home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2631>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: The 30-Year Writer's Block
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 98
- The 30-Year Writer's Block
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After much advance praise and even more delay, Harold Brodkey
- finally finishes his long-awaited first novel
- </p>
- <p>By Stefan Kanfer
- </p>
- <p> As the 1960s began, Farrar Straus & Giroux announced the
- imminent appearance of Harold Brodkey's first novel. In the late
- 1970s Knopf announced the imminent appearance of Harold
- Brodkey's first novel. This year Farrar Straus again announced
- the imminent appearance of Harold Brodkey's first novel. By now
- readers could hardly be blamed for wondering if the book was the
- Great Pumpkin of American literature.
- </p>
- <p> And yet as he traveled from publishing house to publishing
- house, the author lost no adherents. For almost three decades,
- Brodkey managed to preserve his high reputation on the basis of
- two books of evocative short stories and a handful of magazine
- pieces. No other contemporary writer has so successfully
- disproved the adage that you can't live on promises.
- </p>
- <p> The Brodkey legend took wing after his debut, First Love
- and Other Sorrows, was published in 1958. Several critics
- dubbed him the American Proust. Susan Sontag chimed in: the
- author was "going for real stakes." Yale professor Harold Bloom
- burbled, "If he's ever able to solve his publishing problems,
- he'll be seen as one of the great writers of his day."
- </p>
- <p> No one seemed as impressed by all this as Harold Brodkey.
- Consciously or unconsciously, he used the encomiums as a
- strategy for not producing. "If some of the people who talk to
- me are right," he told an interviewer, "well, to be possibly not
- only the best living writer in English but someone who could be
- the rough equivalent of a Wordsworth or a Milton is not a role
- that a halfway educated Jew from St. Louis with two sets of
- parents and a junkman father is prepared to play. In daydream,
- yes. In real life, no."
- </p>
- <p> In daydream the novel was always approaching the finish
- line. In real life Brodkey tiptoed around his writer's block,
- became the father of a daughter, then went through a divorce
- from the woman he had met as a Harvard undergraduate. After a
- long bachelorhood he was introduced to novelist Ellen Schwamm.
- Two weeks later, she left her husband of 23 years and moved into
- Brodkey's cluttered Manhattan apartment. They were married in
- 1980. He supported himself by teaching part time at Cornell,
- developing scripts at NBC and artfully freeloading. He
- advertised himself as "an incredibly good dinner guest."
- </p>
- <p> The quieter his typewriter, the more voluble Brodkey
- seemed to be in person. When he was not doing riffs on his own
- horn ("I'm one of the people that people fight over...It's
- just possible I am the voice of the coming age"), he was
- appraising fellow authors with faint damns. "What's the point
- of talking as if I were Mailer or Updike?" he demanded. "I don't
- have the guts they have. I could defend myself by saying that
- they're not carrying so dangerous a message, but maybe I'm
- flattering myself."
- </p>
- <p> Only the work would tell, and that was invisible. Until
- this month. At the age of 61, Brodkey has at last released his
- magnum opus, The Runaway Soul. Physically, it is the long-
- awaited Big Book. Whether The Runaway Soul deserves 835 pages
- and a price tag of $30 is another matter. For if this is not the
- Emperor's New Novel, neither is it Remembrance of Things Past.
- </p>
- <p> Insofar as there is any plot, Runaway Soul tracks the arc
- of Wiley Silenowicz, born like his creator in 1930. Nothing is
- left out, from birth to the loss of his parents, to adoption by
- S.L. and Lila of St. Louis, through skirmishes with his
- sadistic older stepsister Nonie to encounters with a homosexual
- cousin, to the death of mother and sibling, to Wiley's
- predictably awful marriage.
- </p>
- <p> En route Brodkey produces some apt similes--"The
- intimacy of a head near one's own is like the lights and doorway
- of a house." And he has a phenomenal memory for childhood
- experience: the arbitrary behavior of giant adults, the sudden
- emotional squalls, the vivid contours of sounds and light. Once
- the narrator ventures out to adolescence and beyond, it is a
- different story.
- </p>
- <p> In an effort to render sensation into language, Brodkey
- becomes precious, arch and even incoherent ("Rage or quasi-
- pietistic acceptance, I distrust the wavering tick-tockishness
- of the shrinking and of the dangerous enlargement of the self").
- When he is at his most lucid, Brodkey is at his most self-
- indulgent, particularly on the subject of sex. Straight or gay
- adventures leave Wiley dissatisfied, possibly because he spends
- so much time observing his own reactions. "I became," he notices
- after one bedding, "laboratoryish about entering and going in
- and out watchfully, thoughtfully." Given the narrator's vanity,
- that is inevitable. All along, the man has been harvesting every
- possible compliment, from a notice that half the old women in the
- neighborhood have a crush on him to a judgment that he is
- "nationally smart."
- </p>
- <p> Throughout these encounters Brodkey's invented terms--"mouthy eyes," "doomfully"--attempt to be Joycean. They are
- more reminiscent of Humpty Dumpty, to whom a word meant whatever
- he wanted it to mean. But three words keep the definitions
- Webster's International Dictionary assigned to them: I, my, me.
- Take those away and The Runaway Soul would be a very brief tale
- indeed. Much has been made of the author's investigations into
- the permutations of desire. The chapter headings are instructive
- here. Some are merely labels: "Nonie in Love," "The River," "The
- War." But one of the earliest says volumes about the volume to
- follow. It is titled "The Masturbation."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-