The Globe
& Mail, 12
September, 1992
Healing the
Dead
By D. F. Bailey
Douglas & McIntyre, 182 pages, $16.95
There are trick endings—and then there are trick
beginnings. Right off the bat in D. F. Bailey’s new novel,
Healing the Dead, you know someone named Brad is going to
die.
Brad Watson is only a little boy, seven or eight years old
at most. He dies in a basement playroom filled with no one
but other children in the middle of an innocent game of
dress-up in that most innocent of years, 1956.
The possible means of his inevitable dispatch flash by with
quickening intensity. There is a dreadful lightning storm
outside. Brad runs through it without incident. He brings
from his home next door a bag which includes a bag of his
father’s war treasures, which includes medals and buttons
and a German dagger with a serrated edge, “perfect for
cutting through enemy bone.” The knife edge is allowed to
glisten awhile in your imagination, but nothing,
mercifully, comes of it.
You start reading Healing the Dead with a gasp and never
get a proper chance to exhale. The first chapter ends with
not one, but two bangs. Little Rose Sykes, playing mobster
moll, pulls the trigger of the putative toy gun not once,
but twice. It is the second bullet that kills Brad Watson.
That second bullet ricochets through the lives of the Sykes
family—Harris, Catrina and their three children, Jayne,
Rose and David. Their disintegration, singly and
collectively, over a period of 13 years makes for a
psychologically compelling story. Like the single bullet
from the Ortgies 7.65-calibre automatic that Seymour Glass
put through his right temple in J. D. Salinger’s short
story, A Perfect Day for Banana Fish, it is an agent of
harrowing change.
The Sykes are a sort of white-bread Glass family. The
parents are far from retired vaudevillians—Harris works for
the Canadian government as an international economist and
is often out of town, while Catrina is a housewife who
learns to self-medicate from the liquor cabinet.
But what reminded me of Salinger’s timeless stories and
nouvellas was the relationship between David and his sister
Rose. Like Zooey trying to talk Fanny out of her nervous
breakdown, David lives in anticipation of Rose’s next step
toward madness. When Rose takes to phoning David before
daybreak every night, I fully expected him to say to her,
as one of the Glass children once did, “Keep me up till
three in the morning because all your stars are out and for
no other reason.”
Bailey’s omniscient narrator turns on a dime. He writes
very convincingly from the point of view of all his
characters, bringing us close in on Catrina collapsed into
sobs against the steering wheel of her Buick Electra in a
mall parking lot, or Jayne in exhilaration standing upon
the back seat of her boy friend’s motorcycle at a biker’s
rally. But while he handles the women—both as girls and
adults—more than credibly, it’s apparent that his primary
empathy lies with young David.
David is a very Baudrillardian hero, literally connected to
reality only through its image. From his Kodak Brownie
Bulls-Eye to the sophisticated 35mm Canon that winds up
being smashed against a window grate, his lens is both his
eyes and his soul:
“He found the camera added a certain richness to seeing the
world: the split image in the range finder, the focus, the
blown-up enlargements. With a camera he could see things
that didn’t appear to him in any other way. And, of course,
it helped him remember. The pictures remembered the truth,
the exact way life happened without the soft filters of
nostalgia and hope blurring the hard edges of reality. The
facts of Rose’s punctured hand and Brad’s dead body
stretched on the basement floor.”
Of course David discovers that even the objective “truth”
of photographs can be manipulated, and, in learning to
manipulate that truth himself, he arrives at a disquieting
maturity. It adds a great deal to the complexity of this
coming-of-age novel that is played against a backdrop of
the social and moral upheaval of the sixties, and that the
Sykeses pick up and move their family turmoil from Toronto
to the churn of Manhattan.
This is Bailey’s second novel. His previous work, Fire
Eyes, was nominated for the 1987 W. H. Smith / Books in
Canada First Novel Award. I’m not aware that there are any
prizes specifically for second novels, but if there were,
I’d certainly consider Healing the Dead to be in the
running. —Eve Drobot