Dedicated to classics and hits.

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

1930's English, British & French Literature

    1930's English literature is kind of a "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."  Real highlights like several George Orwell novels, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and, I don't know, The Hobbit and lows like Evelyn Waugh and (sigh) Wyndham Lewis.   Wyndham Lewis was one of those authors that made me question the wisdom of the entire 1001 Books project: An experimental modernist with little or no current audience.  Certainly, the continuing evolution of modernist writing, characterized by radical experiments with the form of the novel is still a major trend in the 1930's in England.  It was less so in America, where many of the representatives of the 1930's were closer to French style 19th century naturalism than 20th century modernist writing. 
   

Published  10/10/14
Vile Bodies (1930)
by Evelyn Waugh

Vile Bodied by Evelyn Waugh

Book Review
Vile Bodies (1930)
 by Eveyln Waugh

  I must confess that I read Vile Bodies with absolutely NO memory of the plot or characters of the last Evelyn Waugh title I read, Decline and Fall.  My review of Decline and Fall, in total, was three paragraphs. (1)  Vile Bodies soldifies his focus in a way similar to how Great Gatsby soldified the focus of F. Scott Fitzgerald.  In America, the group of characters was called "the Lost Generation."  In England, the corresponding group was the Bright Young Things.  These people were Artists, trust fund babies, proto celebrities, demi-mondes, patrons of the Arts, etc, etc, etc. So the important thing to understand about Waugh is that he satirizing these people, not worshipping them.

   And although Waugh is hardly at the forefront of experimental literary modernism, he isn't stuck in the past the same way that say, Ford Madox Ford was in Parade's End.  Vile Bodies will inevitably put readers in mind of the celeb obsessed culture epitomized by TMZ and the Kardashian clan.  In fact, much of the plot revolves around a scurrilous gossip column dedicated to printing the most libelous falsehoods that evoke  the gossip of the web.

   Waugh's characters may not be memorable, but Waugh's writing is.  Much of the breezy style of modern pop literature owes a direct debt to Vile Bodies, consciously or not.


(1)

Book Review
Decline and Fall (1928)
by Evelyn Waugh

  Decline and Fall is Evelyn Waugh's first novel. Waugh belongs to the "comic" strand of the novel, a strain of literature that is present in the creation of the novel itself and in a certain sense is a constituent element of the literary elements that preceded the novel proper.  Waugh draws from different comic sub-traditions: contemporary critics claimed that Waugh was simply aping Voltaire's Candide.  If you are looking for French inspiration closer in time, the characters of Guy de Maupassant in Bel Ami come immediately to mind.

 At the same time, Waugh is a quintessentially English writer.  Although his books are perhaps not particularly popular in 2014, his influence in mediums like television and film is omnipresent. The whole idea of a dry, sarcastic, archness in dialogue seems to originate with Waugh himself.  Compared to other "light" authors of the teens and twenties- Edith Wharton, I'm looking at you- Waugh's satire cuts with a knife and would not be considered "gentle."

  There can be no question that Waugh is NOT for everyone.  I'm sure J.K. Rowling has read everything Waugh has ever written, but I bet none of her Harry Potter fan base have even heard of him.  When you take Waugh's influence on other light lit franchises- Bridget Jones diary would be a not so distant grand child.  Television shows like Absolutely Fabulous- these are all made possible by Waugh.

Published 10/16/14
Testament of Youth (1933)
by Vera Brittain


  This is the first volume of Vera Brittain's three volume auto-biography, covering the period between 1900-1925.  Notably, it gives a first hand account of Brittain's work as a nurse during World War I, where she was stationed during some of the heaviest fighting.  She lost her fiance, brother and cousin in the course of the fighting, and her memoir is also significant in terms of her experience as a woman who began pursuing her degree at Oxford University even before the start of World War I.

  In addition to the vital first hand testimony about the horrors of war, Brittain conveys the actual change in mindset among the young before and after the war.  This shift in attitude, which is often described in terms of "the Lost Generation" is well represented by Brittain both in terms of her material and her position as a well-to-do early feminist living in London after the war.

  I think any reader facing the prospect on whether to engage a 650 page auto-biography about a World War I nurse is going to ask him or herself whether the time investment is "worth it."  I would yes, for the female perspective, for the value of Brittain as an insider the post World War I English literary scene (she wouldn't call herself that.)  Can one really read too much about World War I?  Testament of Youth, published a full fifteen years AFTER the cessation of hostilities, is still grappling with questions that remained unresolved for decades afterwards.

Published 11/7/14
Book Review
The Apes of God (1930)
by Wyndham Lewis
Black Sparrow Press Edition, 1981
639 Pages


 If you are looking for a 600 page satire on the English Artist class in the 1920s, The Apes of God by Wyndham Lewis is for you.  Most of the characters are based on real people, artists and socialites.  The story, such as it is, concerns young Daniel Boleyn, a would-be artist, and his mentor, the mischievous albino Horace Zagreus.  Zagreus promises to guide him through the world of the Apes of God, who are basically wealthy dilettantes who think themselves artsy.  There isn't much difference between Lewis' Apes and the "Hipsters" of today, both are stereotypes with some truth in them.

 It's hard not to read Apes of God as being anything other than homophobic, Lewis' obsession with the relationship between homosexuality and his Apes of God is impossible to ignore if you know, actually read the book. His depiction of homosexuality is not flattering, and again, it kinda reads as being super homophobic.  That's my guess why this particular volume doesn't appear on many college Modern Literature classes- it's certainly not a theme that he explores in his earlier work, and I was left wondering how the afterword in the Black Sparrow Press edition barely mentions it.  Maybe because the afterword was written in 1981, when it was totally ok to be a homophobe.

 I'm not normally one to get wound up by non-PC artistic themes, the combination of the extreme length, lack of incident, prevalence of dialogue and general incomprehensibility, it is hard to get over.

Published 11/24/14
Murder Must Advertise (1933)
 by Dorothy Sayers


  Dorothy Sayers was a charter member of the so-called "Golden Age of Detective Fiction."  This Golden Age of Detective Fiction lasted between 1920 and 1940.  Typically thought to be ended by the onset of World War II, The Golden Age of Detective Fiction canon includes Sayers, Agatha Christie, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler.  The two main branches which descend from this period in the field of the crime fiction genre are neatly parallel by the two nationalities of the four leading exponents.  Christie and Sayers gave rise to the "cosy" style- characterized by genteel detectives and country house murder plots.  Chandler and Hammett developed the "hard boiled" styled.  Not only have all four authors inspired legions of fans and authors writing under their influence, they have also maintained a place for their own characters via film versions and, especially, television series.

   If I had to distinguish Sayers from the others, I would say that she is more on the posh side, with Oxford credentials, and a Detective who is literally an English lord.  Lord Peter Wimsy, or as he is known in Murder Must Advertise, "Death Breedon."  Wimsy is the most famous example of the "gentleman detective" and his DNA is in evidence in comic books characters like Batman.  Unlike Sherlock Holmes, who simply appears to be indifferent to money, Wimsy is a thorough going participant in the between wars aristo lifestyle, with a mansion, cavalcade of servants, and wicked fast automobile.

  My sense is that Wimsy's aristocratic character has hurt his staying power, and his viability as a candidate for remakes.  It's easy to see how a post Lord would come in second to an irascible Belgian detective, or a hard boiled private eye.   In Murder Must Advertise, Wimsy is called in to investigate the "accidental" death of a copy writer ad a London advertising firm.  While investigating, he stumbles into an enormous, London based, cocaine distribution network, which has an uncanny ability to murder people immediately before they are questioned by authorities.   Both the milieu of advertising and the cocaine distribution plot make Murder Must Advertise a well aged narrative.   I was surprised to see no film or television versions since the 1980s.  That's probably due to the fact that Sayers work is still under copyright (unlike Sherlock Holmes and Poirot.)


Meryl Streep in Out of Africa, the 1985 film version of the 1934 book by Isak Dinesen.  A major difference between the film and movie is the strong love story in the film between Streep and Redford's character- which is absent from the book.


Published 12/12/14
Out of Africa (1934)
by Isak Dinesen(Karen Blixen)


  I'm sure that 99/100 Americans think of the 1985 Robert Redford/Meryl Streep starring film when they hear the title of Out of Africa.  The central plot of the film: A passionate love affair between Redford's Denys, a big game hunter, and Streep's Karen is nowhere in the book, which isn't so much a novel as a memoir- an interesting memoir- of a woman who ran a coffee plantation in the Kenyan uplands prior to and after World War I.

 The enduring popularity of this book is likely due to the great sensitivity and perception (and respect) that Dinesen/Blixen shows towards the landscape and people of Africa, even as she engaged in a prototypically imperialist endeavor. The world of Out of Africa is a gentle place, with none of the seething hatred and sprang up prior to and after independence.  True, Blixen is hardly looking for trouble- quite the opposite.  Her privileged status as a wealthy white woman, not a British subject (Blixen was Danish) meant that she had a sensitivity to injustice but didn't have to confront it on a daily basis.

  Those looking for a better understanding of modern day Kenya could do worse than starting here. While it would be unfair to call Kenya an unhistorical place, the coming of Europeans to the area was barely preceded by the entrance of Arab slave traders.  Blixen lives among a mix of Kikuyu's- the largest single ethnic group in Kenya, Somalis, who occupy a kind of "house servant" role within colonial Kenya, and the Masai, who live apart but nearby, since her coffee plantation is on the edge of their reserve.

 Dinesen/Blixen has much to say about the people, particularly her native servants.  Much of Out of Africa is split between the natives and her depiction of the land itself, with various European characters popping in and out.  Thought Blixen emigrated to Africa with her husband, they divorced while they were there and Blixen kept the coffee plantation.  Blixen downplays the uniqueness of her role as a single white female plantation owner in the middle of Africa in the early 20th century, but it's easy to read Out of the Africa as a kind of white-girl fantasy of mastery.

 But Out of Africa isn't fictional- and it doesn't even have the structure of a Novel, merely a series of vaguely linked anecdotes from her life in Africa.   So while the book is a romantic tale, it's not a romance, and there is no sex, so if you are looking for that based on the content of the film version, don't bother because it ain't there.


Published 12/10/14
A Handful of Dust (1934)
 by Evelyn Waugh

  A Handful of Dust is the third book by Evelyn Waugh in the 1001 Books Project, and the only one I would recommend to someone else to read. Neither Decline and Fall (1928) nor Vile Bodies (1930) made much of an impression on me.  In fact, prior to reading A Handful of Dust I had to go back and look at the wikipedia entries for both books so I could remember the plot details of each work.

 While still in the vein of light satire that he established as the overriding tone in the first two books, A Handful of Dust packs a heavier wallop, with a plot that includes infidelity, divorce, the tragic death of a young child, and protagonist Tony Last finding himself held captive in the Amazon rain forest by a deranged settler who forces him to endlessly re-read Charles Dickens out loud.  Last is an English country gentleman, married to the feckless Brenda.  In the early chapters of the book, Brenda embarks on a reckless affair with "idle parasite" John Beavers.  Like all of Waughs works so far, sympathetic characters are hard to find.

  Tony Last behaves as a passive non entity from first to...last.  His wife is inexplicably motivated to pursue a young man who seems to barely tolerate her.  Her young son, also named John, is killed by a kick to the head from a horse while she is away from their country home.  When she is told by a friend, her first thought is to thank god that it is her son, and not her lover, who is deceased.  AND THAT is all you need to know about the character of Brenda Last.

  After Brenda announces she is done with their marriage, Tony duly goes through the necessary arrangements that precede a divorce in post-World War I England, then backs out when he is informed that Brenda intends to ask for thousands a month in alimony.  He decamps for the Amazon on a whim with a professor who is searching for a lost city.  The trip is a nightmare, his companion dies, and he ends up essentially imprisoned by a deranged settler of English background.

  Brenda is left to her own devices and ends up both poor and apparently single, as the repulsive Beavers is unwilling to wed her without her ex husbands money.  It's a sad ending, and a sad novel. Unlike his first two books, A Handful of Dust is more directly based on his personal experience- his young wife left him, and he himself went to the Amazon, and I think that personal experience gives A Handful of Dust some depth compared to Decline and Fall and Vile Bodies.
 
Published 12/12/14
Cold Comfort Farm (1932)
by Stella Gibbons


   In an era of literature saturated with satire, Cold Comfort Farm is a parody.  Gibbons was a professional journalist tasked with summarizing prior episodes from a Mary Webb serial in the periodical that was serializing Webbs work.  Webb was like the last representative of the gloomy Victorian romance typified by Thomas Hardy.  By Webb's time, the formula of the sad rural romance was popular enough to support both Webb and a parody- Cold Comfort Farm was an immediate popular success and its commercial popularity essentially ruined Gibbons later attempts to establish herself as a "serious" novelist.

  Although Mary Webb may have been the immediate target of Gibbons parody, any contemporary reader will be more reminded of Thomas Hardy- since no one reads Mary Webb today.  D.H. Lawrence, or rather his fans, are also a target but he is restricted to influencing one of the characters. Flora Poste herself and the basic structure of the plot reference the popular romantic rural genre of the time, but probably will remind the modern reader of Emma by Jane Austen, with Poste in the same vein of the self satisfied officious meddler in human affairs.

  Probably the most famous line in the entire book is Aunt Ada Dooms famous line, "I saw something nasty in the woodshed."  That phrase has entered English as a generic idiom for a hideous secret memory, though for the record the reader never learns what Aunt Doom actually saw in the woodshed, nor what terrible famous secret makes Flora's Aunt Judith feel compelled to host her after the untimely death of Poste's parents at the beginning of the novel.

  Unlike much of the satire from the early part of the 20th century, Cold Comfort Farm is genuinely funny, whether or not you have familiarity with the works being parodied.  The fact that it has survived even as the underlying books have faded from memory is the strongest argument in favor of Cold Comfort Farm  belonging in the 1001 Books Project/literary canon.


Published 12/31/14
The Thinking Reed (1936)
 by Rebecca West


  Rebecca West was not just an author of fiction, she was, according to her Wikipedia entry, an important public intellectual who wrote criticism and non-fiction.  She has four books in the 1001 Books project: The Return of the Soldier (1918) and Harriet Hume (1928) are the two I've read.  If you are looking for similarities between the three works it would be strong heroine and a gradually expanding scope.  The Return of the Soldier is mostly an English country house novel,  Harriet Hume is a novel about London, and The Thinking Reed is a novel set in Europe, with a mixed cast of European, English and American expatriate characters.

  However, the book that The Thinking Reed most resembles is Tender is the Night (1934), published two years before The Thinking Reed and an obvious reference point and/or direct inspiration.  Both books dwell on the lives and loves of wealthy, floating Euro-Americans with a variety of real and imagined neuroses and ailments. If Tender is the Night is the "male" version of this narrative, The Thinking Reed is the female counter-part.  Like Tender is the Night it's hard not to read The Thinking Reed as containing a main character who resembles the author.

Published 1/8/15
Thank You, Jeeves (1934)
 by P.G. Wodehouse


  If you are my age, you associate the name "Jeeves" with the failed internet search engine "Ask Jeeves" (now "Ask.com.")  If you are twenty years older you might think of Jeeves as the generic term for a butler.  Both references are derived from the same place, the Jeeves series of novels by P.G. Wodehouse.  Thank You, Jeeves is the first in the series of novels, and it features all the characteristics of a Jeeves novel.  Bertram Wooster, an amiable upper class twit from England, gets into a marriage related scrape and worms out of trouble with the help of Jeeves, his condescending, well educated butler.

  The plot of Thank You, Jeeves is as emblematic of the series as any, according to the descriptive essay included in the 2006 edition of 1001 Books To Read Before You Die.  And although the characters and plotting couldn't be more dated: A major plot point in Thank You, Jeeves involves so-called "Nigger" (I shit you not) jazz musicians and Bertram disguising himself in black face and evoking literally murderous reactions from various servants, afraid that he is a "black devil."  Perhaps the only saving grace, in terms of the racist language is that Wodehouse doesn't actually have any black characters, and therefore he can't dig himself deeper then the casual, repeated use of the offensive "nigger"can take him.  I mean this book was published in the 1930s.

 One way that Wodehouse  maintains relevance is his light, airy style which presages the internet style of bloggers and websites.  It is not a far leap, stylistically, from Wodehouse to slang heavy language of the net, and his obsessions with light subjects similarly echoes the cats and kardashians net world.  

Published 1/15/15
Cakes and Ale (1930)
by W. Somerset Maugham


  It is two and out for W. Somerset Maugham: He contributes Cakes and Ale and Of Human Bondage to the 1001 Books Project and bows out gracefully.  If Of Human Bondage is the prototypical "first novel": with a heavily autobiographical main character,  then Cakes and Ale is his mid period masterpiece, and the author's self proclaimed favorite.  Cakes and Ale features a first person narration by William Ashenden, himself an independently wealthy doctor novelist, but it is mostly about another, older author, Edward Driffield, who most consider to be based on late Victorian novelist Thomas Hardy. Told through a combination of present-tense narration and flashbacks which take place during Ashenden's childhood and before Driffield/Hardy's canonization as England's "greatest living novelist" late in life,  Cakes and Ale focus gradually shifts away from Ashenden and Driffield to Rosie Driffield, Driffield's blowsy first wife.

   It is very, very, very easy to see Thomas Hardy in Edward Driffield, and Hardy's own foreword denying it merely reinforces the similarities  Although the central story of the Driffield's marriage and Ashenden's social and indeed, sexual involvement with Rosie is compelling, the insight into the literary world of turn of the century and early 20th century England perhaps seals Cakes and Ale's place in the literary canon.


Published 1/20/15
The Years (1937)
 by Virginia Woolf


 With six titles included in the 1001 Books list, Virginia Woolf is what you call a "major twentieth century author."  She is also one of the top three modernist authors and a prominent publisher.  She also killed herself.  Virginia Woolf, above all else, is a hugely taught author, in that students studying literature in English speaking countries are likely to read her work as part of any course of study.  While she has a popular audience simply from having generations of students being exposed to her work, she's not an author with an enduring hit or hits that has been endlessly cycled through the organs of mass media and popular films and television shows in the manner of Charles Dickens or Jane Austen.

 The Years was the last novel that Woolf wrote before her death, and it is also the best selling and most read novel.

This is an example of an Aspidistra, a house plant that Orwell uses as a symbol of respectability and homage to the "money god."

Published 1/22/15
Keep the Aspidistra Flying (1936)
 by George Orwell


  I studied in London my junior year of undergraduate, and while I was there I wrote a term paper on George Orwell.  One of the subjects that Orwell covers is the experience of being poor in a big city.  Most notably in his "tramping adventure" non-fiction work of Down and Out in London and Paris but also in Keep the Aspidistra Flying, which is a memorable fictional work about Gordon Comstock, an erstwhile ad copywriter determined to make it as a poet.  An "Aspidistra" is a houseplant that Orwell/Comstock uses as a symbol of lower middle class bourgeois conformity.   Keep the Aspidistra shows its age, but personally I've found Orwell's critique of the perils of poverty to be convincing, and though I hadn't read Aspidistra before,  Down and Out in London and Paris deeply influenced my personal decision to go to law school instead of "being a writer."

  Decades later, and I'm happy with the decision, and Aspidistra simply reminded me of why I made the decision in the first place.  Poverty is bad enough, but avoidable poverty is the worst.

George Orwell only published nine books in his too-short life:

Novels
1934 – Burmese Days
1935 – A Clergyman's Daughter
1936 – Keep the Aspidistra Flying
1939 – Coming Up for Air
1945 – Animal Farm
1949 – Nineteen Eighty-Four
Nonfiction
1933 – Down and Out in Paris and London
1937 – The Road to Wigan Pier
1938 – Homage to Catalonia

   He's got two all-time world-beating classics, Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, both of which continue to be a commonly understood reference point in the English speaking world.   Down and Out in Paris and London and Homage to Catalonia are still commonly available in every book store.   Out of his second tier of titles, Burmese Days is still read, though mostly by specialists and students.  That leaves A Clergyman's DaughterKeep the Aspidistra FlyingComing Up for Air and The Road to Wigan Pier in Orwell's second tier.

Published 5/4/20
The Hobbit (1937)
by J.R.R. Tolkien


  I read The Hobbit for the first time in junior high.  Even though I became a card carrying Dungeons & Dragons nerd up until I discovered girls in high school, The Hobbit wasn't a huge part of that.  Quite the opposite!  I never even bothered to read the Lord of the Rings trilogy, still haven't. I flat out didn't like the movies- the fact that they made a TRILOGY from a book that barely scratches 300 pages tells you all you need to know.   The book is a tight little adventure novel, and it moves quickly, unlike the films, which seem to be filmed in real time like some kind of avant garde experiment.

  Inclusion of The Hobbit as a core member of the 1001 Books list is obvious, it's probably the most succesful piece of fantasy literature every published.  Tolkien, of course, was a linguistic scholar- he read many of the Norse saga's in the original, and had early access to rare translations of other works. The Hobbit, with its trolls, dwarves, elves, hobbits and wizards most closely resembles a Scandinavian mythic ecology projected onto a "nation state" political economy, where the nation states are the various races of Middle Earth.

  This combination of mythic elements with a weltanschauung that closely resembles the society of Western Europe in the late Middle Ages/early Modern period proved so persuasive that it persists to this day.  Just try to find a fantasy scenario where the various races DON'T resemble warring nation states of early modern Europe.   I was struck by the scene with the Trolls near the beginning where the Trolls speak with what could only be described as a "working class" English accent:

“Mutton yesterday, mutton today, and blimey, if it don’t look like mutton again tomorrer,” said one of the trolls. “Never a blinking bit of manflesh have we had for long enough,” said a second. “What the ’ell William was a-thinkin’ of to bring us into these parts at all, beats me—and the drink runnin’ short, what’s more,” he said jogging the elbow of William, who was taking a pull at his jug. William choked. “Shut yer mouth!” he said as soon as he could. “Yer can’t expect folk to stop here for ever just to be et by you and Bert. You’ve et a village and a half between yer, since we come down from the mountains. How much more d’yer want? And time’s been up our way, when yer’d have said ’thank yer Bill’ for a nice bit o’ fat valley mutton like what this is.” He took a big bite off a sheep’s leg he was roasting, and wiped his lips on his sleeve. Yes, I am afraid trolls do behave like that, even those with only one head each.

     There is generally an obsession with race and racial characteristics that Tolkien transports to his fantasy world- though at times it is clear that the narrator is someone in our world- for example a reference to the sound of a gun going off in a world where there are no guns.  Take this description, near the end of "the dwarven race":

The most that can be said for the dwarves is this: they intended to pay Bilbo really handsomely for his services; they had brought him to do a nasty job for them, and they did not mind the poor little fellow doing it if he would; but they would all have done their best to get him out of trouble, if he got into it, as they did in the case of the trolls at the beginning of their adventures before they had any particular reasons for being grateful to him. There it is: dwarves are not heroes, but calculating folk with a great idea of the value of money; some are tricky and treacherous and pretty bad lots; some are not, but are decent enough people like Thorin and Company,

    It's a shame the movies turned into such a bloated mess, succesful though they might have been.



A still from the Alfred Hitchcock film version of Rebecca

Published 1/16/15
Rebecca (1938)
by Daphne Du Maurier


  I bought a new paperback edition of Rebecca at an independent bookstore in Exeter, New Hampshire.  Rebecca is a genre hit- with the Alfred Hitchcock film helping maintain its evergreen status in book stores. Because Rebecca is a straight up genre exercise, any discussion of the plot risks the disclosure of "spoilers."  Suffice it to say that Rebecca continues to be read today because it is a very good, very fun book.


Published 1/27/15
In Parentheses (1937)
 by David Jones


  This is an "epic poem" about the experience of fighting in World War I.  I have to be about 20 deep on World War I fighting books at this point, which left me wondering is In Parentheses is really one of the 1001 Books I need to read prior to my demise.  The foreword by T.S. Eliot is like a kiss of death in terms of whether there was any chance I might actually enjoy In Parentheses.  This is the second book in a month that has come with a "classic" T.S. Eliot foreword, but the editors of the 1001 Books project don't actually include any T.S. Eliot poems, leaving me wondering why they would essentially include books on his say-so but not include any of his own work.  Surely The Wasteland is something that one should read before one dies?

Published 2/3/15
Berlin Stories
The Last of Mr. Norris (1935)
Goodbye to Berlin (1939)
 by Christopher Isherwood



   Important thing to keep in mind is that the 1001 Books Project counts Berlin Stories as TWO separate titles- The Last of Mr. Norris (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939) but the standard American edition published by New Directions publishes both novellas in one volume called Berlin Stories.  Technically, this double edition does not exist as an entry in the 1001 Books project but contains two titles that do.

  In the public mind, the most indelible image from Berlin Stories is that of Liza Minnelli playing Sally Bowles in Bob Fosse's 1972 film.  You know the image I'm talking about (see above.)   Bowles, while not exactly a bit player in the context of the entire Berlin Stories, is hardly a dominant focus.  Rather, Isherwood is himself the main character, drifting around the margins of the Berlin underworld in the pre-Hitler Weimar Republic as an underemployed English tutor and active gay man. 

  Berlin Stories is a curious progenitor of gay literature in that entirely admits any description of male or female homosexuality, although many of the characters and situations are obviously gay,  being gay is never actually mentioned.  Hard to blame Isherwood- homosexuality was a hanging offense in the United Kingdom until AFTER World War II.  From that perspective, Berlin Stories are incredibly brave, since Isherwood is so recognizably gay in the book.

  In addition to the well drawn gay and non-gay characters, there is the setting of Weimar Republic Berlin, which was later to become synonymous with early 20th century decadence. Thus, Berlin
 Stories is itself a central document of this place and time.


England Made Me (1935) by Graham Greene is loosely based on the real life story of Swedish industrialist and con man Ivar Kreuger.


Published 2/9/15
England Made Me (1935)
by Graham Greene


    England Made Me is loosely based on the life of Swedish industrialist and con man Ivar Kreuger.  Kreuger invented several financial instruments (debentures, Class A and Class B shares) and became internationally famous before committing suicide in 1933.  Kreuger's legacy is somewhere between John Rockefeller and Bernie Madoff-  his confused Wikipedia entry is a testament to his mixed legacy.

    England Made Me, while not quite a spy novel in the way his later books were, is close to being a spy novel in terms of character and theme.  Set in inter-war Stockholm, with a shiftless English protagonist possessing some of the attributes that would later be associated with Secret Agents and Spies in 20th century fiction, I was waiting for Greene to shift into a higher gear that never came.  I suppose that is something that he developed later in his career, but England Made Me is still a suspenseful, atmospheric read, and at 200 or so pages this is a book you can digest during a morning commute on the train or on vacation.

Graham Greene Book Reviews - 1001 Books 2006 Edition
England Made Me (1935)
Brighton Rock (1938) *
The Power and the Glory (1940) *
The Heart of the Matter (1948)
The Third Man (1949)
The End of the Affair (1951) *
The Quiet American (1955) *
Honorary Counsel (1973) *
* =  core title in 1001 Books list

Published 2/10/15
Burmese Days (1934)
by George Orwell


  George Orwell is a staple of English class from Junior High, where Animal Farm is a perennial, to High School, where 1984 is required reading, to college, where Homage to CataloniaDown and Out in London and Paris and his short story Killing An Elephant are like as not to pop up in the general requirements for a B.A. degree.  Orwell is certainly not fashionable in post-graduate circles, quite the opposite, with his reputation suffering in the aftermath of the 1960s led revolution in voices outside the limited perspective of the entitled white male.   Although George Orwell made his reputation on books criticizing mid 20th century totalitarianism in ways that anticipate much of 20th and 21st century radical thought, he himself was a relentlessly bourgeois white male with issues related to women.

  This makes his more autobiographical novels, including Burmese Days, more of a chore and less appealing for the contemporary reader than his immortal hits.  BUT if you are someone who actually likes George Orwell and aren't just reading him because of a school assignment, it is more biographical works that really tell us about the Author.   Andddd man, he seems like he really had issues with women.  Burmese Days pivots on the relationship between John Flory, the Orwell figure, his Malaysian slave-prostitute and Elizabeth Lackersteen, a young English orphan (20 years old) who arrives in his remote Burmese village with the idea that she needs to find a husband and soon.

 Like the love interest in Keep the Aphrisdia Flying, Elizabeth Lackersteen is a confused figure whose inner life only appears as a reflection of the narrative of Flory.  In his more biographical novels, the love story takes second shift to the struggle between man and society.  In Burmese Days, his critique of the British Imperialist project is trenchant and insightful.  The lower level government employees and European representatives of Corporations doing business in the Teak forests of Burma are a surly and servile lot.

 Compared to their Burmese and Indian counterparts (Burma was a part of India under British rule), the English are one dimensional a-holes; all the depth is reserved for the fascinating native characters, Flory himself excepted.  Modern readers are likely to find Burmese Days troubling for repeated use of ethnic slurs and the casual use and disuse of a sex slave in the context of British Imperial rule.  


Poster from the movie version of Brighton Rock, the 1938 film by Graham Greene.

Published 2/18/15
Brighton Rock (1938)
by Graham Greene


Graham Greene Book Reviews - 1001 Books 2006 Edition
England Made Me (1935)
Brighton Rock (1938) *
The Power and the Glory (1940) *
The Heart of the Matter (1948)
The Third Man (1949)
The End of the Affair (1951) *
The Quiet American (1955) *
Honorary Counsel (1973) *
* =  core title in 1001 Books list


   I'm two books deep into the Graham Greene oeuvre and I can already see why he is such a favorite of the 1001 Books editors: 1) English 2) Catholic 3) Had popular hits that combined genre work with "serious" subjects.   Both England Made Me and Brighton Rock have worked in genre areas: England Made Me is a proto-spy thriller and Brighton Rock more straight forward crime fiction.  I preferred the former to the latter.   Brighton Rock actually has a Catholic theme, with "Pinkie" Brown, the hero/anti hero/protagonist frequently referring to his own Catholic faith and that of others.

  The plot of Brighton Rock is straight forward: Pinkie kills a guy who kills his boss, and then he marries the only witness, a young waitress who is a willing accomplice in his scheme to prevent her from eventually testifying against him any potential court action.  It's a little thin, as crime thriller plots go, and there is something quintessentially Catholic about a gangster who MARRIES a woman simply to keep her from POSSIBLY testifying against him in a case that hasn't been initiated. The marriage assumes he will be charged with murder and need her to NOT testify.  That seems... to be a somewhat remote possibility during the entire book

   Mechanics aside, there is much to enjoy in Brighton Rock, particularly the setting and the inherent pleasure of an English crime novel set outside of London, which seems to be the location for most every English novel that doesn't take place "in the country."

Published 3/9/15
Coming Up For Air (1939)
by George Orwell


  Coming Up For Air is some deep Orwell... a social satire about a 45 year old toothless fatty: George Bowling, who sells insurance and lives in the suburbs with a perpetually distressed, dried up wife and two anonymous young children. After a brief introduction to Bowling's day to day existence in pre World War II England, there is an extended flashback concerning Bowling's childhood.  Bowling repeatedly refers to himself as a Cockney, and his childhood is a kind of late 19th century semi-rural idyll, replete with nostalgic fishing holes.

 After the flashback ends, Bowling decides to tell his wife he's going away for week but instead goes back to his old neighborhood and laments the destruction of a more innocent world.  And drinks.  Personally, I was obsessed with Bowling's lack of teeth- at 45.  I don't think I'm alone when I say that this detail sends Coming Up For Air into the macabre.  Why just today I was at Chipotle, and the bags they had for to-go orders had a quote attributed to Aziz Ansari that simply said, "Do you ever see people without teeth and want to ask, what happened?"

 Of course, what happened is that they didn't receive proper dental care.  Thus, George Bowling, a toothless 45 year old, is emblematic of an English "every man" and not, say, a drifter/hobo riding the rails.  Coming Up For Air is minor classic territory, interesting for the committed fan, but nothing for the average student who reads Animal Farm and 1984 in class.


Published 3/10/15
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (1938)
by Winifred Watson


Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day benefited from the 1998 movie version- the LIBRARY copy of this book was a movie version.  The foreword seems to indicate that immediately prior to the publication of the movie edition, Winifred Watson was "lost" because the writer of the foreword "discovered her" living in happy obscurity.

  The action of Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day takes place during a single day.  Miss Pettigrew is a self-described dowdy, middle aged Nanny- and not a good Nanny- as she points out repeatedly who is sent- by mistake- to the apartment of Delysia Lafosse- a flamboyant English (in the book) or American (Amy Adams in the movie) starlet.

  Miss Pettigrew is a fun romp- racy, flirty and modern- and quite unlike Watson's other books which are more in the neo-Hardian mode of somber rural country novels.


Published 3/17/15
Party Going (1939)
by Henry Green



  English author Henry Green placed four titles into the 1001 Books Project:  Blindness (1926), about a blind soldier after World War I.  Living (1929), about the lives of Birmingham factor workers. Loving(1945), about the servants in an Anglo-Irish castle during World War II and Party Going.  The library edition of Party Going is part of a three-in-one Penguin classic's edition along with Loving and Living.  The foreword to this edition is written by John Updike, and if you take Updike's introduction with LivingParty Going and Blindness you have the portrait of an author whose work places him after the Modernists but before the careful character driven fiction of mid to late twentieth century, or 'New Yorker short story fiction" as I think of it.
  This style is a kind of literary miniaturism.  Unlike the high modernists, who deployed the everyday and mundane in the service of grand ideas about life, the universe and everything, Green does not seem to be concerned with the world outside the universe of the particular characters.  These characters are sharply drawn.  Shifts between narrators are accomplished with a  minimum of fuss.  Green is in the business of domesticating the disorienting narrative techniques of the high modernists.

   Party Going takes place entirely in a single afternoon, at a fogged-in train station, with the main characters huddled at a close by hotel while crowds mill about aimlessly outside.  As the two hundred page story spools out, the upper class characters are questioned about infidelity.  Green is a careful, subtle writer, and my thought is that he wrote on multiple levels.  The Wikipedia entry for this book hints at a "symbolic" analysis of Party Going that relies on Greek mythology and the god of Hermes.   I certainly didn't get that, and Updike doesn't mention literary symbolism in his career summarizing foreword.

Published 2/10/15
Burmese Days (1934)
by George Orwell

  George Orwell is a staple of English class from Junior High, where Animal Farm is a perennial, to High School, where 1984 is required reading, to college, where Homage to CataloniaDown and Out in London and Paris and his short story Killing An Elephant are like as not to pop up in the general requirements for a B.A. degree.  Orwell is certainly not fashionable in post-graduate circles, quite the opposite, with his reputation suffering in the aftermath of the 1960s led revolution in voices outside the limited perspective of the entitled white male.   Although George Orwell made his reputation on books criticizing mid 20th century totalitarianism in ways that anticipate much of 20th and 21st century radical thought, he himself was a relentlessly bourgeois white male with issues related to women.

  This makes his more autobiographical novels, including Burmese Days, more of a chore and less appealing for the contemporary reader than his immortal hits.  BUT if you are someone who actually likes George Orwell and aren't just reading him because of a school assignment, it is more biographical works that really tell us about the Author.   Andddd man, he seems like he really had issues with women.  Burmese Days pivots on the relationship between John Flory, the Orwell figure, his Malaysian slave-prostitute and Elizabeth Lackersteen, a young English orphan (20 years old) who arrives in his remote Burmese village with the idea that she needs to find a husband and soon.

 Like the love interest in Keep the Aphrisdia Flying, Elizabeth Lackersteen is a confused figure whose inner life only appears as a reflection of the narrative of Flory.  In his more biographical novels, the love story takes second shift to the struggle between man and society.  In Burmese Days, his critique of the British Imperialist project is trenchant and insightful.  The lower level government employees and European representatives of Corporations doing business in the Teak forests of Burma are a surly and servile lot.

 Compared to their Burmese and Indian counterparts (Burma was a part of India under British rule), the English are one dimensional a-holes; all the depth is reserved for the fascinating native characters, Flory himself excepted.  Modern readers are likely to find Burmese Days troubling for repeated use of ethnic slurs and the casual use and disuse of a sex slave in the context of British Imperial rule.  



Published 7/10/15
Cause for Alarm (1938)
 by Eric Ambler


  The modern "spy thriller" is forever linked to the politics of the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union, but its genre roots predate that conflict.   The first novel to be widely acknowledged as a spy novel is the The Riddle of the Sands (1903) by Erksine Childers.  That book took place in the North sea, and the plot revolves around a couple of English gentleman seafarers who unwittingly stumble upon nefarious German activity.  Conrad's The Secret Agent, published in 1906, is widely known, though its literary quality sets it above the common genre work of most later spy novels.   The clear inspiration for The Riddle of the Sands is the "adventure novel," popular in the 19th century.   In Riddle, the spy/espionage element seems almost happenstance, merely an additional element dreamed up by an author looking for novel incident for his sailing  adventure story.

  The spy novel as we know it incorporated the crime/hard boiled fiction of the 1920s and 30s with the political upheaval of the 20th century.  In this sense, Cause for Alarm, written almost a decade before the outbreak of the Cold War, is the first "true" spy novel in the 1001 Books list.  The story concerns an English engineer who is suddenly put out of work in his native land and, out of desperation, accepts an assignment as the representative of an English machine tools company in Fascist Italy, stationed in Milan.

  He becomes embroiled in the kind of international geopolitical machinations familiar to any reader of later spy novels.  So unformed in the genre at this point that one of the main characters is an American working FOR the Soviets against the interest of the German/Italian Axis.  Cause For Alarm is a fast paced thriller, and will appeal to any fan of the genre.

Published 7/20/15
The Revenge For Love (1937)
by Wyndham Lewis



     Ultimately, Wyndham Lewis' most memorable excursions into fiction are his satires.  This book and The Apes of God (1930) are the two titles that best exemplify his dark explorations of the modes and mores of 1930s English "bright young things."  Like many thoughtful writers of the 1930s, Lewis explored Communism, Fascism and the similarities between the two in the context of the times.  This "context" were the tumultuous events between the Great Depression and World War II, with a heavy emphasis on the Spanish Civil War and fashionable London.

  Whether a reader is interested in the bright young things of London in the 1930s is very much a matter of personal taste.  Personally, I take interest in all 20th century avant gardes, but the English are at the top of the list in terms of just the level of documentation via the number of authors who were writing about the same smallish group of people.  Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, Wyndham Lewis all traversed a social set that couldn't have been more than a thousand or so individuals.


A young Aldous Huxley.  Eyeless in Gaza is supposed to be his most biographical novel, written after Brave New World was a smash hit.






































Published 8/5/15
Eyeless in Gaza (1936)
 by Aldous Huxley

 I know plenty of people who "don't read reviews" because they don't want to "spoil" the movie/tv show/book etc, and I have to say, I just don't get it.  I actually like to know the plot before hand, because it helps me focus in on the art and craft of the work, rather than worrying if someone dies or whatever in the end.  If "not spoiling the plot" is important to you, you might as well be reading dime store romance novels.  To me, the plot is the least important thing because ultimately, every plot is predictable to a certain degree, it's the carrying out of the mechanics, the depiction of the scene and the characters, which are interesting- to me- anyway.

 Eyeless in Gaza is a portrait of disaffected well off English youth in the 30s.  The jacket copy on my Harper Perennial Modern Classics edition is laudatory ("An important book...without parallel in literature.") but I was not so impressed.  This book concerns the trials and tribulations of Anthony Beavis, a wealthy, upper-class socialite who experiences multiple crises of meanings in the non-chronologically arranged narrative.  The narrative is punctuated by incident: the suicide of a close friend, a love affair with a heroin addicted matron, an expedition to Mexico to assist a socialist revolution.  The lack of chronology makes the reader work, but there are no other modernist techniques in evidence, meaning that what is on the page is at least, understandable.

It's unclear why this book, along with close to 20 other portraits of upper-class English youth in the early 20th century would be one of the 1001 Books to Read Before You Die.   The only difference between this book and many of the themes (and characters)of D.H. Lawrence is that Huxley isn't afraid to pointedly discuss sex and drug abuse. The authorial voice in Eyeless in Gaza is closer to the tone of post World War II literature in its explicit treatment of historically "controversial" subjects, but the social milieu is unquestionably pre World War II.  

 The over-all impression I received from this survey of pre-World War II English literature was that the English upper classes were perilously close to declaring moral bankruptcy at the onset of World War II.  This perspective is certainly colored by the querulous sort of people who write classic novels, but the impression is a strong one.  Perhaps the most extraordinary part of reading Eyeless in Gaza was actually laying hands on a paperback copy.  I had it "on hold" at the San Diego Public Library for a half year before I broke down and bought at a book store in Concord Massachusetts during summer vacation last year.


Published 2/6/16
A Day Off (1933)
by Storm Jameson


  The depiction of loneliness in London is practically a genre itself within the 1001 Books project.  Urban anomie is often associated with the rise of existentialism in the 1950s, but English authors depicted this alienation, minus the heavy philosophical overlay, starting in the late 19th century.  Jameson's take on this fertile territory is that of a single woman, aging, with no children or spouse.  Out of work, she decides to take "A Day Off" to ease her mind, and while doing so she travels back and forth in time, remembering lost lovers and worrying for her future. The feeling of sadness permeates A Day Off, and if a reader has any inclinations in the area of loneliness and anxiety, this book will certainly trigger an interior dialogue with those emotions

Image result for brave new world
Brave New World was published in 1932, a decade and a half before George Orwell wrote along similar lines in 1984.

Published 10/6/15
Brave New World (1932)
by Aldous Huxley


  Brave New World was published 17 years before George Orwell's 1984.   Huxley's depiction of a futuristic totalitarian state may have been the first techno dystopia in fiction or non fiction.  His future dystopia is a combination of mass production and "pure" communism, with a benevolent oligarchic dictatorship ensuring that babies are properly grown in test tubes, the five classes of humanity- alpha through epsilon- are properly indoctrinated via hypno/sleep suggestion and that every has an adequate supply of soma, a drug that sounds pretty much like morphine.

  Compared to Orwell's 1984, Huxley's Brave New World is a fairly benign place.  Orwell, of course, was writing with full knowledge of the horrors of World War II, where Huxley was writing during the interwar period where many English intellectuals flirted with totalitarianism of both right and left varieties.   Huxley's most penetrating observations surround his depiction of the pleasure seeking consumer society that wasn't even beginning in the 1930's.   The idea of cheap drugs and free sex began to resonate deeply a generation after Huxley published Brave New World.   Like Herman Hesse, Huxley wrote books in the early part of the 20th century that only fully resonated with it's largest audience decades later.  In this way, he falls into the same category as Jane Austen or the Bronte sisters.

  Although Huxley's techno-dystopia was prescient in many ways, his writing style is more or less derivative of H.G. Wells.   That is nothing to be ashamed of, but the plot and the writing in general is not equal to Orwell in 1984.  Orwell was very deeply involved with the language of totalitarianism, to the point where he generated his own argot for 1984.  Huxley, on the other hand, relies on Shakespeare, from where Huxley derives his title. 

Published 10/12/15
Star Maker (1937)
by Olaf Stapledon


   I recently completed the Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy-  written by Chinese science fiction author Liu Cixin and I have to say that my mind was blown.  Not so much by book one- which was amazing- and reviewed here, but by the second and third books The Dark Forest and Death's End, which are impossible to even discuss without ruining the sheer mind-blowingness of it all.  But in summary, the trilogy is a variation on the standard "first contact" narrative, where Earth makes contact with an alien race.  The surprise and delight is in the science and philosophy that Cixin brings to the table, and while both might be off putting to casual readers, Cixin clearly strikes a chord, one that has resonated not just in his native China but also in the West, where Amazon studios recently picked up the trilogy for development.

  The experience of the trilogy was so revelatory that I found myself wondering whether I had missed some influential works of science fiction that might have inspired Liu.  The Foundation Trilogy by Issac Asimov is an obvious inspiration, and the characters and the book reference it.  Another book that is often cited by people writing about the Remembrance trilogy is Star Maker, by Olaf Stapledon.
I'd heard of neither book nor author, so I checked out 1970's era reprint.


Published 2/11/19
The Road to Wigan Pier (1937)
 by George Orwell


   George Orwell is one of my favorite writers.  He is very much on my completist list, of authors where I'm trying to read all their books.  The Audiobook of Orwell's 1937 poverty tour in northern mining towns is readily available via the Los Angeles Public Library, and it also ranked #39 on the Guardian's 2011 list of Best 100 Non Fiction books, so I picked it as a space filler during my long weekly drives.

  I didn't expect to be disappointed by Orwell, and I wasn't.   Poverty is a consistent theme of the second tier of Orwell's books- not the ones you read in school but books you might come across if you take an interest in Orwell beyond his big canon-busting hits like Animal Farm and 1984.   The most popular of his poverty books is Down and Out in London and Paris, (1933) which explores similar themes and probably explained why this book was commissioned by Victor Gollancz.   Besides the non-fiction, Keep the Aspidistra Flying, an early novel, deals explicitly with the theme of poverty in the guise of a kunstsleroman.

  The 2011 Guardian list of 100 Best Non Fiction books takes The Road to Wigan Pier as it's representative of the Orwell bibliography, and it's hard to argue, if only because it is the only one of Orwell's books where he well and truly gives his opinion about his subject, and I think the reader can see a hit of the kind of public intellectual he could have become were it not for his very early death at the age or 50, in 1946.

  The first half of The Road to Wigan Pier is a straight forward description of the living conditions and working conditions for the miners in northern English coal mining towns, the second is a polemic directed against the socialist leadership for not doing enough to appeal to actual working men, as supposed to the effete intellectuals who tended to be socialists back then.   It's a critique that holds true into today- you can think of the Democrats in America repeated failures to appeal to white working class voters in the industrial midwest and south.

  The descriptions of actual living conditions, it's hard to believe he's talking about life in England during the 20th century- for example, he describes a common condition of people who can't afford to buy bedding and just sleep on piles of rags placed on top of the bed frame.  It's also very clear that nutrition was terrible for the English working class.   What marks out Orwell from a half century of anti-poverty crusaders is that he actually lived it- experienced poverty both as a reporter and as a bohemian- so both naturally and unnaturally, which was very much not the case for educated writer inveighing against working class poverty in the late 19th and early to mid 20th century.
  Stapledon was an English science fiction writer who had the misfortune to do most of his writing either directly before or after World War II, a time when opportunities were slim for trans-atlantic publishing of all sorts, and before science fiction was taken seriously by literary critics.  He became a cult author, for example, Borges wrote a foreword for 1960's era reprint of Star Maker.   

  Star Maker is, I think, the first serious attempt to imagine the outlines of intergalactic civilization.  Stapeldon's Star Maker is an English man, living in the 20th century, who, one night, rises out of his journey and begins travelling among the stars.  When he lands on a world with intelligent life, he is able to partially occupy the consciousness of the "other humans" as he calls them.    What follows is a systemic attempt to describe all forms of intelligent life in the galaxy.

  Stapledon then follows with an incredible description of millions years of Galactic history, featuring battles, intergalactic space travel and even conscious stars.  It is a wild ride, although there is little in the way of plot or character development. I found myself repeatedly needing to confirm that Star Maker had actually been published in 1937, because it feels several decades ahead of its time.

  I think there is a strong argument to include Star Maker as a canonical novel, perhaps as a substitute for other proto-genre works like At the Mountains of Madness by H.P. Lovecraft (1936), or a work of detective fiction like The Glass Key by Dashiell Hammett (1931), Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy Sayers (1933) or The Postman Always Rings Twice by James Cain (1934).  Do Hammett and Sayers both need multiple titles published in the 1930's?  Surely one book by each author is sufficient.

File:Sylvia Townsend Warner.jpg
Sylvia Townsend Warner
Published 2/21/16
Summer Will Show (1936)
by Sylvia Townsend Warner


    The most striking difference between the 2006 and 2008 versions of the 1001 Books list is the exclusion of books by authors who placed multiple titles on the 2006 list in favor of non-English language, unrepresented authors.  A major theme of the 2006 list which is eclipsed in the 2008 list is the emphasis of books by English language women authors who are commonly excluded from the canon.  Sylvia Townsend Warner is a good example of an author from the group.  Summer Will Show is a little-read, historical novel about the French Revolution, written about a wealthy English woman who becomes a lesbian radical.

   Warner is so little read today that all of her major books are published by the New York Review of Books publishing imprint.  The NYRB is a who's-who of neglected 20th century authors, and I can only presume that their criteria for publication is a lack of interest from bigger publishing houses and a solid critical reputation.

    Warner is so little read today that only one of her books even has it's own Wikipedia page.   There have been perhaps less than ten titles in the 1001 Books list that lack an independent Wikipedia page.  Obscurity aside, there is much to admire in Summer Will Show, namely a strong female protagonist who engages in a lesbian relationship and forsakes a life of leisure in rural England for a position on the barricades of the French Revolution.


The Lady Vanishes
Criterion Collection cover for The Lady Vanishes d. Alfred Hitchcock

Published 1/15/21
The Lady Vanishes (1938)
d. Alfred Hitchcock
Criterion Collection #3

  The question of whether movies (or "film" or "cinema) is literature is very important to this blog- even if I do go half a decade or more without seriously addressing the question here.  Now that I'm back to it (the last stand alone Criterion Collection review was in 2015), I'm back to thinking about the  literature /movies/film/cinema issue.   If you wanted to sketch out the major schools of thought on the issue, you can look at it in the context of the American/Western University system, where films are typically taught as literature to undergraduates, with a narrower band of technical education that typically takes place outside of the question of film as literature.

   On the one side you've got the actually Professors and students of film.  The Professors are typically Professors of literature.  The distinction is less important to the students, many of whom may reasonably prefer movies to the more traditional forms of literature, poetry, novels, short stories.  Because the idea that film was a type of literature to be studied only happened after World War II, all Professors of Film take a post-modernist perspective on the ideas of literature, so they all question the distinction even as they benefit from it.

  On the other side you've got the Professors in the more traditional lines of Literature- World Literature, American Literature, 20th Century Literature, Poetry, Creative Writing, Comparative Literature, Etc.   Those people are naturally going to resent/dislike Professors of Film because they take jobs from these same traditional Professor types.  There is also some prejudice against the idea of moving images as art, and the broad technical and monetary restrictions on making a work of film as literature. 

   Alfred Hitchcock is interesting because he represents a key moment in the transformation of movies into a form of literature, in that he was the artist who inspired Francois Truffaut to coin the term "auteur" back in 1954.  After the term came into common usage, film had its "author" -a prestige denied to the actual writers of films, who were and continue to be viewed as mere technical support.   The whole idea of the auteur then inspired scholars and fans to go back to film before 1954 and re-evaluate film makers for auteur status.   This is another very important example of how artistic reputation is often rejudged decades after the work is published. 

   Using the example of The Lady Vanishes, it was the third Criterion Collection film.  That is despite the fact that, as the accompanying materials make clear, The Lady Vanishes was considered a thriller b-movie type production by the English studio providing the financing.    One of the points that Truffaut makes in his discussion with Hitchcock that appears in audio format in the extras of the Criterion Collection edition is that he has seen The Lady Vanishes multiple times, and will go in saying that he is going to focus on the technical acuity that Hitchcock displays, but instead he gets swept into the story and forgets to look.  That is the essence of great art.   Indeed, I quite enjoyed The Lady Vanishes even though I've never been a fan of Hitchcock.   Part of it has to do with the fact that his films aren't that widely shown.

  I'm sure all Criterion Channel has is his early English films.  They should really let those movies out to breath somewhere!

Published 11/10/14
To The North (1932)
by Elizabeth Bowen


  This is Anglo-Irish author Bowen's second book within the 1001 Books projects.  Her first was The Last September, published in 1929.  In To The North, Bowen has moved on from her rural Irish homeland to the fast times of post World War I, pre Great Depression London.  Any discussion of To The North needs to address the role of technology on the characters of To The North.  Opining that technology has changed our lives in many way is beyond a common place in 2014, but it's interesting to see how long it took Art to absorb and reflect the way technology and innovation changed the way we lived.

  For example, To The North is one of two books in the 101 Books project up until this point that uses the automobile as an active element in telling the story, and maybe one of five books where the characters use a telephone.  Both this novel and The Last September deal with  a changing world where the characters struggle to adapt.  The difference is that in The Last September the changing world is of a recognizable type: political upheaval brought about by the English colonial adventure in Ireland.   In To The North, the change is stranger, less familiar to the author and the characters, but infinitely more familiar to a present day reader.

  The female protagonists of To The North are sisters in law, Cecilia, 29, was married to Emmeline's brother Henry, but Henry died.  During the novel Cecilia does not much of all, while Emmeline has a travel agency with a partner and tools around town in her own car.  Emmeline is involved with a brilliant but decadent barrister who goes by "Markie."  Emmeline and Cecilia are a kind of mid point between the heroines of Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters and those of Bridget Jones and Sex & the City.

  And while no one is likely to mistake the chaste description of the interactions between Markie and Emmeline for a Sex & the City episode, the modernity of Emmeline with her car, business and lack of interest in marriage and children is impossible to miss.  

Published 11/11/14
Sunset Song (1932)
 by Lewis Grassic Gibbon


  Widely acknowledged as the first important Scottish novel of the 20th century, Sunset Song is part of a trilogy of novels written by Lewis Grassic Gibbon.  It's hard to argue that Gibbon in any way started the tradition of the Scottish novel, since Scottish writers like Sir Walter Scott and Tobias Smollett played a role in inventing the novel itself.  However, Gibbon is the first author to attempt to portray the "common folk" of highland Scotland in a realistic manner.  His trilogy of A Scots Quair, of which Sunset Song is the first volume, combines modernist technique (dialogue integrated into the text, stream of consciousness), a strong female hero (Chris Guthrie, who is the central figure of all three novels) and regional dialect (complete with a glossary.). to excellent effect.
  It is the interaction of these three features that make Sunset Song/A Scots Quair classic, and they outweigh the limited invention of the plot, which has the strong scent of earlier nineteenth century novels from other northern countries like Sweden and Norway.   A plot point dealing with a triple infanticide/suicide by Guthrie's mother can't help but recall the rural infanticide of The Growth of the Soil (1917) by Knut Hamsun.   The earlier chapters of the novel, describing the history, courtship and marriage of her parents reminded me of The People of Hemso (1877) by August Strindberg.  Which is to say that Sunset Song isn't necessarily breathlessly original aside from the technique, but it is first in the field, and at 195 pages makes for a quick read.

Published 1/21/15
Wild Harbour (1936)
by Ian Macpherson


  I can't remember the last 1001 Books title that hasn't had it's own Wikipedia page.  Wild Harbour, by Scottish novelist Ian Macpherson has to be one of the most obscure titles thus far simply for that reason.   It's a shame that Wild Harbour is so obscure, because it is actually one of my top ten books for the last 12 months or so.  Half survival narrative in the fine tradition of Robinson Crusoe and his progeny, half dystopian futurism,  Wild Harbour also features a well observed Scottish highlands(?) locale and an engaging love story between the two lead characters, who pack up and leave in the early days of a (fictional) World War II set some time in the near future.

   The transition from traditional-ish survival story to a depiction of an anarchic English country side is a clear influence on popular current dystopian narratives:  Fans of The Road by Cormac McCarthy and the book or movie version of Children of Men will recognize the influence of this book on those books.  Generally speaking, the world-systems perspective of serious fiction is conservative, with authors firmly rooted in the upper-middle class concerns of property inheritance and marriage protocol, with an increasing interest in corresponding concerns among the working classes.  The idea of writing fiction in a world where government is absent is not particularly new, but the setting that world after the collapse of the current social system is.  Wild Harbour merits attention for its early depiction of a post-apocalyptic landscape.


Published 2/20/15
Murphy (1938)
by Samuel Beckett


  You can get away with calling Samuel Beckett either the "last of the modernists" or the "first of the post-modernists" in casual conversation, either assertion is easily buttressed by  Murphy, one of Beckett's few novels.  Published in 1938, the end of the modernist period, it contains a main character whose behavior is more in line with precepts of post modernism than any particular strain of modernism.  Murphy is equally obsessed with not working and conducting breathing and meditation exercises while tightly restrained in a chair.

 Beckett's prose technique is recognizably modernist or avant garde, but not excessively so. It's hard not to compare Murphy to novels written by James Joyce in their similar espousal of a low budget, pre-1960s concern with non-traditional brands of spirituality.  For example, Joyce's Ulysses is infused with multiple ruminations about Kabbalah.  Murphy has no explicit ideology, Samuel Beckett clearly did not want him to have any appreciable motivation.  At the end of Beckett, he is immolated in his "proper garrett" inside the insane asylum where he works.   The portion of the book where Beckett goes to work among the insane is the only part that could be considered to have "action."  The rest takes place mostly in the apartment of Beckett and his hooker girlfriend.

  The relationship of Beckett and James Joyce is no secret, occupying pride of place on Wikipedia for Samuel Beckett's "Early Works" heading.


Published 2/7/16
The House in Paris (1935)
by Elizabeth Bowen


   Any author who placed more than 5 titles on the 2006 1001 Books to Read Before You Die list is practically guaranteed to lose 50% or more of those titles on the 2008 list.  Elizabeth Bowen is no exception, losing three of her six entries on the 2006 edition.  The House in Paris is one of the lost titles.   All of Bowen's works combine modernist styles (use of the "free indirect" narrator, moving backwards and forwards in time out of sequence) but The House in Paris is the most modernist, with the action taking place within a single day and the use of lengthy imagined scenes (imagined by one of the characters) taking place out of the time sequence of the novel, as a flash back.

  Like much of her work, The House in Paris touches on issues of class and religion without being about those things.  Rather, The House in Paris is about a young boy, Leopold, learning about the tangled circumstances around his birth.  In the fine modernist tradition, none of this is spelled out for the reader.  You have to either work or pay close attention to really zero in on the story before the third act ties it all together.  Before then you might find yourself asking which character is which.  That is frequently the case with books that embrace early 20th century modernist technique, a disorientation, if you will, from the standard feelings obtained from reading a well written novel.

  Does anyone read Elizabeth Bowen these days?  Maybe in England.  The last American edition of The House in Paris was published in 1976.  I'd never heard of her before the 1001 Books project, now I would rank her as a middle of the table British (Anglo-Irish) author from the early-mid 20th century.  I think though, that three books is adequate to represent her proper status.

Published 11/23/20
Monica (1930)
by Saunders Lewis

Replaces: Antic Hay by Aldous Huxley

   It is kind of amazing that the Welsh have managed to preserve their indigenous language in the face of going on 800 years of English imperialism.  Monica by Welsh nationalist Saunders Lewis makes it into the revised 1001 Books project as the sole representative of translated from the original Welsh.  Of course, anyone following the 1001 Books project is reading the English language translation.  Without the original language, Monica comes off as early kitchen sink realism with a Welsh accent.

  Monica wasn't a hit- Welsh nationalists didn't like the negative take on social relations between wife and husband.  "Kitchen Sink Realism" wasn't really a thing in England until the 1950's, so Lewis was ahead of his time in that regard. 

Louis-Ferdinand Celine, forerunner of Henry Miller, William Burroughs, Jack Kerouac and Charles Bukowski.

Published 3/11/16
Journey to the End of the Night (1932)
 by Louis-Ferdinand Celine


   Before there was Henry Miller, William Burroughs, Jack Kerouac and Charles Bukowski, there was Louis-Ferdinand Celine.   Celine was also, regrettably, a rabid anti-Semite who was firmly committed to the Nazi cause in World War II AND after- eventually being convicted in abstentia of being a collaborator with the Nazis.  Celine's place in the literary canon is still debated.  He was famously included then excluded from a list of "500 French intellectuals" compiled by the French government itself.

  His widow, still alive at the age of 103, has ensured that his most rabidly anti-Semetic tracts are out of print and he's kind of a poster child for the impact that extremely non-p.c. believes can have on an artistic legacy.  Unlike many other authors I've not read in the 1001 Books project, I know exactly why I hadn't read Journey to the End of the Night before now: It's because Louis-Ferdinand Celine is a Nazi, more or less.  

  But now I'm quite clear on the philosophy of pardoning artists for moral flaws that would otherwise put them beyond the pale of polite society.  Being a Nazi may be more offensive than living as a unrepentant degenerate or heroin addicted trust-funder, but only as a matter of degree.  The direct and obvious comparison is to American author Henry Miller.   Like Miller, Celine directly confronted the reality of life on the margins of Western society in the 1920s and 30s.  Topics like venereal disease, back alley abortions and the ugliness of 20th century racism are put front and center to the reader.

   Journey to the End of the Night squarely fits into the literary genre of 'bildungsroman' or "coming of age story,"  but it represents the negative image of what that genre typically represents.  A fun house mirror, if you will.   Like so many other 20th century anti-heroes, Ferdinand Bardamu is deeply imbued with an existentialist philosophy before such a thing existed.   Bardamu isn't a thoughtful intellectual, but he isn't a thug, either.   He starts out in the army during World War I, finds his way to Africa, where he has some memorable adventures, makes his way to America for a year or so, and returns to France, where he becomes an unsuccessful doctor.

   There is also a kind of negative double to Bardamu, his "frenemy" Leon Robinson, whom he meets first on the battlefields of Belgium, where Robinson is trying to get himself captured by the Germans.  They renew acquaintances in America and after Bardamu returns to France, Robinson ends up becoming a focal point of Bardamu's existence.   This relationship between Bardamu and Robinson more or less constitutes the plot of Journey to the End  of the Night, but like Miller and Kerouac, the atmosphere is more of interest than any overarching narrative.

   Once you get past Celine's unrepentant, explicitly pro-Nazi Antisemitism (or if, I guess) it's clear that Journey to the End of the Night is an early classic of 20th century existentialist


Published 8/30/15
Nausea (1938)
 by Jean Paul Sartre


  Nausea is the first novel by Nobel Prize decliner Jean Paul Sartre.  It's also the first existentialist novel, and indeed the single text that introduced the most people to the idea of existentialism.   It's common to associate existentialism with the post World War II period, but for Sartre and the other existentialists of the early 20th century it was the experience of the first World War and the subsequent post War crisis of faith that shaped their perspective. 

 Antoine Roquentin, the existentialist anti-hero, is living in a thinly veiled version of the French port city of Le Havre, where he suffers from a crisis of faith where being in society, in public, causes him to be nauseas.  He consorts with a variety of low lifes, including his friend, "the self taught man," who spends his days reading indiscriminately at the local library.

  The plight of the existential hero is so familiar 80 years after Nausea was published that it is difficult to plug in the excitement that it must have caused at the time.  It's also unclear how far Nausea penetrated in translation- with the major current English translation dating from 1965, 25 years after it was first published in French.


 
Published 1/4/21
Vipers' Tangle (The Knot of Vipers)
by Francois Mauriac

Replaces:  The Plumed Serpent by D.H. Lawrence

  French author Francois Mauriac won the Nobel Prize in 1952.  Unusually for someone known as a "Catholic" author, he supported the resistance during World War II and was the only member of the Acadamie Francaise to publish in support of the resistance.  Mauriac is another good example of how a well known European author can be totally obscure in the USA.  For example, this book is the only English language edition of his work which appears on the first page of his Amazon author search results- the rest are all French editions. 

  Vipers' Tangle struck me as an extremely French novel, about Monsieur Louis, a wealthy lawyer who becomes obssessed with disinheriting his family.  Told in the form of a confessional journal entry, Louis gradually reveals that the Vipers' Tangle/Knot refers not to the family he hates itself, but rather the situation inside his heart. 

Friday, January 20, 2023

1930's American Literature

   Most of the books here are from the original 1001 Books list- I'm not sure any books from the 1930's were actually added in the subsequent revisions. Americans would of course detect an anti-American bias in some of the omissions but it is hard to argue that they didn't get the feel of the decade right.  There is a heavy dose of 1930's American Literature that wasn't fully appreciated for decades after- starting with the hardboiled detective fiction of Dashiell Hammett- referred to dismissively as "pulp fiction."  James Cain, Horace McCoy and Raymond Chandler also fall into that category.   The second big category are the hits of the day- John Steinbeck, Gone With the Wind, Hemingway, Faulkner, etc.  The final category are the weirdos and outliers- Lovecraft, Barnes and Henry Miller.

   It's worth mentioning that one of the concerns in institutions facing down the threat of AI and its influence on paper writing is a move away from older, better known texts, on the theory that AI engines have digested these texts.  Considering the importance of the academic market to the maintenance of the literary canon, any shift away from older authors is likely to dramatically impact the audience size for books on this list.

Published 6/3/14
The Maltese Falcon (1930)
by Dashiell Hammett


  The most interesting aesthetic phenomenon of the 20th century is not the parallel development of "high" and "low" culture, but rather the related event of specific works crossing from the "low" side of art to the "high" side.  It is a phenomenon that is not exclusive to the 20th century- you could argue that some of the earliest novels crossed from low to high art before such a distinction existed, but the 20th century, with an explosion of media and exponential growth of Audiences for all sorts of art and art products, really brought the movement from low to high (and vice versa) into focus.

 The Maltese Falcon is a strong, early example of something published as "low" art becoming "high" art over a very  short period of time.  Hammett himself made claims even prior to the initial publication of The Maltese Falcon in serial form (a year prior to it being released as a novel) that "future" critics and audiences would regard it as a great work of literature.  Hammett was assisted by the 1941 film version, starring Humphrey Bogart and directed by John Huston, which turned out to be one of the greatest films of all time AND adhered relatively closely to the language of the actual book.

  Although Hammett worked in genre fiction, and inspired decades of sequentially released detective fiction paper backs starring the same detective in re-occurring episodes, he himself did not dillute his genius with successive sequels.  Perhaps some of the "high art" status accorded to The Maltese Falcon was due to Hammett having the biographical attributes of other famous novelists- he was sickly, had limited productivity, and didn't right much after the fertile period of the 1930s.

 In fact, the investing of the main character with a name and personality (Sam Spade) was itself something of a departure for Hammett himself, whose main character in his short fiction was a nameless man called "the Continental Op."   Hammett's work is, of course, a model of tight, economical prose and his influence is visible on several generations of artists working both inside of literature and outside, It's hard to even imagine film noir existing without The Maltese Falcon- novel or book.


Published 10/13/14
The Glass Key (1931)
by Dashiell Hammett


  Dashiell Hammett is one of those authors, like Charles Dickens and Jane Austen, who have been so wholly absorbed into popular culture that they cease to exist as independent works of literature.  Dashiell Hammett did not invent crime fiction, indeed, crime fiction went back to 18th century penny dreadfuls and crime played a prominent part in early 18th century novels like Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe. But Hammett essentially elevated the genre of "Hard boiled crime fiction" from something thought as genre fiction to serious art.  Of course, the effect of his work WITHIN the genre was significant as well, patterning multiple generation of books, films and television series.

  Unlike Red Harvest (1929) and The Maltese Falcon (1930), The Glass Key lacks a specific geographic location to serve as a focal point for the action.  Instead, The Glass Key takes place in a nameless American city.  This gives The Glass Key an abstract quality that is lacking in the more concrete Red Harvest and The Maltese Falcon.  At times, the dissociative quality of a nameless location and Machiavellian manipulations in the course of the plot give The Glass Key an experimental quality, or perhaps a Platonic quality- the perfection of the form without the distraction of San Francisco.

   Red HarvestThe Maltese Falcon and The Glass Key all share a fascination with corruption, power and wealth. Dashiell Hammett is very much an example of an artist who was both popular and critically acclaimed, and he has endured as a result of this combination, staying in print, and inspiring classic work in other artforms, particularly film.


Published 10/23/14
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1933)
by Gertrude Stein

 Gertrude Stein's famous, epochal literary memoir about her life in Paris before, during and after World War I is another book where I was left asking myself how it was possible that I'd not read it before. Stein existed today as a kind of totemic figure for the early 20th century cultural avant garde/modernism, but I don't believe she is commonly read.  I know I've never heard any of her works from the 1001 Books Project: Three LivesThe Making of Americans and this one mentioned either inside a classroom or out.

  Coming from the East Bay of the San Francisco area, I was of course familiar with her famous quip about Oakland, that "There's no there, there."  Maybe that made people in the Bay Area a little hostile, or maybe it's because her significance is not really addressed by any of her works.  Three Lives is very much of the first novels that could be called Modern or Experimental Modernism, The Making of Americans hasn't really held up, and is perhaps a tad long, and The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas is a memoir, not a novel, and memoirs aren't typically read in literature classes in high school and college.

 That said, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas really wowed me. Gertrude Stein is someone that sociologist Randall Collins would call a "network star" or someone whose connections ensure the survival of her ideas after her death.  Although this is putatively an auto-biography of Stein's long time companion and lover, the author's by line and the book itself make it clear that it is in auto-biography of Stein written by Stein from the perspective of Toklas.

 Stein was important not only for her writing, but also for her patronage.  She was an earlier purchaser of Cezanne,  Pablo Picasso and Matisse.  Her older brother was a partner in these endeavors, and while Stein does go into her child hood and education, including time at Radcliffe and at John Hopkins Medical School, where she was apparently one class from  taking her degree.  It is unclear where her money comes from, but she is not someone who has to work for a living, and could afford to support herself and buy paintings and such without any source of income.

 During the war she had a Ford shipped over and became a driver, as did many Americans based on the number of World War I books written by Americans about their experiences as Ambulance drivers- ee Cummings and Hemingway to name two.  The action which takes place post-World War I is a bit of an anti-climax.  Hemingway makes a decent appearance, and Stein lives to see herself hailed as a genius at Oxford and Cambridge University- but not by the Atlantic Monthly, who in fine literary memoir form singles out for particular ire.

 Fashionable or not, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas is a must for anyone who thinks they understand 20th century modernism- for both painting, sculpture and literature.


Published 10/30/14
Call It Sleep (1934)
by Henry Roth

  The 1934 publication date of Call It Sleep should come with an asterisk, because it wasn't until a mid 1960s revival that this modernist bildungsroman of the Jewish-American experience in the Bronx and Brooklyn was hailed as a classic.  Call It Sleep is also a famous 20th century one off- Roth didn't publish another novel for forty years. The main aspects of Call It Sleep to understand is that Roth was familiar with James Joyce and the tenets of literary modernism, in terms of utilizing stream of conscience narrative and the incorporation of non-standard English into his writing. For Roth, the other languages include Aramaic (the language of the Old Testament), Hebrew and Yiddish(Hebrew and German language spoken by many Jewish immigrants from Germany/Eastern Europe.)

  So, the narrative style (stream of consciousness) combines with multiple languages, all rendered phonetically in English, and it tells the important story of what it was like to grow up a Jewish-American immigrant in New York City in the early 20th century.  Perhaps Roth's biggest mistake was writing it so close to the time period depicted.  What read in the 1960s as a lost modernist classic may have read as a pale imitation of Joyce in 1934.  My sense is that Call It Sleep was probably favorably noticed upon publication but didn't permeate into the general population the way that the work of Hemingway and Fitzgerald did.

  I don't believe that Call It Sleep is widely read these days, certainly I'd never heard of it outside of the 1001 Books project, and I am a Jewish-American myself.  I would have expected my parents to have a copy, or for it to have been mentioned by a classmate in school in the context of books like The Basketball Diaries or Catcher in the Rye.  Henry Roth's status as a one hit wonder has also likely contributed to his general neglect as an Author.  I think some Authors obtain classic status with later works and then people go back and look at earlier books and elevate them, but if an Artist only has one major work, that project is impossible and there is no interplay between works.  This interplay between various works of a single Artist is something that can contribute to the maintenance of a larger audience years after publication.


Published 11/28/14
The Thin Man (1934)
 by Dashiell Hammett


  The above Ngram has no surprises.  Agatha Christie, with her huge general audience, is first by a mile.  Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett both peaked in the mid 1980s, and Dorothy Sayers has remained flat since her glory days in the 1940s.  The Ngram chart for Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett probably reflects the ongoing canonization process in the United States, with a growth of secondary literature "filling up" during the 1980s and thereafter diminishing as there remains less to be said.

  Chandler's rebound since the early 1990s (vs. Hammett's flat line) probably reflects a revival of popular interest in Chandler as the true literary stylist of Detective fiction.  If you are looking for a point to distinguish between the collected work of Chandler and Hammett, The Thin Man, Hammett's succesful gentleman detective whose exploits were taken over by Hollywood, would be that point.

  Read back to back with Dorothy Sayers Lord Peter Wimsey gentleman Detective, it is hard not to draw a firm conclusion that Nick and Nora Charles were his attempt to move up in the market, and perhaps a calculated move to sell books. There is no shame in that game by the standards of pulp fiction, but it is a literature no-no.  Rampant success aside, The Thin Man degrades Hammett's authenticity in comparison to that of Chandler, who has no similar work.

  Another facet that jumps out about the Ngram is that Raymond Chandler started later and lower than the other three.  He remains in last place until 1960, when he passed Hammett (and stays more popular than Hammett from then on.)   The Thin Man was Hammett's last novel, although he didn't die until 1961 he didn't really write much between 1934 and his death, and no more novels.  Thus, the corpus of Hammett full length novels stops at five.  The only one not to make the 1001 Books project is The Dain Curse (1929).

   The Glass Key (1931), with its plot of urban politics, is the densest of the four.  The Maltese Falcon(1930) is the most enduring in terms of a general audience, likely because the film is such a classic.  However, I would recommend the other book- Red Harvest, which involves activity in a far Western mining town.  For me, Red Harvest was the most memorable- only because I've seen the film version of Maltese Falcon so many times that reading the underlying book felt duplicative.  Another appealing aspect of Red Harvest is that it stars his early, anonymous Detective "The Continental Op" and this use of the nameless protagonist almost seems like high literary modernism rather than a pulp fiction derived convention or lack of imagination.

Originally Published 12/3/14
To Have and Have Not (1937)
by Ernest Hemingway



   As the above Ngram clearly demonstrates, Ernest Hemingway's ability to generate book sales and celebrity level attention from the media and audiences did not produce a level of long term popularity equal to that enjoyed by the high modernists: Gertrude Stein, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf.   I would speculate that Ernest Hemingway, perhaps because of his immense popularity with the general public in the 1950s, was less read by literature graduate students in American University English departments, whereas James Joyce and Virginia Woolf were becoming firmly enshrined as fully "canonical" authors.

 Part of me thinks that this is ridiculous, a prejudice by academics against a popular author with a large general audience and respect among the critical community.  On the other hand, I can see where a scholar, could see his talents already in decline by To Have and Have Not, which is either a still-waters-run-deep indictment of the American Dream during the Great Depression or Hemingway's take on the hard boiled Detective novel, or both, or neither I suppose.

  One difference between Hemingway's Hard Boiled Cuban/Florida Keys locations and those of detective fiction mainstays like Hammett and Chandler is the tropical vibes. Another is the moral ambiguity of bootlegging, gun-running Harry Morgan.  Morgan is no private detective, quite the opposite of Hammett's continental operative or Philip Marlowe.   To Have and Have Not was pieced together by Hemingway writing a conclusory novella to two short story/novellas about the Harry Morgan character.   His prose is still bracing in 1937, but To Have and Have Not lacks the personality of his roman-a-clef-ish The Sun Also Rises(1926) and the Italian Front chronicle of Farewell To Arms (1929.)  Sun and Farewell were career makers, and To Have and Have Not reads as the work of someone who is assured an Audience.  Not lazy, but not world beating. 

Published 12/17/14
Absalom, Absalom (1936)
by William Faulkner


    The Ngram above compares the frequency of mention for Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway.  Woolf, Faulkner and Joyce are all part of the literature of "high modernism" characterized by the abstraction of the form of the novel and the integration of challenging narrative techniques like stream of consciousness, shifts between narrators without signaling breaks in the text of the book, irregular punctuation and vocabulary and experimental grammar.

  The chart above clearly signals that Virginia Woolf is the most popular, likely due to her popularity of being "taught" to college and post-graduate scholars of fiction.  She has written several short novels, ideal for classroom teaching, and her status as a woman with relatively non-controversial subject matter (and highly controversial personal history) make her an ideal exponent of the principles of high modernism.

  Of the remaining three, Joyce has second place probably on the strength of the combination of legal notority of Ulysses and scholarly interest.  Hemingway and Faulkner share American nationality, but Faulkner employs a variation on the distinctive style of Woolf and Joyce, where Hemingway represents a non-experimental style.  The technical innovation of Woolf, Joyce and Faulkner limit their popular appeal.  Faulkner also carries the burden of being utterly unpolitical correct.

 Absalom, Absalom with a "use of the N word per paragraph" rate of something above 1.0, is exhibit A  the catalog of Faulkernian political incorrectness.  Like The Sound of the Fury- whose Quentin Compson is the narrator of Absalom, Absalom shifts back and forward in time and weaves between narrative perspectives with little more than chapter titles.  Modernist technique abounds, with Chapter VI featuring the current holder of the Guinness Book of World Records record for "longest sentence in a work of literature."

  Although Quentin Compson serves as the narrator, the story is about a friend of his grandfathers, a man named Thomas Sutpen, a son of West Virginia, who made his fortune in Haiti, married a woman with "Negro" blood unwittingly, fathered a son with her, abandoned her, moved to Mississippi, built a huge estate, had two children, saw his son from a first marriage attempt to marry his daughter from his second marriage and ends up murdered at the hands of a tenant whose 15 year old daughter he impregnates with the understanding that if she has a son he will marry her.

  Wikipedia describes the "genre" of Absalom, Absalom as "Southern Gothic" which is rather like calling the text of the Old Testament, "Biblical."  Yes, it's true that has all the elements that would come to characterize "southern gothic" but it's also a late classic of the high modernist period.   Like Woolf and Joyce (but not Hemingway) you don't just pick up a copy of Absalom, Absalom and read it while you are waiting for the bus.

  Most, and arguably all of the top texts of high modernist literature is difficult to imbibe.   At least Faulkner has healthy doses of incest and insanity. 

Buddy, you are about to die.  Still from the early movie version of The Postman Always Rings Twice (1934), by James Cain.

Published 12/18/14
 The Postman Always Rings Twice (1934)
by James Cain


  The Postman Always Rings Twice is popular in both book and movie form.  In book form it is most certainly "hard boiled" but it is not detective fiction, because there is no detective involved.  The Postman Always Rings Twice was shocking in its day, and actually got banned in Boston, and it was an immediate hit.   The hard boiled sex and violence mask a complicated moral universe and the minimalist scenery disguises a book that is very grounded in the Southern California environment of the Great Depression.  Frank Chambers, the narrator and central figure, is a classic drifter/hobo.  An interrogation between Chambers and the local district attorney sounds like the description of a classic hobo lifestyle.

  The Postman Always Rings Twice also touches of issues of class, race and gender- all the central issues of 20th century American life, wrapped in a thick blanket of tough guy talk and hottish sex.  I'm a little disappointed that Double Indemnity, the other classic James Cain hit, didn't make the 1001 Books list. Its absence seems clear evidence of an anti-American tendency within the 1001 Books project (understandable most if not all of the selectors are English authors and academics.)

Published 12/19/14
Tender is the Night (1934)
by F. Scott Fitzgerald


  Tender is the Night is the story of the rise and fall of Dick Diver and his marriage and divorce from the fabulously young and fabulously "crazy" Nicole.  Generations of scholars have pointed to Tender is the Night as ALSO being about the rise and fall of F. Scott Fitzgerald, who wrote Tender is the Night while his fabulously young and fabulously "crazy" wife Zelda Fitzgerald was institutionalized for schizophrenia for a couple years in the early 1930s.  I believe it is fair to observe that Tender is the Night hasn't aged particularly well for reasons to related its un-politically correct treatment of women and mental illness, but as a similarly aged male who has also experienced a divorce after a marriage of roughly a decade, it's hard for me to simply turn my back on this book and say, "Don't bother."

 After all, is F. Scott Fitzgerald not a major American novelist?  Whether you agree is likely to depend on how you feel about the role of hits in establishing an artistic legacy.  If you are OK with hits being the defining measure of artistic greatness, than The Great Gatsby is likely, by itself, to secure a spot of Fitzgerald in any canon of 20th century novelists.

  If however you are someone who champions the "avant garde" or likes high modernist authors like Virginia Woolf, James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, you would probably rank Fitzgerald as second class, and you might use Tender is the Night as Exhibit "A" in your argument, if you don't outright call him a "one hit wonder" and disregard him on those grounds alone.

  I'm not a huge fan of Gatsby personally, but I do adhere to the believe that hits define an artistic legacy, and that, coupled with the "relatability" of Dick Divers to my own personal experiences leave me inclined to recommend Tender is the Night to someone on the fence.   I don't believe Tender is the Night is a "taught" book, especially when you consider how popular The Great Gatsby is as a teachable text.  I'm not sure that modern woman reader would appreciate the frankly misogynistic OVERTONES of Dick Divers, he's like Mad Men's Don Draper without the wink and nod.

  Tender is the Night is a fun read, you won't be bored or challenged by the text, though the shift between narrator perspective gives it some feeling of modernism.  I think a sophisticated contemporary reader should possess the wherewithal to both acknowledge the retrograde attitudes about women and mental illness and appreciate the place and time of Tender is the Night (1934) as a work of art.

Djuna Barnes: author of Nightwood (1936)

Published 12/23/14
Nightwood (1936)
by Djuna Barnes

  Calling this book a "masterpiece" has to be special pleading. I'd go along with calling it a minor classic of early-mid twentieth century modernism, but T.S. Eliot's famous introduction to the American version of this novel rang false to me.  Barnes represents modernism, lesbianism and the avant garde of American AND Europe- she was from the north-east of the US, wrote in Berlin and settled in Greenwich Village, where she survived to the 80s.  Nightwood is her one hit, she has one other novel and a play and some poetry and that is about it.  Nightwood is loosely "about" a lesbian couple in Berlin, but the most memorable character is the itinerant gynecologist who has a postively Burroughsian quality (Burroughs was a Nightwood fan.)

Published 1/30/15
Gone with the Wind (1936)
by Margaret Mitchell


   Gone with the Wind is a brick, first of all.  The hard back version I checked out from the San Diego Public Library was full 8.5 x 11 dimensions and close to a thousand pages.  A thousand pages! Gone with the Wind is both a top ten novel and film in terms of popularity for those art forms. Gone with the Wind was the first and only novel that Margaret Mitchell wrote. In 2015, more people are familiar with the 1939 film but the book has sold 30 million copies.  It's the second most popular novel behind the Bible with American audiences.

  Make no mistake- Gone with the Wind is racist as HELL.  It is UNBELIEVABLE how virulently racist Gone with the Wind is.  Annnddd.... even though Gone with the Wind is written about the 19th century, it was published in 1936 and everyone LOVED it.  I don't know that GwtW is defensible in the way that Uncle Tom's Cabin- a book written during the 19th century by an ardent abolitionist.

  In terms of literary antecedents, Scarlett O'Hara most resembles Becky Sharp from Vanity Fair.  The amount of literary merit one accords to GwtW is likely to tie closely to ones opinion about the literary merit of Vanity Fair.  If you haven't read Vanity Fair, you should probably read that book before you read this book.

Published 2/11/15
Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937)
by Zora Neale Hurston


  Virtually forgotten by the 1960s, Their Eyes Were Watching God and the work of Zora Neale Hurston is a great example of a literary revival.  According to the afterword in the edition I read, near the end of her life Hurston was working as a maid in Florida, and she was buried in an unmarked grave, which Toni Morrison famously located.  Hurston is the acknowledged inspiration for Morrison.   Unlike most of the major works of the Harlem Renaissance, Their Eyes Were Watching God is written in vernacular and Janie Crawford is no tragic mulatto (she is mixed race, though.)

  Crawford's story is notable for a sophisticated rendering of the inner life of an unsophisticated heroine.  Huston, a student of Franz Boas (famous anthropologist) was sophisticated as any author in the 1930s, but Janie is not.  Despite an absence of formal education, Janie is a subtle, complicated character.  She demonstrates deep personal insight and the book basically has a happy ending.


James Franco as George and Chris O'Dowd as Lenny in the 2014 stage revival of Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, first published in 1937.

Published 12/12/15
Of Mice and Men (1937)
by John Steinbeck


  This last portion of the 1001 Books Project has felt a bit like a high school english class:  Of Mice and MenTheir Eyes Were Watching GodBurmese Days... the combination of Authors and titles is such that almost everyone with a junior college degree has read one of the three.  To be fair Burmese Days by George Orwell isn't one of this top hits, but Orwell is a monster of high school English class.  Of Mice and Men is clearly a book I should have read in school:  It's by a native Californian author, it is set in the Great Depression and it is barely 100 pages long- if even that.


Of Mice and Men was Steinbeck's first hit.  As the chronology of his life included in the back of the volume which contained it makes clear, Steinbeck went through a great deal of struggle both before and after fame.  Before, he lived in garrets, worked in warehouses and lived off of Daddy's money.  After, he cheated on his wife, got divorced and struggled with numerous physical and mental maladies.  He would go on to publish The Grapes of Wrath and win the Nobel Prize for Literature.

 Today he is considered the most famous inhabitant of the Monterey/Carmel/Pacific Grove/Salinas Central Coast area, with his own museum and numerous landmarks.  His description of Central Coast places like Tortilla Flats and Cannery Row have become synonymous with those places, as do his descriptions of Depression area farming life in the Central Valley.

  Of Mice and Men is located firmly inland in what sounds like the Northern reaches of the Central Valley.  The kind hearted George and slow witted Lenny are iconic literary figures.  My take is that the success of Of Mice and Men is tied to his depiction of a mentally challenged character with a level of insight and sensitivity that is new to literature.  He also generates enough atmosphere to keep attention despite the banal surroundings.  The timelessness of the fields being worked are given a sharp counter-point by the action sequences- flirting, fistfights and more.  The overall impact is to create a pleasing rhythm in spite of the awkward length.

Horror writer H.P. Lovecraft is best known for his "Cthulhu" mythos.  His novella At the Mountains of Madness essentially created the "ancient astronaut" genre of fantasy/crazy.










At the Mountains of Madness (1936)
by H.P. Lovecraft


   H.P. Lovecraft is one of those authors where it's like, if you've never heard of the guy, you are probably better off, because the people who like H.P. Lovecraft are a bunch of creeps and weirdo's.  The Lovecraftian aesthetic of tentacles, aliens, mysticism and "Nameless horrors" continues to remain vibrant and has a real and vital influence on Hollywood sci fi and genre fiction.  Like many sci fi/fantasy titles on the 1001 Books list, Lovecraft is included for the strength of his vision, not as a master of the prose form.  

  As such, At the Mountains of Madness has both the good and bad of Lovecraft in its 100ish pages. Plot and character development are minimal, but his ability to integrate recent (as of the late 1920s) archeological discoveries and the breathtaking setting- Antarctica push this particular story out of the realm of normal sci fi fantasy and into something deeper. 

  Readers note- good luck finding a stand alone copy- look at his story collections, At the Mountains of Madness is typically included but not always. 

Jane Fonda played Gloria Beatty in the 1969 movie version of the 1935 novel, They Shoot Horses, Don't They

Published 3/14/15
They Shoot Horses, Don't They (1935)
 by Horace McCo
y

  A misunderstood failure when initially published in America in 1935, They Shoot Horses, Don't They was revived by French existentialists after World War II, part of the larger interest in "film noir" during that period in Paris. Told in a continuous flashback by the narrator, who is facing execution on California's death row after the murder of a woman, the action of They Shoot Horses, Don't They takes place during a lengthy depression-era dance marathon. 

   They Shoot Horses, Don't They is an outlier in 1930s and 1940s crime fiction in terms of the extremely bleak and proto-existentialist attitude of both the narrator and the victim.  The title is what the narrator tells the cops when they ask him why he killed his dance marathon partner, Gloria Beatty.  Gloria is a striking character, who is obsessed with death and the prospect of dining.  Unlike the traditional crime fiction/film noir "femme fatale,"  Gloria is not a hot to trot sex pot, but an aging, fading, wannabe.  Adapted into a film in the late 60s by Sydney Pollack, the idea of a crime drama with an endless dance party as a back drop is a concept that contains vitality even today.  It's not hard to imagine an EDM Of They Shoot Horses, Don't They popping up at Sundance in the near future. 


Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in the first film version of The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler

Published 3/11/15
The Big Sleep (1939)
 by Raymond Chandler


  If you have ever confused Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Carver, or thought that Phillip Marlowe and Sam Spade were the same person because Humphrey Bogart played them both in the movie version, join me in the club.  First of all, Raymond Carver is a short story writer and poet, and did not write crime novels, although he did, like Raymond Chandler, write many stories which took place in the area of Los Angeles.

  Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett are the one-two punch of American crime fiction.   Hammett's Sam Spade worked out of San Francisco, and his other detective fiction had a decidedly western feel, whereas Chandler's Sam Spade was an LA cat, through and through.  Through the performance of Bogart as Spade in the Maltese Falcon and Marlowe in The Big Sleep,  the two characters have been joined as a kind of archetypical hard boiled American private detective.  Both characters have also been affixed to the idea of film noir, though strictly speaking that refers only to the movie portrayals, not the books, which belong to the "detective fiction" genre- an inspiration for but different from film noir.

  One important difference between Chandler and Hammett is that Hammett actually worked for the Pinkerton agency as a private investigator, whereas Chandler was employed as an executive at an insurance company before a mid-career lay off forced him into writing for a living.  I think you can probably make a good argument that this difference in personal experience explains stylistic differences between the two authors.  Hammett was more of the break-through pioneer, Chandler a more refined prose stylist with a better grasp of literary symbolism.

  The Big Sleep is embedded with memorable visual atmospherics- the hot house in the initial meeting between Marlowe and General Sternwood, and the various Los Angeles locations that surface throughout The Big Sleep from beginning to end.   You can hardly say you've read if you haven't read The Big Sleep- simply watching the film (which is also a must) is not enough.  I would say that The Big Sleep essentially invents the idea of Los Angeles as a noir location- the sub-genre of sunshine noir, even though as book, it is not a "film" noir. 

   The decadence and corruption of pre-war Los Angeles sticks with you, and it is possible to appreciate The Big Sleep without following the plot at all.  By the time Marlowe  fingers the General's younger daughter as the murderer, the narrative force is spent, and I closed the book with a sigh, sad to be at the end of such a glorious journey through a historic Los Angeles.



Dorothea Lange snapped this iconic image of the Great Depression while on assigned with John Steinbeck- his observations would form a large part of The Grapes of Wrath.

Published 3/24/15
The Grapes of Wrath (1939)
by John Steinbeck


  Hits don't come bigger than The Grapes of Wrath.  On the basis of Of Mice and Men and Tortilla Flats, Steinbeck had already made his bones, if not achieved the kind of everlasting canonical status which The Grapes of Wrath gave him.  Steinbeck did journalism and non-fiction throughout his career, and so it came to be that he toured the depression era California central valley with photographer Dorothea Lange.  She is the woman who snapped that iconic portrait above- an image which came to define the Depression for generations. 

  Steinbeck's story of the Joad family isn't exactly fashionable.  As the Depression era population has passed, the relevance of the experience of the so-called "Okies," economic migrants who came from the Oklahoma panhandle and environs to the agricultural areas of the central valley, is less apparent.  Today, the more culturally relevant agricultural migrants are those that come from Mexico.

 You could say that the shift in perspective and interest among subsequent generations of readers combined with Steinbeck's decidedly non avant-literary style makes The Grapes of Wrath less necessary, but then you have to deal with the fact that he won The Nobel Prize for Literature, and The Grapes of Wrath is his biggest hit.  Steinbeck's prose is a mixture of Hemingway and Zola, with similarities to earlier and contemporary West Coast writers like Frank Norris and Jack London.  Frank Norris and The Octopus- written very early in the 20th century, seems to be a kind of template for the combination of mid 19th century European realism and 20th century rural California locations.

   Mexican farm workers, which are the only California central valley agricultural laborers I've ever learned about, are no where to be seen.  It isn't a stretch to think that the very popularity of The Grapes of Wrath was one of the causes of the phasing out of native farm workers after World War II.  In spite of my better, more refined instincts I found myself chuckling at the idea that native born Americans would be working the central valley bringing in the crops.

  Steinbeck also embeds a more or less socialist critique to the situation the Joads and their Okies were fleeing from: The Dust Bowl, The Great Depression and the resulting take-over of large swaths of agricultural land by the banks in the Midwest and South.  The first third of the book is particularly heavy with interstitial chapters that simply contain portentous statements about "the land" and "the people."  Thankfully, once the Joads make it to California the critique becomes embedded in the plot itself, and the characters are able to speak on their own behalf.



Henry Miller, notorious pussy hound.

Published 11/5/15
Tropic of Capircorn (1939)
 by Henry Miller


  Tropic of Capricorn was written after Tropic of Cancer but is a prequel, rather than a sequel.  Both concern the life and times of Henry Miller.  His books are a combination of fiction, non-fiction, philosophy and obscenity.  He is the first major novelist to present a convincing, if male-centered and misogynistic view of sexual activity and the explicit sex that fills both Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn got his books banned in America until 1961.  The lifting of that ban in the early 60s ensured his immortality as an early avatar of American counter-culture.

  Tropic of Capricorn covers Millers time living and working in New York City in the 1920s.  Written at the end of the 30s, not published in the US until the 60s, Tropic of Capricorn is very much a novel about 20s New York.  Miller hints at his early ramblings in California but otherwise sticks entirely to his experience in the boroughs of New York City in the 1920s.  Miller is a famous literary asshole and his bare knuckled attitude towards life and experience is tattooed on every page of Tropic of Capricorn.  Only Miller himself is compellingly portrayed, even as the book Miller character proclaims that he quit working so he could write about the people he meets he is engaged in a fifty page soliloquy that takes up the last 50 pages of the book.  Henry Miller writes about Henry Miller and pussy.

  Miller talks more about pussy than a The Weeknd record.


Published 4/16/18
Tropic of Cancer (1934)
 by Henry Miller


   The publication date of 1934 is misleading.  Tropic of Cancer wasn't published in the United States or Great Britain until 1961 and after that it figured prominently in the obscenity law spawned litigation that helped redraw the rules of free speech in the United States to their modern, lenient standards  This puts Henry Miller in the same category with James Joyce, whose frank descriptions in Ulysses made it another trailblazer in American publishing jurisprudence. Since then the debate has been whether Miller deserves it, helped by the tremendous popularity the suddenly-au-courant book involved with the start of the1960's.  Tropic of Cancer is the Paris book, Tropic of Capicorn the New York book.

   And while Tropic of Cancer may have been judged "not obscene" by the it certainly is a dirty book.  That is kind of the point, the over all dirtiness, both sexual and in terms of hygiene, that seems to be the very point of Henry Miller, a kind of non-religious spiritual mortification of the spirit, the 20th century equivalent of a medieval flagellant. I was young when I read Tropic of Cancer for the first time- high school.   As a 41 year old, Miller's sexual obsession is less interesting that it was to my 16 year old self, for obvious reasons.

   I think in terms of literary merit, the jury is still out on  Henry Miller. He's still read, because of his proximity to the Beats and the importance of his depiction of 1930's Paris in the psyche of the American back packer.  On the other hand, he is never spoken in the same breath as the pioneering Modernists, and nor is he an iconic mid century figure like Samuel Beckett.  He's also surely lost some audience in recent decades to Charles Bukowski, who transported the Miller-ian obsessions of sex, loafing and cadging to the sunny climes of Southern California. 

Published 8/16/18
1919 (1932)
 by Jon Dos Passos


    The USA Trilogy is 1300 pages in length, 1919, book two in said trilogy, picks up more or less where The 42nd Parallel cut off, in terms of time, but shifts the action to Europe, where the characters are peripherally involved in World War I and then stick around for the aftermath.  Unlike the more unfamiliar locales of The 42nd Parallel, which were mostly little described small towns, railroad depots and lumber camps, 1919 spends much time in Paris.   Thus, Dos Passos is firmly in the mainstream of "Lost Generation" fiction, and 1919 shares many similarities with Hemingway's World War I books: volunteering for the foreign ambulance service, complaining about America from the point of view of a well educated college graduate, drinking.

 Unlike Hemingway  or Fitzgerald, who wrote dialogue which has stood the test of time, Dos Passos' characters come from the "gosh golly gee" school of American speech circa early 20th century.   The dialogue hasn't aged well, and that, coupled with the 1300+ page length of the trilogy is probably why no one reads this lost classic of American literature in 2018.  I mean not lost, exactly.  Forgotten.   1919 is a good choice for an Audiobook, since so much of what goes down is either dialogue or one of the interstitial stream of consciousness chapters- there isn't much to miss from the printed page. 

Published 10/27/18
The Big Money (1936)
Book III of the USA trilogy
by Jon Dos Passos


  If you take a look at the full 1001 Books list you will see that the "core list" is 708 titles, and the number of books removed from the first revision is 282, and if you add the two numbers together, you get 990 titles, which is 11 short of 1001 books.  Included in the 990 titles are at least three different individual listings that seemingly list a 10 volume series as one book.  Multiple trilogies are listed as a single entry- this trilogy is one example.  The Lord of the Rings trilogy is another.   

  Depending on how you want to do the math, the actual numbers of titles in the original edition of the 1001 Books list is somewhere between 990 and something like 1050.   I don't have an answer here, and I'm taking different approaches to the multi volume series' listed as a single title on the original 1001 Books list.  For the Jon Dos Passos USA Trilogy I decided to do separate reviews for each book, and I also listened to the last two as Audiobooks- each is close to 30 hours long.

  All that said, if you've read the first volume, you might as well have read all three novels.   All three books are more or less the same thing and although they do move through historical events- notably World War I and up to just before the Great Depression- they show events from the fringes.  Dos Passos deserves credit for his ambitious, modernist portrait of American society, but none of his works have aged particularly well.  His style, a pastiche of half-understood modernist technique and the more descriptive realism of early 20th century American writers like Theodore Dreiser, has always been awkward.  The length of the trilogy- well over a thousand pages for the three volume set, makes the time commitment outlandish relative the value.


Prophet of Harlem | Commonweal Magazine
Claude McKay, Harlem Renaissance era author.
Published 4/13/20
Romance in Marseille (2020)
 by Claude McKay


  Romance in Marseille sat unpublished for nearly a century, gathering dust in an archive before Penguin Classics published it in February.  McKay was a key figure in the Harlem Renaissance, though he had his issues- sparring with more moderate figures over his avowed Communism.   McKay was a Jamaican who spent time in the US and of course, the south of France- several of his books, including this one, take place in and around Marseille.

   The story is a "view from the bottom" about an African migrant/stowaway whose legs freeze off when he is caught and confined to a water closet for a trans-atlantic trip.  He receives a substantial settlement courtesy of a Jewish lawyer and returns, legless to Marseilles to find his prostitute-sweetheart.   Like many of the books written during and before the Harlem Renaissance, McKay eschews many of the cultural refinements which developed as a result of the Renaissance- several of his African characters speak in dialect that would sound racist if penned by a non-black writer.

  The material is racey for the time period- no surprise he couldn't find a publisher back in the day- a book set among the sailors and prostitutes of Marseille would have been tough to publish until after the mid 1960's.



Penguin Classics cover of The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies

Published 6/24/20
The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies 
by Clark Ashton Smith

    Clark Ashton Smith was an American author- poetry and short stories- active on the west coast in the early 20th century.  Although he obtained early notoriety as a Romantic style poet, he is best remembered today for his "weird fiction" period between 1926 and 1935, during which time he maintained a frequent correspondence with H.P. Lovecraft, whose Cthulhu Mythos show up in several of his best stories:

But one fortuitous result was that some of these books were placed in the hands of H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937), who in August 1922 sent Smith what could only be called a fan letter expressing wonderment at the exquisite beauty and imaginative power of his verse. As a result, Smith established a correspondence with the Rhode Island writer that would only lapse with the latter’s death. The next year, the pulp magazine Weird Tales was founded, and Lovecraft found a ready haven for his weird fiction there. He later claimed that he had persuaded the magazine’s first editor, Edwin Baird, to renounce his “no poetry” policy, and some of Smith’s poems began appearing there as well

     I like but don't love Lovecraft himself- almost all of his stories revolve around a "nameless horror" which is nonetheless exhaustively named and described, purple prose being the sine qua non style of the original weird fiction movement. 

     Although there are hardly plots to his stories, his descriptive ability in the realm of cosmic horror is  unmatched even by Lovecraft himself:

I had never seen an image of Tsathoggua before, but I recognized him without difficulty from the descriptions I had heard. He was very squat and pot-bellied, his head was more like that of a monstrous toad than a deity, and his whole body was covered with an imitation of short fur, giving somehow a vague suggestion of both the bat and the sloth. His sleepy lids were half-lowered over his globular eyes; and the tip of a queer tongue issued from his fat mouth. In truth, he was not a comely or personable sort of god, and I did not wonder at the cessation of his worship, which could only have appealed to very brutal and aboriginal men at any time.

       That's the frog god Tsathoggua- frogs and toads turn up in several places in Smith's stories.

About him were scattered all the appurtenances of his art; the skulls of men and monsters; phials filled with black or amber liquids, whose sacrilegious use was known to none but himself; little drums of vulture-skin, and crotali made from the bones and teeth of the cockodrill, used as an accompaniment to certain incantations. The mosaic floor was partly covered with the skins of enormous black and silver apes; and above the door there hung the head of a unicorn in which dwelt the familiar demon of Malygris, in the form of a coral viper with pale green belly and ashen mottlings. Books were piled everywhere: ancient volumes bound in serpent-skin, with verdigris-eaten clasps, that held the frightful lore of Atlantis, the pentacles that have power upon the demons of the earth and the moon, the spells that transmute or disintegrate the elements; and runes from a lost language of Hyperborea, which, when uttered aloud, were more deadly than poison or more potent than any philtre.

     This is a description of Malygris the magician who does... I'm not sure exactly, but his lab sounds litty.

       Anyway, Smith has this shit for days- he can't tell a story for shit, but the atmosphere is incredible, and doesn't that count for something?  Smith certainly is a must for the weird fiction crowd.

  All three books are best tackled on Audiobook, easy to get from the Public Library app, and it will spare you the slog of trying to read any of these three doorstops, which aren't that easy to find in print in the first place.

Published 1/19/23
Miss Lonelyhearts (1933) 
by Nathanael West

  It occurs to me that in the course of reading the whole list of 1001 Books there were moments when I was rushed.  Recently I've been revisiting books I've already read- this one was picked for my book club, so I went back and listened to the Audiobook again- which is what I actually did back in 2018, so that I've now listened to the same Audiobook twice.   

    Trying to pin down the exact point where American Literature becomes "modern" is an interesting game.  First, of course, you need to pin down your definition of modern as it pertains to American Literature , then you can make your argument, but Nathanael West is close to the beginning.  Miss Lonelyhearts which is probably the classic work of "expressionist" literature in the American Canon, is associated with an early/formative genre of modernism, that of expressionism.  Stylistically, Miss Lonelyhearts is interesting because of West's proximity to Dashiell Hammett and the "hardboiled" school of American Crime Fiction.   It's a blending of high and low culture that pre-dates "film noir" by decades, completely separate and independent preceding force. 

  I was struck, again by just how vile parts of Miss Lonelyhearts are- genuinely like cancellable/get kicked out of school libraries level stuff.  For example, Miss Lonelyhearts and his newspaper buddies are getting drunk at a bar and one of his buddies talks about the gang rape of a woman writer as a punishment for being a woman who dares to write about the working classes.  And of course, the story itself turns on a false accusation of rape against Miss Lonelyhearts (he only beat her up!)

  And I was also more cognizant of the fact that West's canonical elevation via this text didn't come until the late 1950's, when a compilation of his books/stories were released and garnered him the kind of wide spread audience that had eluded him while he was alive.


ORIGINAL REVIEW FROM 3/19/18

  I'd convinced myself that I had actually read Miss Lonelyhearts, when in fact, what had happened, is that I had owned a book which combined Miss Lonelyhearts with his other hit, Day of the Locust, read Day of the Locust, never read Miss Lonelyhearts, and then lost the book.   That is how Miss Lonelyhearts became a skip in the 1001 Books project, remedied today via an audio book version I checked out from the Los Angeles Public Library.

  Miss Lonelyhearts is dark, dark, dark, decades ahead of it's time in terms of the tone, which is called "expressionist" because it was written in 1933 and expressionism was the avant-garde art movement of the time, maybe also because the quasi-hysterical affect of the main character, the unnamed male newspaper columnist in charge of the Miss Lonelyhearts column for a New York tabloid.   You'd have to jump ahead to William Burroughs and Hubert Selby to find writers who depict urban America with such grotesque regard.

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Album Review: Margo Price - Strays


Album Review
Margo Price - Strays

 A major reason in the decline in music related content here over the past decade is my relationship with my partner- Amy works in the music industry as a manager.  She worked for the producer Danger Mouse for years now she manages Margo Price among others.  Margo Price is quite a story- and has been she broke out back in 2016 her break-out from the East Nashville indie scene to national prominence is one of THE most interesting phenomenon in indie music over the past couple decades.  The number of indie artists who "make it" after several years in a local music scene is pretty minimal- those types of artist tend to emerge quickly, get snapped up by the music industry proper and disappear out of said local scene.

 Amy's been working largely from home for the past three years, so I've had a ringside seat to the making-of this record, and man, it has been a journey.  Margo is not on a major label per se, but Loma Vista is part of the Concord Music Group (now it's just "Concord") which is a titan in the music industry beyond the record label part because of their publishing catalog.   Margo also wrote a book last year which got released by the University of Texas press and a lot of the planning involved the sequence of book and record, which went first, how long between the two etc. 

  The thing about Margo- who I consider a friend at this point based on the amount of time I've spent around her and her family, is that she is both authentic and ambitious and her struggle is an illustration of how the music industry necessarily creates a conflict between the authenticity and ambition of an artist.  In other words, it is pretty easy to be one or the other- authentic OR ambitious, it is less easy to be successfully be either:  You can think of the authentic musician who works as a sound guy in a local music venue in his 50's or an ambitious musician who sends out a million demos and never finds any interest.  It is most difficult to successfully be authentic and ambitious.  

   And the problem that Margo has faced is that of truly world class expectations.  To express it in terms of orders of magnitude,  Margo Price generally resides in the 100,000's category with dips down 10,000's or up to 1,000,000 depending on the metrics.  The Artists she emulates/respects are those in 1,000,000/10,000,000 world, for the most part- she doesn't live in the world of 100,000,000 let alone a billion, which represents the upper stratosphere of the metrics for the biggest Artists on the planet.

  Like other Artists I've known Margo's profile among certain elements of her Audience: Other award winning musicians working the same area, journalists, people who book festival music acts in the United States has run ahead of her actual metrics with the larger elements of the Audience:  people who listen to music, people who buy tickets to concerts, people who buy albums.   The fact that there is a discrepancy has given grist to those who might be called "haters"- people who doubt her appeal and those who claim that she is a manufactured phenomenon.  It is that later argument that is the most absurd.  Can you imagine someone telling Willie Nelson or Chris Stapleton that Margo Price is a phony, media constructed mirage? 

    A variation in acceptance by different elements of her audience- critics and writers love her, but she hasn't had a number one record, to create it in a pithy formula; is an observation that could equally be ignored (really, it doesn't matter) or embraced, with the only answer being a number one record.  Is Strays that record, then, is the only question that needs to be answered.

     I believe the answer is yes, Strays is the album Margo Price needed to make to both maintain her authenticity and widen her scope of appeal.   It is easy to find metrics that support the conclusion that she is poised to jump one or even two orders of magnitude.  Take her streaming figures on Spotify, the most transparent data point that has ever existed within the culture industry for measuring audience size for a particular artist.   One year ago at this time she had 300,000 monthly listeners. This number had been steady since the release of her last record in 2020.  As I write this today, her number of monthly listeners is up to 1.5 million, five times what it was a year ago.  

Monday, January 16, 2023

Show Review: Secret Attraction, CD Ghost, Soft Vein @ Rubycon Records & Tapes in Los Angeles CA.


Show Review:
Secret Attraction, CD Ghost, Soft Vein
@ Rubycon Records & Tapes in Los Angeles CA.

When it comes to my current record label project, Dream Recordings, I take a decidedly and avowedly hands off approach to the creative side of the project- picking the artists, interacting with the artists, etc.  That is because if you look at the unmitigated  economic disaster that is the history of independent record labels it is quite clear the faculty for selecting artists and that for running a record label as a business only rarely reside in the same person.  It was clear to me- long before this project- that my main faculty would be running an independent record label as a succesful and ethical business, which meant that either I was that one in a million person who could do both OR I would have to rely on partners for the creative side.  That doesn't mean that I'm culturally unsophisticated or some kind of barbarian, only that I choose not to make MY taste the criterion for whether an artist is worth releasing or not.

I went to Rubycon Records and Tapes in Los Angeles, CA. on Saturday night to see the latest signee to Dream Recordings, Secret Attraction, from Phoenix.  I try not to listen to bands before I see them- it's been next to impossible over the past three years of course- and also, if a band is part of my label, I try not to listen to much to their prior recordings, first, because it's not really my business if my partner think's the artist is a good bet, and second, you can't really judge the value of a particular artist on your label until you actually hear the recordings that you yourself will be releasing. 

My initial impression of the venue- Rubycon Records and Tapes was very positive.  I've been following the owner's content on social media (mostly instagram) and I identified with his quest to force-feed the music of his taste the greater Los Angeles record and tape shopping community since we have similar tastes- his being finely tuned and exquisite, mine mostly limited to the music of the bands I put out, their influences and whatever pops up on my post-punk spotify genre mix.   The venue had light drinks available- beer and coffee.  Tickets were 20 dollars and the show was sold out.  

The sound and lights were both the best for any record store show I've ever attended. I was expecting some variation on the standard record store show vibe- awkward standing around etc, but instead this was a show-show DJ Malvada was Djing when I arrived- her pre-band set was itself revelatory, particularly with the sound system.  I'm actually planning to just go see her DJ around town because she seems really active (she had 3 shows that night) because she was that good- it was all EBM/Industrial dance type stuff, which I like but am utterly unfamiliar with because, well, I know nothing about it.

The opening band was Soft Vein- from Sacramento. Two guys with one singing/playing guitar/synths and a guy in the back doing more synths and what I presume are triggers.   The crowd was completely into it for an opening act, which, in all my days of going to indie/diy shows, is practically unheard of.  Back when I went to shows more frequently, I always believed that you could just the strength of a specific scene by the intensity of response to an opening act in front of the first 50 crowd members, and by that standard, this particular scene (LA dance goth let's call it) is ready to blow.  I hope so anyway, because that is what Dream Recordings is betting on heavy.  I texted my partner during the set and it turns out this band had already enquired about working with Dream last year, so I was like, "Yeah!"  Bought his t-shirt- anyway, they were great and readers should def. check out his next LA area show in March where he's opening for some weirdo who never plays or does social media- more on that show next month.

The second band- CD Ghost- came highly recommended by my partner, Mario- they have a record label so there was no professional interest there but I wanted to see them- really to see any live show of a band these days is interesting to me after the past three years.  CD Ghost had a heavy synth vibe and none of the harder EBM sounds of Soft Vein.  Layers of synths and a distinctive vocal. Crowd response was again fantastic.  The live show didn't seem as developed as that of Soft Vein and Secret Attraction but you can hardly blame an indie band for that these days.  Would again recommend seeing this band the next time they make it through LA.

Last band, Secret Attraction- signed them to Dream Recordings late last year.  The way it works is that Mario describes the attributes of the band- so it goes with out saying that he thinks the music is outstanding and then we talk about the overall profile of the artist and various risks involved.  I had remembered that Secret Attraction sounded like a slam dunk to me so I was looking forward to the live show.   The perform as a two piece, with Derek singing playing up front and then a woman in back playing synths and hitting triggers etc.  The live show was great- crowd loved it. heavy synth vibes and actual song structures etc.   Very very much looking forward to hearing the completed record after this show and highly recommend it to anyone who is a fan of synth forward music- starting from Manchester/New Order up through Phoenix and whatever "vapor-wave" was or was not- but his strengths are the songwriting, the song structure and the charisma of the live performance itself, so I'm thinking that Secret Attraction has all the tools to go far, especially now that live shows are back.

Great show! Great scene! Really vibrant and I feel like it will be breaking out for more mainstream attention (yikes I'm sure) once people get going this spring and paying attention again to subcultural rumblings from the underground.  Secret Attraction and CD Ghost are playing New York... next month?  That is a must for NYCers.  Don't sleep on either band. 


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