Astonish me

Maggie Shipstead

Book - 2014

"From the author of the widely acclaimed debut novel Seating Arrangements, winner of the Dylan Thomas Prize: a gorgeously written, fiercely compelling glimpse into the passionate, political world of professional ballet and its magnetic hold over two generations. Astonish Me is the irresistible story of Joan, a ballerina whose life has been shaped by her relationship with the world-famous dancer Arslan Ruskov, whom she helps defect from the Soviet Union to the U.S. While Arslan's career takes off in New York, Joan's slowly declines, ending when she becomes pregnant and decides to marry her longtime admirer, a PhD student named Jacob. As the years pass, Joan settles into her new life in California, teaching dance and watching h...er son, Harry, become a ballet prodigy himself. But when Harry's success brings him into close contact with Arslan, explosive secrets are revealed that shatter the delicate balance Joan has struck between her past and present. In graceful, inimitable prose, Shipstead draws us into the lives of her lovably tempestuous characters. Filled with intrigue, hilarious satire, and emotional nuance, Astonish Me is a brilliant investigation into the bonds that hold us, despite the distancing of time and geography"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Maggie Shipstead (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
253 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780307962904
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

THE BALLET WORLD is incestuous - insular and intensely intimate, full of young, beautiful people who work grueling hours and share in one another's triumphs, setbacks and neuroses. No wonder, then, that dancers' professional and social lives become inescapably entwined, and that fictional works revolving around ballet so often default to melodrama. The challenge for the novelist is how to present dancers as human, how to temper the soap operatic with the real. It's not an easy feat, Exhibit A being the great dearth of fiction that convincingly portrays the inner lives of these peculiarly committed virtuosos, who sacrifice so much in the name of art. ("Dancer," Colum McCann's fictional biography of Rudolf Nureyev, published in 2003, is a showpiece of form and style, but it's less about Nureyev than about the audiences who adored him and the milieus through which he moved; only fleetingly does McCann attempt to get inside Nureyev's head.) For her second novel, "Astonish Me," Maggie Shipstead has leapt into this difficult territory - and landed, for the most part, on the same old stuff. Her book, which spans three decades and is told from multiple points of view, is at once a mash-up of late-20th-century ballet's hottest tabloid hits; a "Turning Point"-style tale of fateful choices, resentments and regrets; an occasionally sardonic and insightful depiction of sexual manipulation and creative ambition; and, yes, a soap opera complete with impulsive couplings, adolescent longings, heartwarming May-December romances and, fluttering beneath it all, a "secret" that will fail to astonish even faintly attentive readers. Shipstead populates her novel with types who will be immediately recognizable to watchers of either ballet or the many films devoted to its backstage theatrics. There's Joan ("too precise, too reserved, too square" - think Natalie Portman in "Black Swan," before she went bonkers), a corps member in a New York City company presided over by one Mr. K (template: Balanchine). In 1975, Joan drives the getaway car in which the dazzling Soviet dancer Arslan Rusakov (Baryshnikov) defects. Two years earlier, we learn, Joan seduced Arslan at the Palais Garnier, dropping her undies into an urn and materializing before him, "like the fairy in the window in 'La Sylphide.'" Then there's Elaine, Joan's roommate and colleague - imagine a composite of Mila Kunis ("Black Swan" again), Anne Bancroft ("The Turning Point"), Gelsey Kirkland and Suzanne Farrell (playing themselves) - who in a double-barreled shot of unfairness is both more talented and way more fun than Joan, the kind of dancer who'll "do a bump before a performance for confidence and maybe another at intermission" and "always has men but is never in love, except with Mr. K." When the novel opens it's 1977, and Joan is pregnant and plotting "the end of her ballet life." In America, Arslan has achieved nuclear stardom - the media frenzy, the drooling horde of women, the corny PBS specials ("Rusakov and Friends") - and Joan's dreams of shining alongside him, of possessing "some piece of the fearsome beauty he has onstage," are crushed. She's not skilled enough to dance with him, which makes her an unsuitable partner under the spotlight or the sheets. Thus she plans to marry Jacob, a brainy old high school friend who has worshiped her since they met, and whose bed she sought in the wake of Arslan's rejections. The pregnancy and Jacob are her timely excuses, her getaway vehicles from the tyrannical pull of dance: "I couldn't just decide to stop," she confesses. "I'm too much of a coward." As any retired dancer knows, you can leave the ballet, but it never leaves you. In suburban Southern California, where Joan and Jacob settle with their boy, Harry, Joan compulsively repeats barre exercises on her patio and is eventually drawn back to the studio as a teacher. Her pupils include Harry and a neighbor girl, Chloe, both of whom will grow up to dance professionally, and whose connection will evolve (predictably) to contain echoes of Joan's entanglements with Jacob and Arslan. Joan's escape from New York breeds other, more interesting complications. Jacob, now an accomplished adult, clings - a little cruelly - to the idea of Ballerina Joan: In his eyes, "her retirement means she has been reduced in some essential way." Joan, in turn, justifiably "fears the slow, corrosive trickle of reality" into Jacob's adulation. They may be building a home together, but the crucial pedestal on which he once placed her, on which they both relied, has toppled. As Shipstead demonstrated in her first novel, "Seating Arrangements" - a beachy romp about old-money WASPs convened for a weekend wedding - she does caustic humor, simmering hostilities and social envy well. When Joan and Jacob become frenemies with Chloe's sad and boorish parents, Shipstead's writing sharpens, her couples dancing awkwardly, sometimes viciously, around the themes of money, parenthood, gender, domesticity and dysfunction. The novel's most fascinating relationship is not between Joan and Jacob or Harry and Chloe or the dueling parents, however, but between Elaine and Mr. K - a nearly two-decade push-pull of artistic need, devotion and dependency, a partnership that, as Elaine matures, transforms from something seemingly reckless into a bond that is deep, tender and rare. (A novel revolving around these two - now that would have been a treat.) A nondancer, Shipstead has admirably absorbed ballet's vocabulary of steps, and certain settings and classic bits of choreography are precisely and credibly described. So, too, are some of the wounds and notions lodged in her dancers' psyches. Joan's childhood "was dominated by discipline, fear, repetition" and "bled seamlessly into her adulthood, each contaminated by the other." "Love for ballet," Elaine believes, "is necessary to survive it, but she doesn't know if she survives because she loves to dance or if the love comes from a need to survive." In general, though, the novel's prose is unexceptional, subservient to the momentum of Shipstead's schematic plot. "It all seems too obvious, too easy, too literal," a disappointed Harry thinks while watching "The Phantom of the Opera." "They just sing the lyrics someone else wrote." His words resonate as the stagy clichés pile up and "Astonish Me" trips along to its unsurprising end. JENNIFER B. McDONALD is a former editor at the Book Review.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 29, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Languishing in the corps de ballet of a premier New York company while her lover, internationally renowned dancer Arslan Ruskov, is captivating critics and audiences, Joan becomes pregnant and reunites with her high-school boyfriend, Jacob, now a doctoral student in Chicago. Though they build a life together for themselves and their son, Harry, Joan can never escape the role she played in helping Arslan defect from the Soviet Union. As she makes tentative peace with her new status far away from the footlights as a suburban mom and strip-mall ballet instructor, Joan pins her hopes on salvaging her career relevancy as she guides her neighbor's daughter, Chloe, to professional status. However, it is Joan's own son who astounds everyone by becoming the sought-after new prodigy. When he and Chloe cross paths with Arslan, the finely tuned life that Joan and Jacob constructed comes crashing down as long-held secrets are exposed in a particularly brutal way. Readers who reveled in Shipstead's sardonic comedy-of-manners debut (Seating Arrangements, 2012) will rejoice in the emotionally nuanced tale of barre-crossed lovers and the magnetic, mysterious world of professional dance. A supple, daring, and vivid portrait of desire and betrayal.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Shipstead's second novel (after Seating Arrangements), set mostly in California and New York in the 1970s, '80s, and '90s, concerns Joan Joyce, a ballerina who abandons the dance world when she becomes pregnant. Early in her professional career, she had helped Arslan Rusakov, a famed Russian ballet dancer, defect to the West while his troupe was performing in Toronto, after which the two had an affair. But Joan marries Jacob, a childhood friend, and moves to suburban Southern California, abandoning her glamorous life of concerts and parties in New York City. Their son, Harry, reveals a gift for and a love of ballet, and his talent is such that eventually he comes in contact with Arslan. Their meeting leads to the creation of a ballet that will unite Arslan, Harry, and Harry's girlfriend, Chloe, who is also a dancer, but that threatens to leave Jacob estranged from his son. Shipstead's prose moves fluidly through settings as varied as a ballet rehearsal and a suburban backyard, and her characterizations are full. The story proceeds with a quiet insistence that is matched by the inevitability of its denouement. Agent: Rebecca Gradinger, Fletcher & Co. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Joan, a serious young dancer, falls in love with the great Soviet ballet star Arslan Rusakov and helps him defect to the United States. Their affair doesn't last long, for she is only a good dancer, not a great one, thus not a worthy partner for Arslan. She leaves New York, marries her childhood sweetheart, and chooses a different life. As a teacher she finds contentment in nourishing young dancers and later sends two young people one her son into Arslan's brutal dance-centered world. Shipstead brings listeners into this world with skill. The book's structure suggests a series of dances, inevitably moving toward climax but drifting back, not quite ready to bring the dance to an end, always leaving space for the next one. Rebecca Lowman's voice is soft yet somehow cold, using pacing, rather than tonal changes, to differentiate characters, with varying degrees of success. VERDICT Recommended, especially for dancers and those who love them. ["Shipstead moves her story back and forth in time with the same seamless precision found in the details of a beautiful ballet, capturing the brutality of the training, the impossible perfection on stage, and the messy fallout that erupts when personal and professional lines blur," read the review of the Knopf hc, LJ 2/1/14.] Juleigh Muirhead Clark, Colonial Williamsburg Fdn. Lib., VA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

February 1973--Paris Joan kneels in a dark box in the third loge of the Palais Garnier, the Opéra, peeping over the red velvet railing. Six rickety chairs stand close around her, but she knows they creak and is careful not to disturb them. The houselights are down, but the glow from the stage picks out a profusion of gilded plasterwork: serene deities, trumpeting angels, lyres, garlands, flowers, oak leaves, masks, Corinthian columns, all deeply shadowed, piling up around the proscenium and among the boxes like the walls of a craggy gold cave, climbing to Chagall's painted round ceiling of naked angels and voluptuous ballerinas and goats and chickens and lovers and blue Eiffel Tower and red-splotched rendering of the Palais itself. From the center of this hangs the great sleeping chandelier: an enormous gold and glass thistle hung upside down to dry, darkly gleaming. The Kirov's orchestra noodles around in the pit, waiting. At stage left, just in from the wings, the young star who has been the subject of so much hubbub stands in a heavy grey sweater, white tights, and thick army-green leg warmers pulled up to his thighs. Joan's angle is not ideal--she is looking steeply down on him--but he seems too delicate and too boyish to be impressive. Most of the corps girls milling around in black leotards and white practice tutus are taller than he is. The ballerina who is his partner, however, is tiny, like a fairy, and she stands facing away from him, smoking a cigarette in a long white holder and absently blowing rings of smoke. Her head is wrapped in a printed scarf. Rusakov makes one smooth turn around her and plucks the holder from her fingers. He skips backward, puffing and making faces at her. Not taking the bait, she watches impassively, then pivots and disappears into the wings. He tires of his own game at once and presses the cigarette in its holder into the hand of one of the corps girls. She appears terrified by the gift and passes it off to her neighbor, who rushes into the wings after its owner. Joan is not supposed to be watching the rehearsal, but she can always claim she did not understand the remonstrations of the ballet master. Still, to be safe, she had crept in a back door and made her way higher and higher through the gloomy backstage passages and stairways until she emerged into the third loge, which was quiet and a little musty without crowds of gossiping, mingling Parisians. Its balconies overlook the bronze and marble excess of the grand escalier. There is a curved wall of closed doors, each with a round porthole and leading to a box. She had used an usher's key, purloined in advance, to open the door of box 11. Some invisible cue makes the dancers flee the stage and the orchestra collect itself. The conductor lifts his baton, slices down- ward. After a few bars, Rusakov launches out from the wings. He has shed the leg warmers and sweater, and his body, in tights and T-shirt, is perfectly proportioned, muscled but not bulky. His legs appear longer than they are; his ass is round and high. Rumor has it that the Kirov won't cast him as a romantic lead because he is small, preferring to use him as Ali the slave boy or the Bluebird or the Golden Idol, but his stage presence is aggressive and masculine, arrogant. He has arched, almost pointed eyebrows and very dark eyes that bounce imperiously off the empty theater. At first the raked French stages had given Joan trouble. She would migrate toward the pit on her turns, earning a few kicks from the next girl in line. But the stages in Russia are raked, too, and Rusakov shows no discomfort as he flutters downstage, hooking his body from side to side in a series of brisés volés. Another rumor is that he bleaches his hair to look more Russian, less Tatar, and the contrast of his feathered blond mop against his olive skin and black, restless eyes is striking. The choreography is old-fashioned, but as Rusakov circles the stage doing high, perfect coupés jetés en tournant, his technique is not fusty but pure. His movements are quick but unhurried, impossible in their clarity and difficulty and extraordinary in how they seem to burst from nowhere, without any apparent effort or preparation. But the beauty of Arslan's dancing is not what moves Joan to cry in her red velvet aerie: it is a dream of perfection blowing through the theater. She has been dancing since before her fifth birthday, and she realizes that the beauty radiating from him is what she has been chasing all along, what she has been trying to wring out of her own inadequate body. Forgetting herself, she leans out over the railing, wanting to get closer. Étonnez-moi, Diaghilev had said to his dancers in the Ballets Russes. Astonish me. As Rusakov executes a final leap offstage and the music abruptly ends, the silence that follows is an injustice. Someone starts shouting in Russian. It is the artistic director. He leaps from his seat and charges up the aisle, bellowing. Rusakov reappears, his face blank. He listens to the harangue but does not nod, only stares at his slip- pers. Without waiting for the other man to finish, he stalks to the back of the stage, and with no music except the lone, rising, furious voice, comes whirling forward in the fastest chain of steps Joan has ever seen. Each step leads inexorably and precisely into the next. Nearly in the pit, he stops and holds an arabesque, all his momentum falling away, leaving a flawless statue. Then he spits and walks offstage. A deeper silence than before follows. Joan looks up at Chagall's angels. Their fleshy wings are like those of penguins, more like fins than tools of flight. As she gets to her feet, she bumps into the chairs, making a clatter, but she doesn't look back to see if anyone has heard. Behind a curtain, the box has a small antechamber with crimson damask walls, coat hooks, a mirror with a wooden shelf beneath it, and a small velvet fainting couch, also red. She sits on this couch in the dark and snuffles, wiping her face with her hands. After two years in San Francisco, she had come to Europe to dance in a new competition in Switzerland and was spotted there by the director of the Paris Opéra Ballet, who offered to take her on as a quadrille, the lowest rank in the company. There was something about her he liked, he told her. Not everything, but something. He can make her better, if she will work. And so she had come to Paris and rented a room in Montmartre from a sullen girl in the company who does not speak to her. She had a short affair with a violinist who liked to hold her feet, tracing his fingers over the bloody patches and rough calluses. Then she had a slightly longer fling with a dancer, a sujet, as they call soloists, and she has learned enough French to get by. Every morning she goes to the opera house for class in the huge, round studio that hangs like an unpopped bubble between the auditorium and the Opéra's green dome. Instructions come to her mostly as the names of steps, which she only knows in French anyway, and as eight counts and clapping and singing--bum BA BA, bum BA BA--and rapid bursts of elaborate description she can't follow and, sometimes, to her, comme ça, comme ça with a demonstration she imitates as best she can. If she succeeds, she earns a voilà, simple, voilà, c'est tout. If she fails, there is a small grimace, a twitch of the head, a resigned smile, a retreat. For Joan, Paris has the feeling of waiting. All the elegance, the light and water and stone and refined bits of greenery, must be for something, something more than simple habitation and aggressive driving of Renaults and exuberant besmearing with dog shit. The city seems like an offering that has not been claimed. Its beauty is suspenseful. Joan has walked the boulevards and bridges and embankments, sat in the uncomfortable green metal chairs in the Tuileries, puttered down the Seine on a tourist barge, been to the top of the Eiffel Tower, stared politely at countless paintings, been leered at and kissed at by so many men, stood in patches of harlequin light in a dozen chilly naves, bought a scarf she couldn't afford, surreptitiously stroked the neatly stacked skulls in the catacombs, listened to jazz, gotten drunk on wine, ridden on the back of scooters, done everything she thinks she should in Paris, and still there has always been the feeling of something still to come, a purpose as yet unmet, an expectation. But, now, in the dark, on the red velvet couch where fashionable Parisian ladies used to retire from the scrutiny of the opera house, Joan finds herself unexpectedly atop a moment that feels significant. Her life, unbeknownst to her, was narrowing around this point, funneling her toward it. The city was never waiting. She was waiting. For Arslan. Already she has started to think of him by his first name. If the beauty of Paris is suspenseful, the beauty of his dancing is almost terrible. It harrows her. Her throat is tight with fear. She is afraid of how this man, this stranger, has already changed the sensation of being alive. She is afraid he will slip away. All the things she has felt for months--the mundane loneliness, the frustration with language, the nagging anxiety, the gratitude for the opportunity to dance--all that is gone, replaced with brutal need. She should leave. She should go home and then to class tomorrow and the next day and the day after that. But her need is too powerful to ignore. She must see it through. Carefully, she eases the door of the box shut behind her. The loge and escalier are deserted. The orchestra kicks up again, muted and distant. She has left the door to the back staircase propped open, and she passes into the convoluted innards of the Palais, making a few navigational flourishes to avoid spots where she might encounter Opéra stage crew or where the Kirov would be likely to have stationed security guards. She goes up through a stairwell and along a catwalk through the fly tower, where the painted backdrops fall silently through space like huge blades, and then she descends and descends. He will not be in the best dressing room; she guesses he will be in one of the second best, and she must cross the width of the theater to get there, something most covertly done through one of the basements. Her loneliness within the company has made her an expert in the geography of the opera house. Between rehearsals, when the others go out together for espresso or climb to the roof to gaze across the city and smoke with patina-green Apollo and his upraised lyre, she wanders the corridors and staircases, seeks out corners where she can sit invisibly and read a book. Some doors are locked but not as many as should be. The concierge is lazy. The cryptlike basement is dark, but she finds a switch. Harsh fluorescence lights its stone vaults and the piles of miscellaneous stage junk underneath them. There are plain black cases for delicate things--lights, perhaps--in neat, anonymous stacks, but then there are loose assemblages of props: foam boulders, tables and chairs, floppy velvet stags, crates of fake fruit, canopy beds in pieces, an elaborate tomb, thrones, swords, scepters, a guillotine, carriages, muskets, angels' wings, donkeys' heads, trees, a magnificent rubber boa constrictor, Corinthian columns, and heaps of other jumbled objects under plastic sheeting or canvas tarps from the gas-lamp days. Joan hurries through, pausing only to lift the drape from an oval mirror and look at herself. She sees a flushed face, lank hair, eyes dilated in the gloom, a floral dress too thin for the season, tight in the waist like Parisian women wear. She draws herself up. She tells herself she is ethereal, mysterious. She will simply appear, like the fairy in the window in La Sylphide. She reaches under her skirt and pulls off her ratty underwear, dropping the scrap of cloth into an enormous urn, three feet tall, dusty and black, that stands beside a pile of wooden gravestones. His name is written on a piece of tape stuck on a door. She is waiting when he comes in, his sodden T-shirt already stripped off and balled up in his hand. He pauses and glances back out into the hallway, looking both ways before he shuts the door. For a moment, he studies her. Then he touches her cheek and says, "Très belle." He shows her the tears that come away on his fingers. "Mais pourquoi triste?" "Je ne suis pas triste. Je suis très heureuse parce que je suis avec le meilleur danseur du monde." He does not seem especially flattered or surprised to find a strange girl speaking schoolgirl French in his dressing room, calling him the best dancer in the world. Nor does he appear impressed by how she managed to evade the Kirov security men or confused about what to do with her. Ordinarily, her love affairs are entered into skittishly, sometimes reluctantly. She doesn't dive into bed but flutters in like a wayward moth. But now she strips off Arslan's damp tights almost violently, as though she were skinning an animal. On the floor, his black eyes flick to her--amused, not especially surprised-- when he discovers she is naked under her dress. The glance reminds her of how he had looked spotting his turns, arrogant, tapping his gaze briefly, indifferently against the empty theater, needing nothing from it. Clutching this Russian stranger, smelling his sweat, feeling the oddly remote pressure of him inside her, she wants some piece of the fearsome beauty he has onstage. She wants to take some of his perfection for herself. He buries his face in her neck, as though flattening himself against a bomb blast. Even as his body presses on her, chest to chest, the outsides of his legs against the insides of hers, he seems hidden. She pries his face up with both hands, makes him look at her. Still, she isn't satisfied. She cranes her neck so their faces are as close as they can be without touching. "Regarde-moi," she whispers. "Tu m'étonnes." He tries to twist his head away, but she holds on. "Regarde-moi," she says again. Something travels through the dark eyes, some obscure disturbance. And then he looks at her the way she wants. He sees her; she knows he does. She releases his face, but he doesn't look away, not until he is done and closes his eyes. Before she leaves, she writes her name and her mother's address in Virginia on a slip of paper with a kohl pencil. She does not expect to hear from him. Excerpted from Astonish Me by Maggie Shipstead All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.