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Book Review: ‘Stag Dance: A Novel and Stories,’ by Torrey Peters


STAG DANCE: A Novel and Stories, by Torrey Peters


In an 1817 letter to his brothers, the poet John Keats defined the concept of negative capability as “when a man is capable of being in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.” This is a quintessential trait of a great writer, who must know everything but create characters who know nothing, or only the wrong things, or different things on different pages. In her discomforting new collection, “Stag Dance,” Torrey Peters excels at this particular kind of unknowing. Hopscotching through genres and decades, Peters, across three short stories and a novella, summons up characters whose ideas about sex, gender and sexuality exist beyond (or before, or to the side of) our current orthodoxies.

Set in the early 1900s, the titular novella explores what happens when a restless winter camp of “timber pirates” decides to throw a gender-bending soiree. Any man can declare himself a “skooch” for the night and be courted by the others, but when the biggest, ugliest lumberjack, Babe Bunyan, steps up first, it upsets the camp’s surprisingly fragile hierarchy of manhood. Babe Bunyan knows the other men expect (and even want) Lisen, the youngest, slightest, most feminine axman to take the role of skooch.

Bunyan’s own desires are unclear even to him. He wants to play the skooch, and he wants the men to court him, but more than anything, Bunyan wants Lisen to recognize that they are the same in some essential way that he can’t define. Plaintively, he wonders, “How do you beg when you don’t even know the words to beg with?” When this desire for sisterhood gets thwarted, the stag dance becomes a violent competition. “We were rivals,” Bunyan reflects of his new dynamic with Lisen. That, in a way, is his dream achieved. Because “to be rivals is to be something the same.”



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