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The Machine in Ward Eleven

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Title: The Machine in Ward Eleven
by Charles Willeford
ISBN: 1-56858-210-2
Publisher: Four Walls Eight Windows
Pub. Date: 09 September, 2001
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $12.95
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Average Customer Rating: 3.5 (2 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Six stories of madness
Comment: Originally published in the early '60s, The Machine in Ward 11 is a collection of six short stories by Charles Ray Willeford. Though the six stories all stand independent from each other, a theme of madness and disillusionment runs through them. A brilliant film director goes insane when his artistic vision is curtailed by the demands of reality. A cocky air force pilot commits a senseless murder and finds himself assigned to the mountains of Tibet as an indirect consequence. A recovering alcoholic discovers that giving up drinking is possibly the worst thing he's ever done. These stories are filled with a wry sense of the macabre. Of these stories, three were previously published and three were written (I assume) specifically for this book. The three original stories -- A Letter to A.A., "Just Like On Television," and Jake's Journal are the strongest in the collection. I was especially enthralled by Jake's Journal (which deals with the unfortunate pilot in Tibet) which is a story that defies any easy interpretation. While at first, it seems that the story will be a rather standard tale of a man going insane in isolation, Willeford instead piles on more and more bizarre anecdotes and incidents before building up to a brilliant, tour-de-force ending.

Willeford, best known for writing Miaimi Blues, is often dismissed as an occasionally interesting but otherwise unremarkable writer of pulp fiction. This dismissal manages to unfairly underrate both Willeford's talent and pulp fiction itself. While the melodrama was often sordid and over-the-top, pulp fiction -- especially in the years immediately following World War II -- often served to give voice to a darkened and, at times quite critical view of the American Dream then one might find in more "respectable" books. Often that is why, while most of the previous decades' best sellers have since faded into obscurity, the works of Mickey Spillane, Chester Himes, Jim Thompson, Richard Stark, and others have continued to be reissued and read. At the heart of the best pulp fiction was a universal fear of the future and an ongoing debate between human desires and human society. These are concepts that remain universal to readers spanning both time and location. These are also the concepts that Willeford deals with in The Machine In Ward Eleven.

Rating: 3
Summary: A Gulp of Pulp
Comment: The book contains six stories:

The title story is the creepy account of an asylum inmate forced to take drastic action in order to avoid electro-shock treatment.

"Selected Incidents," a tribute to Fitzgerald's Pat Hobby stories, is a pitch-perfect parody of a Hollywood picture producer.

"A Letter To A.A. (Almost Anybody)" is an alcoholic's confession that sets up like a Raymond Carver story and then delivers an ironic payoff that is straight out of Fredric Brown.

"Jake's Journal" is the first person account of an American serviceman who runs afoul of his superiors in the Phillipines and is exiled to a lonely airstrip in Tibet where he slowly goes mad.

"Just Like On Television" is a parody of one of Jack Webb's suspect interviews on the old "Dragnet" TV show. The entire story is told in a Q&A format between an interviewing detective and a discursive suspect.

"The Alectryomancer" is the story of a Caribbean conman who uses trained roosters to predict the future.

The back-cover copy calls Willeford's stories "almost Chekhovian." This is nonsense. His work can hold its own with the short fiction of Fredric Brown, Jack Finney, Richard Matheson, or Charles Beaumont, but there is nothing particularly deep or memorable about it. The stories are clever pieces of American pulp fiction circa 1960, but they are very much of their time and haven't aged particularly well.

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