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Tuesday

Flash Focus: Craige Reeves’s “The Pit # 1” Invites Readers to the Dark Side

The Pit # 1
Craige Reeves

I circled the pit,
nearly blind. I had been blindfolded, but I had loosened it by rubbing it
against the wall. The pit is cylindrical, hence--pit. I could not loosen the
blindfold because Nemo had cut my arms off. You think I'm kidding? I'm writing
this with my mouth. He put pen and paper here to make me squirm. Poor Nemo;
John won't squirm.

He
threw down duct tape. Told me to choke myself with it. Get it over with quick.
He had knocked me out with ether and then injected me with Novocain;
100c.c.--every four hours. We'll have no O.D. in my pit.

The
big hearted S.O.B. The worst of my suffering, aside from pain, was taping these
notes to the rats. Ever hold down a sewer rat with your chin while you
diligently tape on the note with your mouth? I'll never proffer my left hand to
be shook as a joke again.

Originally appeared in Craige Reeves's Flash
Fiction (
Vantage Press Inc.
)

Craige Reeves' "The Pit #1" (the first
of four sections) invites readers into an incredible physical and mental
hell
. The narrator--John--is maimed and "nearly blind" as well as stuck in a
"cylindrical pit" where he is forced to confront himself through handling his
own "suffering." The suppression of the pit, its cylindrical nature, represents
the repetitious aspect of the situation. John's willingness to "write with
[his] mouth" as well as his determination to attach help "notes" to filthy
"sewer rats" portrays his desire to survive. Although we do not know the exact
reasons why John was thrown into the pit, we can relate with his impulse to
live
. Yet John does not just want to live, he expects to live. The
last sentence implies that he believes he will return to his old life, and it
also shows how the character uses jokes as a form of coping with this ordeal.

What attracts me to this piece is the characterization,
not just of John but also of Nemo.
Although we never actually see him, his
exploits haunt the page when he administers drugs and severs limbs
apathetically. In less than two hundred words, Reeves' has created two
complex characters with real desires and motivations.
John must have done
something awful to Nemo in order for him to act like this.  John, too, shows some apathy. "Poor
Nemo," the narrator says as if Nemo is the one in the pit. It is interesting
that John acts like he is the one in control, and perhaps he is considering he
refuses to commit suicide though Nemo urges him to do so. (Yet could John kill
himself without arms, anyway? Maybe Nemo is no more than a "S.O.B" like John
stated.) And even though John talks of his "suffering", he appears to avoid the
subject all together, because "John won't squirm." He does not allow anything
or anyone defeat him. Whatever the relationship between John and Nemo, the
suspense pushes the narrative forward in an incredible way.

This piece draws me to flash fiction
because of its inventiveness and ability to delve into both the strength and
darker side of human nature in such a brief passage
. Although I have read
numerous stories where characters are trapped or imprisoned, I have never read
one about an armless man seizing rats with his chin as a means to stay alive.
Even more interesting is how the character deals with this predicament. Here,
John does not die or give up. He goes on, using every possible way to escape
while maintaining that "the worst of [the] suffering" is in fact not
actually the worst of the suffering.

In addition, this flash story provides
its readers with both surprise and suspense
: the surprise of the creepy
situation and the suspense of what will happen now that we know the sadistic
nature of Nemo. Likewise, I appreciate how this piece begins in media res and
avoids back story. All the unanswered questions leave me thinking about the
story even after it's over.

About the Author

Photo[1].jpgBenjamin Grossman is an MFA in Creative Writing candidate at Rosemont College. He writes screenplays and novels, as well as poetry and flash
fiction. He experiments with mixing different writing genres, but prefers to
write fiction. In his free time, Benjamin enjoys listening to music, reading
history, running, and watching sports.

       Flash Fiction Symbol

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5 comments

From Alina Ladyzhensky

Your read­ing of this piece real­ly piqued my inter­est & made me look at what’s hap­pen­ing here more close­ly– I won­der, since I haven’t read the oth­er three sto­ries in this series: are these notes real­ly ‘help’ notes? This first one doesn’t real­ly strike me as such, but maybe I’m see­ing it out of con­text. As you said, John might (or cer­tain­ly, might NOT have) done ter­ri­ble to war­rant this treat­ment… This strikes me as less of a call for help than a chron­i­cle of his time in this hell­ish pit. Chron­i­cles of an inmate, or some­thing. There’s this weird under­cur­rent of black humor here that I can’t seem to shake– it makes the piece all the more haunt­ing.

I love the dark humor. This piece is just so spooky in gen­er­al. Nice inter­pre­ta­tion, Ben. 

From Leo

This piece intrigued me for a few rea­sons. First, I’m impressed with John’s per­sis­tent desire to over­come this obsta­cle that seems all too impos­si­ble to over­come. I found it inter­est­ing that not only is he writ­ing a let­ter with­out the use of his hands, he is also writ­ing it with­out his eye­sight. Sec­ond, the dark humor in this piece is rather sub­tle and appro­pri­ate. Ter­ri­ble times in life some­times are eas­i­er to han­dle when humor is uti­lized, and I think this piece in a way com­mu­ni­cates that to the read­er.

From Carrie Capili

Well done inter­pre­ta­tion! It def­i­nite­ly push­es me to read the remain­ing four sec­tions. This piece pulls you in in a very heavy way and doesn’t let go. 

From Garret Gaudens

Excel­lent entry, Ben. This is tru­ly an orig­i­nal sto­ry. Now I need to read the oth­er three. Using his chin to pin down the rats was an espe­cial­ly vivid detail.

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