The Way Things Go
Louis Bury
Published on September 12, 2023 by punctum books
- Pages
- 300 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 5⤫8 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-118-4 (Paperback)
- ISBN (PDF)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-119-1 (PDF)
- LCCN
- LCCN: 2023944167
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: POE005010, POE023010, SCI092000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: 6NP, DCF, FXE
The Way Things Go contains a mix of poetry, art writing, and life writing about anticipatory grief, or mourning someone or something before it’s gone. Each successive chapter in the book decreases in length by exactly one sentence, from a 71-sentence-long opening chapter, to a 70-sentence-long second chapter, to 69 sentences, 68 sentences, and so on down to 1 (a book-length Oulipian “melting snowball”). This shrinking form enacts the book’s concerns with loss, climate change, and the passage of time.
At the level of its content, however, The Way Things Go is not fatalistic. Its title comes from a cult classic 1987 Fischli and Weiss film, in which objects such as bags of trash, car tires, and oil drums knock into one another in a Rube Goldberg-esque chain reaction. Moving through both personal history (his sister’s lupus and heroin addiction, his grandmother’s experience as a Holocaust survivor) and more global concerns (the Sixth Mass Extinction, COVID-19, the war in Ukraine), Bury considers the disruptions that occur as “things go,” as well as the continuity that remains. The book suggests that recent negotiations between optimism and pessimism with respect to the future reflect people’s feelings of vulnerability, particularly people who are used to taking their life’s stability for granted, in a world that seems increasingly precarious.
Biographies
Louis Bury is an art critic, author of Exercises in Criticism (Dalkey Archive Press, 2015), and Associate Professor of English at Hostos Community College, CUNY. He contributes regularly to Hyperallergic, BOMB, and Art in America.
Endorsements
Una Chaudhuri
author of Ecocide: Research Theatre and Climate Change
New York University
As rising right-wing nationalism and accelerating climate chaos breed existential despair and political paralysis, the need to identify strategies to resist fatalism intensifies. The Way Things Go responds to that need with rare honesty, generosity, and playfulness, building an ark of texts—found, borrowed, gorgeously composed, breath-takingly discovered—and inviting the reader to go the way things do: growing while diminishing, learning while forgetting, letting in while letting go. Using one of the book’s most fertile images, one could say that this book teaches ‘the way of the hourglass,’ the gift of endlessly beginning again.
Daniel Levin Becker
author of Many Subtle Channels: In Praise of Potential Literature
The Way Things Go bears the beguiling melancholy of many of the past century’s best experiments in conceptual introspection—see Édouard Levé, On Kawara, Annette Messager—but none of the aloofness. It is vulnerable and courageous and urgent, poignant and probing and wise, fleetingly but luminously alive.
Reviews
Louis Bury's The Way Things Go(opens in new tab)
Raphael Rubinstein
2023 Small Press Gift Guide(opens in new tab)
For the people working on overcoming their fear of dying.
Additional resources
Using writing constraints to range widely. .
Usage metrics
Funding
Genres
- Anthropocene
- Thought Experiments
Keywords
- addiction
- art criticism
- climate change
- constraint-based writing
- eco art
- experimental writing
- Oulipo
- Sixth Mass Extinction
