Martin Schneider writes:
A new issue of The New Yorker comes out tomorrow. Here is a description of its contents.
Jeffrey Toobin profiles the newly appointed junior senator from Illinois, Roland Burris, and examines the scandal surrounding his appointment to the Senate by disgraced Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich.
Ron Chernow traces the evolution of the Ponzi scheme, from Charles Ponzi’s postal-coupon racket to Bernard Madoff’s money-management fraud.
Keith Gessen chronicles the trial this winter, in Moscow, of the men accused of organizing and abetting the murder, on October 7, 2006, of the Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya.
Hendrik Hertzberg looks at how eliminating the payroll tax could help to stimulate the economy.
There is a short story by Tessa Hadley.
John McPhee on the history of lacrosse and how it is played today.
Dan Chiasson reviews Daniel Mendelsohn’s new translations of C. P. Cavafy’s poetry.
Paul Goldberger visits the new stadiums for the Yankees and the Mets.
John Lahr delves into the past with Moisés Kaufman’s 33 Variations and Noël Coward’s Blithe Spirit.
Joan Acocella observes puppetry onstage in New York.
Anthony Lane reviews Tokyo Sonata and The Great Buck Howard.
Monthly Archives: March 2009
New Yorker Artist Could Always Moonlight as Interior Designer
Martin Schneider writes:
New Yorker cover illustrator (and Twitterer) Bob Staake has posted a pictorial tour of his studio. He seems to have designed it with an eye toward convincing intelligent children (or humans of any age) that previous decades were waaaay more fun than today. Staake has a keen eye for old-timey bric-a-brac, which makes it just completely delightful. Go have a look.
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Job Search
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James Purdy, 1914-2009–and His One New Yorker Story
Jonathan Taylor writes:
James Purdy died today, the Times‘s ArtsBeat reports, saying that he “labored at the margins of the literary mainstream, inspiring veneration or disdain.”
I was a little surprised to find a Purdy story published in The New Yorker, but not that surprised that it was a very early one: “About Jessie Mae” in the May 25, 1957, issue—just after the 1956 publication of Purdy’s novella 63: Dream Palace. It’s a grotesquely decorous little dialogue between two nieghbors in St. Augustine, Fla., seething in harmony. Myrtle and Mrs. Hemlock are bursting simultaneously with the uncontrollable urge to gossip about the breathaking “untidiness” of their rich frenemy Jessie Mae—and with Mrs. Hemlock’s icebox full of homemade fudge bars. “About Jessie Mae” was included in Purdy’s 1962 story collection Children Is All.
Here‘s a 2005 appreciation by Purdy champion Gore Vidal.
If Pnin is In, Does That Mean Kilgore Trout is Out?
Martin Schneider writes:
Last week we posted the syllabus of Zadie Smith’s fiction seminar at Columbia University. I noticed that one of the books was Vladimir Nabokov’s Pnin. It triggered a memory: last October, on a New Yorker Festival panel with Hari Kunzru and Peter Carey, Gary Shteyngart answered moderator Peter Canby’s request to name a favorite or most influential work by intimating that he reads Pnin “once a month.”
I know the journalistic credo has it that once is an occurrence, twice a coincidence, thrice a trend. I have only the two mentions, yet nevertheless cry “Trend!” My impression is that Pnin is relatively obscure; it doesn’t come up in conversation much, at least not with the people I know. I’ve read four Nabokov novels, and Pnin isn’t one of them. As far as I know, Pnin is noteworthy for being somewhat more autobiographical than most of Nabokov’s work, as it is about a Russian emigre who is working in the United States as a professor.
So much for this focus group of one. Have you been running into Pnin lately?
As it happens, Pnin has a slight familial resonance for me; my father used to tell how impressed he was with the original Pnin stories when they appeared in The New Yorker in the mid-1950s, so it feels like I’ve been aware of it for years. I’m now traveling and have a limited number of books at my disposal, but, triggered by Shteyngart perhaps, elected to bring that one with me. I’ll get to it soon.
National Book Critics Circle: Winners, Honors, New Yorker-ers
Emily Gordon writes:
I’m SXSW-bound in a few hours, but I wanted to send a brief report from a stirring and satisfying National Book Critics Circle awards ceremony and reception. The 2008 finalists for NBCC awards included a good group of New Yorker-related people: the late Roberto Bolaño for 2666, Pierre Martory for The Landscapist, which was translated by John Ashbery; Richard Brody for Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life Of Jean-Luc Godard; Steve Coll for The Bin Ladens: An Arabian Family in an American Century; and Honor Moore for The Bishop’s Daughter (an excerpt of which ran in the magazine)–and it’s true, there are other people in the list you can certainly call New Yorker-related as well. After the ceremony, I spoke with Richard Brody, whose blog and Twitter presence we’ve noted recently with pleasure; he’s a lovely fellow, and I’m glad to have met him.
Bolaño’s book got the fiction prize, and after seeing the multiple-cover design, I want to own it. The rest of the prizes came home with Ron Charles, who won the Nona Balakian Citation for Excellence in Reviewing; my former employer the PEN American Center, which got the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award; August Kleinzahler and Juan Felipe Herrera in a surprise poetry tie that had the brainy audience whispering in delight; Seth Lerer for criticism; Patrick French for biography (James Wood reviewed the book, The World Is What It Is: The Authorized Biography of V. S. Naipaul, in December) Ariel Sabar for autobiography; and Dexter Filkins for nonfiction. I’m sure the NBCC website will be full of details tomorrow, so look there then!
New Yorker Blog Roundup: 03.12.09
Martin Schneider writes:
I have the vague impression that the magazine’s newfound interest in its blog section has not penetrated the awareness of its audience, as much as one might hope. There has been a lot of activity over there since about Thanksgiving; there’s terrific writing there every single day, and you should check it out. Hence this recurring feature.
Also: Comments! Some of these blogs accept comments. Steve Coll’s “Think Tank” accepts them, Richard Brody’s “Front Row” accepts them, and George Packer’s “Interesting Times” accepts them. New terrain, indeed!
So go over and make those writers feel good—everyone appreciates a little feedback. And more to the point, make the magazine feel good about its decision to give you a voice!
As always, I’ll be putting this little message in front of the roundup: (This content is taken directly from the left nav bar on the magazine’s website.)
Steve Coll on why energy efficiency matters in a time of war.
Evan Osnos puts himself in Richard Nixon’s shoes.
The Front Row: Danny DeVito will tell the story of “Crazy Eddie.”
Hendrik Hertzberg revisits election results and reaches a conclusion.
News Desk: Grown men, in unfamiliar places, can do strange things.
James Surowiecki asks what it means to bury a bank.
George Packer praises a civil servant helping Iraqi refugees.
Sasha Frere-Jones finds his soulmate.
The Book Bench: Generation twit, is Joan Acocella a vampire?
The Cartoon Lounge: Warren Miller draws man’s best friend, playing dead, one million dogs.
Goings On: U2 disappoints fans, guess the name of Rihanna and Chris Brown’s duet.
Ask the Author: Submit a question to the editor the Style Issue, Susan Morrison.
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Death By Design
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David Foster Wallace’s “Wiggle Room” and Updike’s “Basically Decent”
Benjamin Chambers writes:
I’ll confess up front that I don’t care for novel excerpts. The pleasures of fiction include completing a narrative arc, seeing a character in the round, or comprehending the whole of the author’s conceit and execution, yet all of these are thwarted by an excerpt. The New Yorker publishes a lot of such excerpts, and they are invariably unsatisfying. (Recent examples include Colson Whitehead’s “The Gangsters,” from the December 22, 2008 issue, or Louise Erdrich’s “The Fat Man’s Race” from the November 3, 2008 issue.)
TNY might reasonably be excused, however, for publishing work excerpted from novels that are to be published posthumously, as it did in the March 9, 2009 issue, with David Foster Wallace’s “Wiggle Room,” which is taken from his unfinished novel, The Pale King. On the other hand, with Wallace’s suicide still so recent, you can’t read “Wiggle Room” without being acutely aware of the poignant reason it’s before your eyes. And what can you say about it? You can’t praise it without wondering if you’re making unwarranted allowances; nor can you critique it without feeling that you’re kicking Wallace while he’s down.
That said, I soldier on. “Wiggle Room” focuses on a young I.R.S. agent’s fight against boredom as he does his stultifying work. The agent is suddenly visited by an improbable hallucinatory figure who knows all about the etymology of “boredom” and “interesting.” (D. T. Max, in his introductory essay, “The Unfinished,” tells us this figure is the ghost of another I.R.S. agent). The relief with which I greeted this hallucination speaks to how well Wallace conveys, during the first half of the piece, how unpleasant tedium can be.
One of my favorite aspects of the excerpt is the recurring image of the beach. The agent has been taught to visualize a pleasant afternoon at the beach as a way of refreshing himself mentally, but when he tries it, the imagery proves a flimsy defense. It starts off as “a warm pretty beach with mellow surf,” but “[a]fter just an hour [of work] the beach was a winter beach, cold and gray and the dead kelp like the hair of the drowned.” A little later, the agent’s sunny beach has devolved even further:
The beach now had solid cement instead of sand and the water was gray and barely moved, just quivered a little, like Jell-O that’s almost set. Unbidden came ways to kill himself with Jell-O.
Still, “Wiggle Room” isn’t terribly satisfying. It’s slightly more so than most excerpts because it narrates a complete incident, but it’s not a complete story. An I.R.S. agent is visited by a smart-ass ghost: why? Does it change him? Does the ghost come back? Does the ghost do anything besides belch up etymologies? Does the agent manage to stick with the job, despite his obvious hatred of it? None of these questions can be addressed by the excerpt, though I have to admit that it does its job—and Wallace would’ve been wryly savage about this—of teasing prospective buyers to read the entire novel-fragment when it’s published.
It’s also poignant to read (in the same issue as “Wiggle Room”) “Basically Decent,” John Updike’s posthumous review of Blake Bailey’s new biography of John Cheever. It’s poignant not only because the review may well be Updike’s last book review for the magazine, but because he was writing about John Cheever, who, like Wallace, was famously tormented and struggled all his life with doubts about the merits of his work; but who, unlike Wallace, was able by some miracle of grace to keep trying.
Updike doesn’t like Bailey’s bio much. Though he applauds its thoroughness, he nails its drawback with characteristic elegance, observing that “all this biographer’s zeal makes a heavy, dispiriting read.” The pleasure of reading Cheever’s fiction, in other words, and the “glimmers of grace and well-being” experienced by his characters, are “smothered” in the biography, which cannot ward off “the menacing miasma of a life which, for all the sparkle of its creative moments, brought so little happiness to its possessor and those around him.”
In this, though, Bailey’s biography is no different from literary biographies as a class. I’m sure Bailey did an excellent job of documenting the facts of Cheever’s life and the chronology of his work, but a life can only go so far to explain its art; explanation rarely improves the work. (This is partly what is meant by saying that art is transcendent, after all.)
Charles McGrath also reviewed Bailey’s biography for the New York Times. I preferred his review to Updike’s because McGrath, in addition to addressing the biography, took the time to argue that it’s not just Cheever’s life that deserves new attention, but his work does too. In particular, I appreciated the fact that he disassembled the ridiculous-but-common canard that Cheever was a chronicler of suburban malaise, when in fact, as McGrath notes, “…far from being another Sloan Wilson-like chronicler of suburban malaise—or even a meticulous painter of middle-class life like Updike—Cheever was a writer pressing against the very limits of realism itself.”
McGrath proves his case, I think, but I urge any doubters to check out Cheever’s story, “Some People Places and Things That Will Not Appear in My Novel”, which appeared in the November 12, 1960 issue of TNY, and which I wrote about here. In it, he uses metafictional techniques to talk about his impatience with the complacency and foolishness of then-contemporary fiction—and with his own.
But the phrase Updike uses to describe Cheever’s unhappy life, “menacing miasma,” is apt, and applies to accounts of David Foster Wallace’s life as well. Perhaps it’s only because Wallace’s story was published next to Updike’s review of Cheever’s biography, but I couldn’t help feeling that the degree to which Cheever’s unhappiness haunted his work (as in the “Some People Places and Things” story) was echoed in Wallace’s life and work as well. It’s hard not to think of Wallace when one reads Updike’s observation about Cheever: “Like Kafka and Kierkegaard, Cheever felt his own existence as a kind of mistake, a sin.”
Peace be upon them both, and upon Updike for good measure.
Thru You, Through the New Yorker Blog, to Most of the Rest of Us
Martin Schneider writes:
A friend sent me a link to Kutiman’s marvelous “Thru You” website, and now I’m all excited about it. After the initial delight had worn off, I thought, “I wonder if Sasha Frere-Jones knows about this?”
Relax, man, his blog was on it way back last week (an eternity in meme propagation terms). Unsurprisingly, what he has to say is well worth a look.
But more to the point, go visit Thru You.
