home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT1557>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: A Useful Application Of Faith
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 69
- A Useful Application of Faith
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By R.Z. Sheppard
- </p>
- <qt> <l>THE LIFE OF GRAHAM GREENE, VOLUME I: 1904-1939</l>
- <l>by Norman Sherry</l>
- <l>Viking; 783 pages; $29.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> If you have been waiting 40 years to learn the name of the
- obscure Mexican clerk who was the model for the Judas figure in
- The Power and the Glory, or if you lie awake wondering who
- originally owned the revolver that Graham Greene used when he
- played Russian roulette in 1923, this is the book for you.
- </p>
- <p> Volume I of Norman Sherry's meticulously protracted
- biography takes the English novelist step by step, from his
- birth in 1904 to 1939. Readers of Greene's memoir A Sort of Life
- may experience a mild paramnesia as they again hear of the
- novelist's neurotic childhood, his crush on his psychoanalyst's
- wife, his dissolute years at Oxford, his conversion to Roman
- Catholicism, his beginnings as a journalist, and the physical
- and spiritual wanderings that led to the writing of his popular
- moral thrillers.
- </p>
- <p> The proposed Volume II remains open-ended. Greene is 84 and
- still active (The Captain and the Enemy, his 24th novel, was
- published last year). Sherry, a professor of literature at
- Trinity University in San Antonio, has yet to tackle Greene's
- Africa service with British intelligence, his marital breakup,
- love affairs, involvements with the movie business,
- anti-Americanism and friendships with left-wing Latin American
- leaders Fidel Castro and Omar Torrijos of Panama. One should
- also expect deep penetration of the privacy that surrounds
- Greene's life in the south of France, where he has lived since
- the '60s. A genuine coup would be the identity of the Swedish
- Academy member who, as rumor has it, blocks Greene's path to a
- Nobel Prize.
- </p>
- <p> So the best is yet to come, and Sherry, who has had
- Greene's sort-of approval and cooperation, should be in the best
- position to get it. Of all the big fish still swimming in the
- shrinking pond of English letters, Greene is one of the most
- elusive. As Sherry told the British press this spring, "He will
- not give you anything. If you don't ask, you won't get, and if
- you do ask, you might well get a no."
- </p>
- <p> The novelist selected Sherry for the job after reading his
- 1971 book on Joseph Conrad, Conrad's Western World. Greene was
- taken with the scholar's unbiased approach and willingness to
- travel to the remote and hazardous regions that inspired the
- author of The Heart of Darkness. And indeed, Sherry makes a fuss
- about his field investigations for this book: "Risking disease
- and death as he had done, I went to those places and in most
- cases found people Greene had met and put into his novels." He
- tells us that he developed gangrene in South America and got
- dysentery in the same Mexican boardinghouse where Greene was
- stricken. In Liberia, locale of Greene's first safari, officials
- he interviewed had their throats cut a week later, when the
- government abruptly changed hands.
- </p>
- <p> Macho scholarship may satisfy a personal need, but Sherry's
- tribulations do not yield much about Greene's nature. For that,
- the biographer hits the conventional paper trail: books,
- journals, diaries, letters and periodicals. His impressive
- accumulation supports what readers of Greene's writings have
- already had reason to suspect: his morbid childhood fears
- ripened into the themes of his art.
- </p>
- <p> Sherry's dossier reveals a physically awkward and
- emotionally withdrawn boy who became the scapegoat of his
- playmates. Neither Greene's autobiography nor his chronicler's
- researches fully convey the depths of shame and humiliation that
- must have marked the early years. Young Greene seems to have
- felt these emotions as a profound boredom that required dramatic
- action. His suicide attempts by dull knife, hay-fever drops and
- aspirin foreshadow the lengths to which he would later go in the
- name of love and literature. He changed religions to win the
- hand of Vivien Dayrell-Browning, a devout Roman Catholic. When
- she said that she would rather live with him as a sister, he
- suggested a celibate marriage. "Greene was in deadly earnest,"
- Sherry concludes, "but as a practical ploy it could not be
- bettered." Nature took its course; a daughter, Lucy, was born
- in 1933.
- </p>
- <p> Greene made a useful application of his faith in Brighton
- Rock (1938). The novel began his reputation as a Catholic
- writer, although he has usually described himself as a writer
- who has merely employed Catholic ideas. Sherry takes the broader
- position that, in Brighton Rock at least, "it is certain that
- the new dimension his conversion brought to his view of man and
- God brought also a new dimension to his fiction." What readers
- got, and would later get in The Power and the Glory and The End
- of the Affair, was tightly plotted melodramas about evil and
- divine grace as a means of escape. Many critics have admired the
- craft of these books but have not been convinced of the quality
- of Greene's mercy. Sherry should have something to say about
- that quality when he sums up in Volume II. The current opus
- concentrates mostly on quantity.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-