the '70s. Erica Jong's cheesy fiction offered a New Age
- pardon for the grunting libido of genital-to-genital sex.
- Zipless meant voiceless. Vox, by contrast, is the ultimate in
- '90s safe sex: voices, not hands, caress each other as Baker
- teases out a rambling romp of a conversation followed by
- simultaneous masturbatory climaxes between partners thousands
- of miles away.
- </p>
- <p> The two interlocutors of Vox--Abby and Jim (the
- pedestrian names somehow don't do them justice)--are virtuoso
- talkers. They are not merely poets of sexuality (an eroticized
- George and Gracie) but acute lyricists of everyday life. Listen
- to Abby's riff on pop songs that end with fade-outs ("this
- attempt to imply that oh yeah, we're a bunch of endlessly
- creative folks who jam all night"); while Jim explains why he
- doesn't bother to buy such records ("you really need the feeling
- of radio luck in listening to pop music").
- </p>
- <p> A just-the-facts-Ma'am summary of their conversation would
- go like this: she fantasizes about having sex with three house
- painters, while he tells her how he and an office co-worker sat
- in his apartment, covered by a blanket, and silently,
- separately masturbated to a porn film.
- </p>
- <p> But to condense Vox that way is to describe Lolita as the
- story of a randy professor and a dim-witted 13-year-old girl.
- It misses the myriad ah-yes analogies, the deadeye humor, the
- fervent, carnal lyricism of what is not pornography (as some
- will call it) but an anatomically correct, technology-assisted
- love story.
- </p>
- <p> Jim is a kind of platonic voyeur. He doesn't seek to peer
- into women's bedrooms but into their brains. He masturbates to
- the idea of women masturbating. He postulates a sexual
- Heisenberg's principle: "A man is a watcher, and a watcher
- disturbs the purity of the event." Abby is aroused mainly by her
- ability to arouse. She is a Hall of Fame sexual fantasist. "It's
- kind of like getting dressed for a party," she says, "and being
- unsure of what to wear...and frantically trying on one image
- after another like clothes."
- </p>
- <p> Baker, 35, lives in a small town in upstate New York with
- his wife and child. The telephone is the way he communicates
- with the outside world. "My business life seems to take place
- over the phone," he says, in a pleasantly reedy voice. "I know
- all these people and deal with them weekly on the phone whom
- I've never met." Talking on the phone and reading have a
- certain kinship: "The nice thing about reading a book is that
- it is private, like a phone conversation; it doesn't matter what
- you're wearing when you read it."
- </p>
- <p> An astute critic once said that the poet must be as in
- love with the form of his sonnet as he is with the form of his
- love. Nicholson Baker is as obsessed with language as he is with
- sex. Vox is as much about wordplay as it is about foreplay.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense Vox illuminates the strange connections of
- modern life, how people achieve intimacy at a technological
- distance. Two hundred years ago, Vox would have been titled
- Lettres and been an epistolary romance. Today people don't kiss
- by the book but by telephone wire. The phone affords protection;
- it literally allows us to save face. Vox proves once again that
- the brain, as love doctors always tell us, is the sexiest organ.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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