24. Brian Phillips, Impossible Owls: Essays (2018) (12/25/25)
I have no recollection of where I heard about this book, but I'm glad I did. A collection of eight essays, it ranges far and wide and is full of sparkling writing. The subject matter covers the 2013 Iditarod, sumo wrestling and the writer Yukio Mishima, Area 51, the Russian animator Yuri Norstein (whom
I devoted a post to last week, I so enjoyed that essay), man-eating tigers in India, "science fiction in small towns" (in particular, Phillips's interesting takes on
Wrath of the Titans, Star Trek: The Next Generation, and
The X-Files as reflections of American society), Queen Elizabeth II and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, and finally, the checkered story of a woman, Lydie Marland, from the small town Phillips grew up in, Ponca City, Oklahoma.
The "impossible owls" of the title aren't addressed specifically, but in almost every essay owls make a brief appearance. For example, here, in describing the sumo phenom, Mongolian-born Hakuhō Shō, it is in contrast to Gagamaru,
the Georgian wrestler who is currently [2014] the largest man in top-division sumo—440 pounds and a little over six feet tall—[and] looks like a canyon seen from the air, all crevasses and folds. Hakuho, by contrast, is a single large stone, an owl quickly sketched by Miyazaki. His face is vague. Once in a while he will glance to one side with what looks like critical intelligence. Then he blurs again.
In the Area 51 essay, "The Lost Highway," Phillips describes meeting "a man who said owls forecast his destiny." This man, Mike, speaks freely of paranormal events he has experienced, or given thought to. "There's a beauty to his stories," Phillips writes,
most of which are about how, when something truly inexplicable happens, owls tend to turn up around the edges of the event. You'll see a dozen of them on a telephone wire, and then, around the next corner, the spacecraft. Owls appear with unnerving frequency in what those who believe they've been abducted call screen memories, artificial recollections implanted by aliens to mask what really took place. Mike's written a book, collecting accounts of owls in paranormal events. He thinks they might be psychic projections of extraterrestrial beings. As in cloaks that aliens wear to hide from us. The more real an owl appears, perhaps, the less likely it is to be what it seems. Perhaps many of the things that seem most vividly real to us seem so because they overlap a world of dreams. Mike described lying in the woods, looking up, feeling the silent passage of owls' wings.
In "Man-Eaters," Phillips hears a fish owl, its call sounding
nothing like the who, who of the owls I was familiar with. It was a low moan, mmmmm, faint but insistent, the sound of a person stunned with pain. Very hard to spot in this light, Mr. Sharma [his guide] said. . . .
Then I saw it. It was perched on a fallen tree limb a short way ahead. It was the most beautiful bird I had ever seen. Its body was brown, with a white outline, and the feathers of its head were white. It was beautiful because of its marvelous tail, which fanned out behind it, and because of the angle of its head, which somehow implied a gentleness and thoughtfulness quite different from what most owls' heads express. I stared. Just when I was about to point it out to Mr. Sharma, we drew a little closer, and I saw that the owl was only a broken branch extending from the fallen limb.
When he describes the original 1981 Clash of the Titans, which he saw as a kid, he said he loved
in particular the golden owl, Bubo; years later, when I read "Sailing to Byzantium" for the first time, and got to the part where Yeats asks to leave his mortal body and be refashioned as a golden bird, Bubo was what I pictured him becoming.
An owl—a real one (or maybe just an imagined one)—shows up as well in Phillips's recounting of The X-Files at the very end of "In the Dark: Science Fiction in Small Towns." A "monstrous owl" makes a cameo appearance in the "Her Castles" section of "Once and Future Queen," about ERII. And finally we have a pair of stone owls, their eyes containing "tiny red lights," on the staircase landing of the Marland mansion in Ponca City. (I'm sure there was a mention of owls in the Iditarod piece, but I hadn't started dog-earing yet, and the mention was so brief that I can't locate it by skimming.)
In any case, there you have a sample of Phillips's excellent writing and whatever explication we're going to get about the impossibility of owls.
This is his only book, though he has also hosted two podcasts, Truthless, about "the lies people tell," and 22 Goals, about the history of the World Cup. He has also written a number of book reviews for the Poetry Foundation.
Well, I'm glad he collected his essays into this book. I learned a lot.