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"Seasons clear, and awe" - chapter 1

PILCROW opens a serialized novel contest not with a pitch for market disruption, but with a quiet, devastating observation: that post-industrial America has produced a generation "too intelligent for ordinary happiness, too self-aware for decisive action." This is not merely a story about a family; it is a psychological autopsy of a specific class experience in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where the ghosts of heavy industry haunt the living room. The piece's most distinctive claim is that the greatest inheritance for the children of the working class is not wealth, but "their parents' unlived ambitions and their mother's gift for psychological dissection."

The Architecture of Anxiety

PILCROW frames the narrative through the lens of a marriage strained by the weight of unspoken history. The author writes, "The only fundamental thing they had in common, actually, was a desire for kids, and a solid middle class respect for the duties entailed therein." This observation cuts deep, suggesting that the glue holding this family together is a shared sense of obligation rather than deep emotional resonance. The commentary here is sharp: the author posits that the parents, Adele and Michael, are suspended between the "working-class pragmatism of their fathers and the creative and spiritual aspirations of their mothers," a limbo that renders them "capable of everything except building lives."

"Seasons clear, and awe" - chapter 1

The text draws a powerful parallel to the industrial decline of the region, noting that Michael and Adele, whose ancestors worked at Bethlehem Steel, view the neighbor's son, Gary, as a "haunting possibility that the middle class might become the underclass again at any time." This fear is not abstract; it is the backdrop against which their domestic anxieties play out. PILCROW effectively uses the setting to mirror the internal state of the characters, where the "feedback loop of the entire planet was expressed or represented in the miniature of the neighborhood."

"Marriage was a constant fine-tuning of constants, and you had to have faith in the fine-tuning process and the little adjustments that enabled coexistence."

This metaphor of marriage as a mechanical adjustment rather than a romantic union is the piece's emotional core. It reframes the domestic squabbles over movies or bedtime not as trivialities, but as the essential maintenance required to keep the fragile structure of a middle-class life from collapsing. Critics might argue that this view of marriage is overly cynical, ignoring the potential for genuine growth and connection outside of duty. However, the text's strength lies in its refusal to romanticize the struggle, presenting the "artless religiosity" of family life as a necessary, if exhausting, ritual.

The Weight of the Past

The narrative is steeped in a sense of historical inevitability, echoing the themes found in Hart Crane's poetry, which PILCROW quotes to set the tone: "Bind us in time, O Seasons clear, and awe." This literary allusion is not mere decoration; it anchors the family's personal history in a broader cultural moment of loss and transition. The author notes that Adele, having terminated her psychoanalysis, turns to her husband to "absorb her mental energy," a dynamic that highlights the isolation of the modern individual. As PILCROW puts it, "He was a history teacher, and, technically, a Catholic, but he only understood these catechisms now in a firm way: the way his father had understood them."

This generational transmission of trauma and belief is a recurring motif. The text suggests that the characters are trapped in a cycle where the past dictates the present, much like the "latticework of ions becoming crystals, becoming larger structures" that the author describes in a moment of cosmic reflection. The author writes, "With the possible exception of painkillers and the C-section, her body would experience childbirth and motherhood the same way that all of her female ancestors had, as a sacrifice and transference of vitality." This line is particularly striking, as it connects the biological reality of motherhood to the historical continuity of female suffering, a theme that resonates with the psychoanalytic tradition of exploring the unconscious drives that shape our lives.

The piece also touches on the class dynamics of the region, contrasting the "foliate" abundance of the late summer with the underlying fear of social decline. PILCROW notes that the family chose Bethlehem to avoid the "urban blight" of Philadelphia, yet they remain haunted by the possibility of falling back into the underclass. This tension between aspiration and reality is the engine of the narrative, driving the characters toward a future that feels both inevitable and uncertain.

Bottom Line

PILCROW's opening chapter succeeds by grounding high-concept literary themes in the gritty reality of a suburban living room, creating a portrait of a generation defined by what it cannot build. The strongest element is the seamless integration of historical context—specifically the legacy of Bethlehem Steel and the psychological weight of the post-industrial era—into the intimate details of family life. The biggest vulnerability is the potential for the narrative to become too introspective, risking a detachment from the external world that might alienate readers seeking more plot-driven engagement. However, for those willing to engage with the slow burn of psychological realism, this is a compelling invitation to explore the hidden costs of the American dream.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • Hart Crane

    The novel's title and epigraph come directly from Hart Crane's poetry (specifically 'Voyages'). Understanding this modernist American poet's tragic life and his ambitious epic 'The Bridge' provides essential context for the novel's themes of artistic ambition, American identity, and the tension between working-class origins and creative aspiration.

  • Bethlehem Steel

    The novel is set in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and explicitly addresses 'post-industrial, late 20th century America.' Bethlehem Steel was once the second-largest steel producer in America and its decline devastated the Lehigh Valley region where this family lives, directly shaping the economic and cultural landscape the characters inhabit.

  • Psychoanalysis

    Adele's history with psychoanalysis in Philadelphia is explicitly mentioned and shapes her character—her tendency toward 'psychological dissection' and her frustration when her husband won't explore his past. Understanding Freudian psychoanalysis illuminates her worldview and the generational divide between analytical self-examination and working-class pragmatism central to the novel.

Sources

"Seasons clear, and awe" - chapter 1

by PILCROW · · Read full article

Today begins PILCROW’s Inaugural Serialized Novel Contest. Over the next three weeks, we’ll serialize the first few chapters of our three Finalist’s unpublished novels, and then subscribers (both free and paid) will vote on a Winner to be fully serialized here on the Substack. (Finalists are awarded $500; the Winner $1,000.)

Our Finalists for this round:

Seasons Clear, and Awe by Matthew Gasda

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Mites by Gregory Freedman

Notes on the State of Virginia by Peter Pnin

We’re excited to have all of you as a part of this endeavor to forge a new path for fiction on Substack. If you believe in what we’re doing, please consider offering a paid subscription.

“Seasons Clear, and Awe” chronicles three decades in the life of the Gazda family, whose children inherit not wealth but something more dangerous: their parents’ unlived ambitions and their mother’s gift for psychological dissection. As Stephen and Elizabeth grow from precocious children into neurotic artists in their thirties, Matthew Gasda reveals how post-industrial, late 20th century America created a generation too intelligent for ordinary happiness, too self-aware for decisive action: suspended between the working-class pragmatism of their fathers and the creative and spiritual aspirations of their mothers, capable of everything except building lives.

Matthew Gasda is the founder of the Brooklyn Center for Theater Research and the author of many books, including the recent novel The Sleepers and Writer’s Diary.

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Bind us in time, O Seasons clear, and awe.

O minstrel galleons of Carib fire,

Bequeath us to no earthly shore until

Is answered in the vortex of our grave

The seal’s wide spindrift gaze toward paradise.

— Hart Crane

These beauteous forms,

Through a long absence, have not been to me

As is a landscape to a blind man’s eye

— Wordsworth

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—1992—

They had bought the house from the estate of a woman named Emily Ebberly, who had died in her 80’s, childless. The kitchen was in bad shape, the tiling coming up, and the floorboards needed sanding and lacquering. But the potential was there and they were, for the time being, happy.

Adele had taken her husband’s name, unlike her best friend Mariana, who had opted to hyphenate, and Adele took a secret pleasure in not making such a fuss out of family life: it all came so naturally to her, or so she imagined. Michael, already having ...