xTx’s Nobody Trusts a Black Magician

December 6, 2009
By

coversmHere is a collection of non-traditional character snapshots, often vulgar, often disturbing, and always appreciated for its unwillingness to dodge moral conflict. xTx’s Nobody Trusts a Black Magician beautifully relies on shock to entice the reader, offering visceral descriptions of subject matter not often tackled, even among the non-profit micropress word, from which this collection comes. xTx is not shy, and it’s damn hard not to love her material for that very reason.

Each story has a stark, matter-of-fact tone reminiscent of a Noah Cicero work, and often carries bizarro sensibilities in terms of subject matter. But, neither of these descriptions should deflate the moments of poetry peppered throughout the collection. In “Saving the Meat,” a very plausible reality sets the story’s tone, laying out a basic plot about one character’s confusion over another character’s insistence on saving a few small leftover meat slices from her dinner. But the final lines pierce the calm reality:

On the drive home, I make a silent plan to save the slices. Come midnight, penlight in mouth, I’ll jump over the razor wire and come courageous (pg. 9)

This juxtaposition of the absurd with the real is what gives Nobody Trusts a Black Magician its power. Take this section, from “So Much of the Same,” which showcases xTx’s skills collectively (brackets mine):

I want to lie next to you in a bed covered in four-day-old sweat, male and female cum, and wine [the disturbing]. Lying there I want to fight over the same breath with you [the emotionally arresting]. Eyes closed, lips so close to touching. Sun rising then setting. Getting lost. Drowning [the poetic]. (pg. 10)

Review by Caleb J Ross

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Caleb J. Ross


Caleb J. Ross has been published widely, both online and in print. He graduated with a degree in English Lit and a minor in creative writing from Emporia State University in 2005. He is the author of Charactered Pieces: stories (OW Press), Stranger Will: a novel (Otherworld Publications, 2011), As a Machine and Parts (Aqueous Books, 2011) and, I Didn’t Mean to Be Kevin: a novel (Black Coffee Press, 2011).

4 Responses to xTx’s Nobody Trusts a Black Magician

  1. avatar
    Mel Bosworth on December 6, 2009 at 5:18 pm

    ahhhhhh, yeah.

  2. avatar
    Luis Rivas on December 6, 2009 at 6:47 pm

    I have just recently stumbled upon xTx’s work. It’s hard not to hate her guts for her monsterous amount of talent and skill, and the how easy she makes it all seem.

  3. avatar
    xtx on December 6, 2009 at 8:07 pm

    Thanks Caleb!

    and thanks Mel for making that sound and thanks Luis for hating my guts! ;-)

  4. avatar
    Emma on December 7, 2009 at 9:00 am

    I completely agree with Luis. xTx, you are crazily, eerily good. Freaks me out.