I. Men Listening to men attempt to talk to each other is like trying to get The Magic Flute on Armed Forces Radio. --Â(second lieutenant) caroline becker The origin of enslavement is the invention of writing. --Âfoucault COMP LIT 101: ADVICE FROM MY DAD Good to get your long and candid letter, Dave. I must say I''m somewhat perplexed by your reaction to your creative writing class. I think you have the accent on the wrong syllable, figuratively speaking. You''re in this class to learn from the teacher, and perhaps from your fellow students. I think if you keep this in mind you''ll loosen up a bit and get a great deal out of the course.
All of your classmates are in the same boat; they''re all just as apprehensive about revealing themselves as you are, even though some may be able to camouflage it better than others. I think it''s great you were accepted in the class, and you should think so, too. Relax, and learn from this "famous" writer (though I don''t know his books and had never heard of him before). A certain amount of fear and anxiety at the approach of a new experience is natural and healthy. I don''t know any placid types who are creative peop⤠intensity is what drives them to the outrageous thoughts and ideas ordinary people never think of. But anxiety also has to be Âself-Âcontrolled if it''s not to become the dominant force. I find Kosinski a good writer, very good. Nobody I''ve read recently writes a better, simpler declarative Âsentence--Âno extraneous language, not one extra word or sentiment.
With your stuff I''m sometimes so busy untangling the syntax I don''t know what you want to say. Not to be involved with mankind is not to have lived; join up. The Roth book you gave me for my birthday (thank you) grew on me. At first I did a foolish thing: I placed my own prejudices ahead of the novel. I wanted him to leave, for good, his absorption with his father and mother and their Âself-Âdeprecation. I wanted him also to leave the novel told in the first person. Why Âdoesn''t he write novels like everyone else? Writing them in the first person is the lazy way, the easier way. I soon realized how utterly naïve and unsophisticated such an attitude was and settled down to enjoy the book, even that very contrived exchange of letters between David and Debbie, and David and Arthur.
I''m hoping that you won''t wait as long as I did to learn how to make dinner, clean house, make sensible purchases, etc., etc. Just because one is a "poet" Âdoesn''t mean one has to be a schlemiel. I feel very strongly about this and look forward to talking about it in depth sometime. The Front? I Âdidn''t like it. The blacklistings were serious. I want serious subjects treated seriously. I went with your Âgreat-Âuncle Hyman to hear Elie Wiesel give a talk at UCLA this week.
A very moving experience, comparable only to the talk I heard by Chaim Potok several years ago. Wiesel had been in AuschÂwitz as a teenager and so, of course, he spoke about the Holocaust and the baffling faith of the Jewish people in humanity. He opened with a tale of two Russian peasants who were sitting around drinking and talking. Jacob says to his friend Yosal, "Are you my friend?" "Of course," Yosal assures him. They talk some more and again Jacob asks Yosal if he''s his friend and again Yosal assures him. Then Jacob asks him once more, "Are you Âreally my friend?" And Yosal says, "Of course I am. Why do you keep asking?" "Well," replies Jacob, "if you are my friend, how come you don''t know that I am hurting?" Wiesel closed his talk by quoting from documents that he''d seen recently, diaries and journals written by concentration camp victims who were forced to conduct their fellow Jews into the gas ovens and then later were themselves incinerated. They left letters and notes and descriptions in bottles and boxes in crevices in the Âcrematoria--Âsome discovered only now.
If ever there were people who had the right to tell all the world to go to hell, these were such people, but they wanted humanity to know what had happened there, and by sharing their experiences and describing them, they demonstrated their faith in the survival of the Jews and their faith that people would remember and not ever let such horrors happen again. It was a respectful, quiet, and appreciative audience, and there Âwasn''t a dry eye in the house. Hyman went through two handkerchiefs himself. Don''t stop the world because you want to get off. A Âplay--Âeven a Âone-Âact set in Âseventeenth-Âcentury ÂEnÂgland--Âneeds some "wasted" moments to make it work. Your protagonist, Lilburne, is alone way too much. Plus, he''s a pompous martyr; he Âcouldn''t have been that Âself-Ârighteous in real life. I want to see him in private, enjoying himself with his family, being witty.
So far he''s so serious as to be inhuman. Work it out in emotional terms, not intellectual ones. It''s been a long time since I''ve seen you. You''ve done a lot of greening and growing in the fourteen months since you were last here. I think I''ve done some, too. My old habits have been carted off to the dump. You''ll see, I think, when you visit in March, although I thought I detected at the end of our last conversation a very conscious pulling away on your part. John William Corrington writes in the darkly humorous tradition of a Barth, Donleavy, or Heller.
He is concerned with the troubled spirit of this country and writes about it with gusto. Peace in the world or the world in pieces. I found that Âtoward the end of summer I needed some distance between you and me because I was becoming so conscious of your writing, presumably about me. When you told me that after dinner with Hyman and me, you went downstairs and recorded our sodden trip down memory lane, I was disturbed by it, and after that I felt you were making mental or actual notes any time anything of an "interesting" or curious nature was discussed between Hy and me. I don''t mind that you use any of your observations about me in your writing, but I do mind being made so conscious of the fact that you''re doing it. If other people get this feeling, you may find that they, too, require distance from you, and this Âdoesn''t make for close, open, honest relationships. I''ve known quite a few writers and have never had the feeling with them that they were interested in me or observing me just for what grist I could provide for their mill. This is an attitude and approach that I think you will, in time, learn to cultivate.
Some think O''Hara''s stories consisted of an introduction, a little character development, and the rest was dialogue of a most ordinary nature. O''Hara was more than that, much more. He said the lonely mind of the artist is the only creative organ in the world. His advice: inherit money, have a job that will keep you busy, be born without a taste for liquor, marry a woman who will cooperate in your sexual peculiarities, join a church, don''t live too long. Oh, he had his wild and uncontrollable moments. He thought of his work as a personal reassessment against the history of his time. An important writer of the ''20s, ''30s, and the ''40s and clear until the time he died. I know from your letters and even the things you say to me during our Âtoo-Âbrief telephone conversations that a considerable annealing has taken place, and I know it''ll be very much in evidence in what you write.
This blacklisted writer (played by Luther Adler, I think, maybe not), after coming out of jail for contempt of a congressional committee, gets some work in the gray market and then has a chance to do a script on his own. He can''t believe his luck has changed. Then, when he goes over to his friend''s place to celebrate, his friend says, "Well, it seems that somebody has been doing some poking around, and you know how it is, this ain''t the end of the world, times will change, you''ll see, one of these days we''ll look back on all this and laugh, but in the meantime you''re off the picture and we have to put some schnook, a nebbish who can''t carry your typewriter ribbon, on the picture." Adler looks at him, looks through him, and on Adler''s face is written all of man''s grief from the beginning of time. His friend sees him to the door, arm languidly on his Âshoulder--Âfeeble gesture of phony friendship, but it''s there. And he asks Adler, "What will you do now?" Adler says three words, and no more eloquent words have ever been spoken on screen, stage, TV, or anywhere: "Survive. I''ll survive." He closes the door and walks off into the night.
The scene haunts me still and I bet I saw it on Playhouse 90 Âtwenty-Âfive years ago, maybe longer. ÂThat''s real writing. Why not take the reader into your confidence rather than play a game of wits with him? Illumine the human Âcondition--Âthat''s all. Set it down one little word after another. No tricks or gimmicks. Did you know I must have tried half a dozen times to get down on paper those stories Hyman told you and me about being a panhandler in New York during the Depression? I never could get away from the plain reportage of it, even though I strove to put in "local color" and the "bums" as Hy depicted them. On my Ânow-Âand-Âthen tries, I Âcouldn''t get past the obligatory opening Âscenes--Âdescriptions of the Lower East Side, etc. Rarely got much further.
"Fiction is not fact," wrote Thomas Wolfe (the real Thomas Wolfe). "Fiction is fact, selected and charged with a purpose." Which is exactly what you Âdid--Âblending Hy''s memories with your imagination to pu.