Biography of X
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4.0 • 4 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
When X - an iconoclastic artist, writer and polarizing shape-shifter - dies suddenly, her widow, wild with grief, hurls herself into writing a biography of the woman she deified. Though X was recognised as a crucial creative force of her era, she kept a tight grip on her life story. Not even CM, her wife, knew where X had been born, and in her quest to find out, she opens a Pandora's box of secrets, betrayals and destruction. All the while she immerses herself in the history of the Southern Territory, a fascist theocracy that split from the rest of the country after World War II, as it is finally, in the present day, forced into an uneasy reunification.
A masterfully constructed, counter-factual literary adventure, complete with original images assembled by X's widow, Biography of X follows a grieving wife seeking to understand the woman who enthralled her. CM traces X's peripatetic trajectory over decades, from Europe to the ruins of America's divided territories, and through her collaborations and feuds with everyone from David Bowie and Tom Waits to Susan Sontag and Kathy Acker. And when she finally understands the scope of X's defining artistic project, CM realises her wife's deceptions were far crueller than she imagined.
Pulsing with suspense and intellect, Biography of X is a roaring epic that plumbs the depths of grief, art and love, and that introduces an unforgettable character who shows us the fallibility of the stories we craft for ourselves.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lacey follows up Pew with an audacious novel of art and ideas set in an alternate late 20th century. It comprises a book titled Biography of X, which was published in 2005 by a journalist named C.M. Lucca. That book's subject, X, a pseudonymous multidisciplinary art star, reaches cult status as a novelist in 1973, when she's in her 20s (in one of many deliberately anachronistic references, X receives fan mail from a yet-to-be published Denis Johnson). Later, X travels to West Berlin to record with David Bowie, and, back in New York City, becomes a controversial performance artist. Lucca meets X in the mid-1980s, and they marry in 1990. Same-sex marriages are legal, thanks to progressive advances decades earlier pushed through by Emma Goldman, FDR's chief of staff. Goldman's agenda, though, led to a Southern secession in 1945. Shortly after the country is reunified in 1996, X dies from an unspecified cause. After an unauthorized biography of X is published, Lucca embarks on a project to set the record straight. She begins in the small Mississippi town where X was born, which X kept a secret to protect her from agents of the Southern Territory. As Lucca conducts interviews over the next several years, she begins to doubt how well she knew X after all. Lacey does a brilliant job convincing readers of Lucca's chops as a reporter, even as Lucca becomes unhinged. The author also perfectly marries her invented history with her study of a shape-shifting artist, with X refashioning herself both to escape her ultraconservative homeland and to build a vehicle for her creative expression. This is brilliant.
Customer Reviews
Solve for X. Or not. It’s up to you.
3.5 stars
The author is American. Her CV includes a Guggenheim fellowship, a Whiting Award, and the 2021 NYPL Young Lions Fiction Award, three previous novels and a short collection. A sizeable proportion of the NY literati have their knickers in a twist, metaphorically speaking, about this, her latest novel.
The book opens with the narrator CM mourning the death of her late wife X, an “iconoclastic artist, writer, and polarizing shape-shifter” (to quote the blurb). She is approached by a dude writing a biography, and refuses to cooperate. Others do. She decides to write her own biography of the great whatever, about whom she seems to know precious little considering they were married. That’s far from the weirdest thing about this book, which is set in an alternate history where the southern half of what we call America split off from the northern part post-WW2 and is ruled by a fundamentalist religious/neo-fascist regime that’s, well, let’s call them not very progressive. Consequences include no American involvement in the Vietnam war, a bonus, although there are negatives too. Our gal CM learns that X was born in the South, and how she escaped, then of her celebrity life featuring cameos by luminaries like Susan Sontag, Kathy Acker, David Bowie and Tom Waits. Oh, and a female alter ego of Brian Eno named Brianna Eno. Did I mention there’s a bit of mixed media going on and that CM was an unreliable narrator? And that this is a novel within a novel which makes it meat. Damn you spell check, I meant meta. The truth of X, who might or might not have even existed, remains mysterious to the end, to me at least, but I liked the avant-garde prose. I probably would have liked it more if there weren’t quite so much of it.