It operates as a refuge for a civilizing element in short supply in contemporary America: honest criticism
BooksSeptember 2003 S.O.B. story A review of The Art of Burning Bridges: A life of John O’Hara, by Geoffrey Wolff. The photographers were waiting like assassins outside the door
on the cold slate street. John OHara, the millionaire hermit
novelist, sort of staggered down the churchsteps in front of me;
his legs buckled as he reached the final step. He looked smaller
than I would have thought from gossip about him as a barroom
brawler 30 years ago. His Rolls Royce was waiting for him in
front of the church. He was wearing a natty doublebreasted
grey-check suit, ears sticking out like Gable and Mailer, eyes on
the steps, speaking to no one
. Alert, but a stone
misanthropethat was the message.
American he-men writers used to pride themselves on their ability to punch their way out of a paper bag. For these bare-knuckled typists, writin was fightin, to paraphrase Ishmael Reed, and some didnt hesitate to reply to a bad review or a snide comment with a right uppercut. Ernest Hemingway fancied himself a heavyweight champ inside the ring and out (I beat Mr. Turgenev, he boasted infamously to Lillian Ross, Then I trained very hard and I beat Mr. de Maupassant), scuffling with the critic Max Eastman after Eastman had mocked him for being a fur-bearing author. Norman Mailer, Hemingways curly-locked heir, hoisted on the boxing trunks to show his mettle, bobbing and weaving with Jose Torres on The Dick Cavett Show. Perhaps no literary pugilist in the amateur division wielded his fists of fury more often with less provocation than John OHara. He was an impartial slugger. He hit men, some of them quite harmless (he once took a swipe at the sweetest tempered member of the Algonquin Round Table set, Robert Benchley); he hit women, smacking one for arriving late for lunch; he even started a rumble with a midget (the phrase Pick on somebody your own size meant nothing to him), going down in ignominious defeat when another midget joined the fray. On page, in person, and over the phone, OHara, touchy in the extreme, tussled with nearly everybody, becoming a master of the Angry Ultimatum, the Nasty Kiss-off. Dead for over three decades, his status in American letters a bit moth-eaten, OHara now has someone to defend his dubious honor. In The Art of Burning Bridges, Geoffrey Wolff gallantly steps forward to fight on OHaras behalf against all comers. Unlike his anti-hero, Wolff fights fair, mostly.[1] This is one of those literary biographies that doubles as a reclamation project. Wolff endeavors to remove the rust and nasty buildup from OHaras once formidable reputation and bring out its vintage glow. Even before OHaras death in 1970, tarnish had set in. During the long home stretch of his career, wiseass critics too often wrote him off as a truculent malcontent, a social climber embittered by his exclusion from the worlds pickiest clubs, Wolff writes in the preface. OHara was derided as a bully, parvenu, and braggart by contemporaries who had been at the receiving end of his sonic booms. So quick was he to take offence and break off relations that he was known in New Yorker circles as the Master of the Fancied Slight. Dwight Macdonald, postwar dean of wiseass critics, delivered a capsule version of the case against OHara in a letter to John Lukacs dated January 11, 1956 (not included in Wolffs book), where he uncorks: OHara is about the most brutal, insensitive, tricked up, sensational novelist we have, at least above the Mickey Spillane level; he is really a bad personsnobbish, aggressive, ignorant, facile, with the sentimentalism that usually accompanies brutalityand it shows in his writing. I used to know him in the early thirties; he could never get over his envy of me for having gone to Yale! Interesting to compare him with [F. Scott] Fitzgerald, his literary father and mentorF. was a snob too, but a loving one, he makes you feel nostalgic about the Plaza and Princeton of the twenties; there is no love, no charm, no reverence in OHara; he is, essentially, a bum. Wolff wouldnt deny that OHara often behaved like a bum. But that was hardly the whole man, the whole writer, and the whole story, and hes had his fill of the smirkers and scorners who want to reduce OHara down to their own piddling level. My aim, he writes, is to restore to John OHaras complicated history those human and occupational particulars that make him such a writer worthy of attention. He takes as his credo the words of OHaras friend and editor William Maxwell: Good writers deserve to be remembered. Wolff also had a personal angle in taking on the task. The author of the bestselling memoir The Duke of Deception, he was drawn to OHara because his father and OHara seemed cut from the same gabardine. Both were sons of doctors. Both were obsessed with Yale, a university neither attended. Both were classic-automobile buffs, owning the same make of MG touring car. Both were Anglophiles, carried blackthorn walking sticks, drank like demons, had fiendish tempers, and pretended to be members of private clubs, swiping stationery and playing cards to carry off their impostures. In short, from such an extraordinaryor is it?alignment of tastes and circumstances I expected to write about a character not my fathers fraternal twin, but at least a version of my father. Added to my own preoccupationperhaps unwholesomely persistentwith accounts of revered objects and anxious manners, I expected that I was an appropriate teller of John OHaras tale. After this awkward throat-clearing, Wolff lets drop that after years of research he realized he was sorely mistaken. These two old crocks wouldnt have been able to stand each other had they ever metthey would have eyed each other like a couple of ex-cons. So there went Wolffs lyrical quest for the literary dad he never had. This left him to plow ahead on the more conventional biography/defense argument described in his preface. But this approach too may be based upon a misconception, one of which he still seems unaware. Is OHaras literary achievement truly undervalued, the victim of elitist disdain? Does he roast in a special place in litcrit hell, as Wolff contends? Suppose John OHara isnt underrated or overrated but ranked right where he ought to be? Veterans of previous OHara biographies Finis Farrs OHara, Matthew J. Bruccolis OHara Concern, Frank MacShanes Life of John OHarawill be able to tick off the familiar stops on this time-machine trip through the lost duchy of OHara Country. The highlights and lowlights are all here. OHaras childhood in the Pennsylvania mining town of Pottsville, which he immortalized in print as Gibbsville. The house calls he made accompanying his doctor father. His apprenticeship at the Pottsville Journal. His fathers death. The familys ruined finances following the fathers death. His initiation into newspaperdom upon meeting Franklin Pierce Adams, whose column The Conning Tower was the chief transmitter of Algonquin Round Table lore. His cub reporter days at the Herald-Tribune and less stately rags. His entry into The New Yorker. His early sketches and stories. The explosive success of his first novel Appointment in Samarra. The even more scandalous reception of Butterfield 8. Hollywood. The Broadway triumph of Pal Joey. Marriage. Divorce. Marriage. Divorce. Marriage. Countless babes in between. The rupture with The New Yorker over Brendan Gills demolition of A Rage to Live. His squiredom in Princeton. Death in 1970. His final resting under a gravestone whose inscription reads, Better than anyone else, he told the truth about his time, the first half of the twentieth century. If The Art of Burning Bridges is a standard swing through the speakeasies, country clubs, and Cadillac showrooms of OHara Country, our tour guide does everything he can to spice up his spiel. The author of Black Sun, the acclaimed biography of Harry Crosby, Wolff forgoes the lofty judicious deliberation of the Leon Edel/Michael Holroyd/Michael Reynolds slow-processional approach. His manner is the opposite of magisterial. He digresses, tosses off asides, wrestles with the burning questions that torment OHara fans (Did OHara wear a pith helmet in Bermuda when he met Simondss boat? I dont know, but would guess that he didnt; and I also imagine that if he did, it was by way of a joke), and interjects his own experiences with editors, fellow authors, and the enticement of Hollywood (When I was a greenhorn novelist, beckoned from New York to that palmy colony ), all of which makes for a bouncier, chattier read. It also pitches the tone of the book all over the lot. Slangy phrases such as pissed off, snotty proposal, and ur-pain in the ass jostle uncomfortably with arch locutions like evidentiary patina of validity and a chimera of theoretical, psychological, or sociological consistency. At other times Wolff seems to be flailing, reaching, putting down whatever popped into his head. Take one sorry incident from OHaras life. The night before he was to graduate from Niagara Prep, his fathers old school, he and a couple of classmates got blitzed at a roadhouse, detained by state police, and marched across the campus the next morning in full view of the authorities. His graduation suit filthy and torn, OHara was denied his academic honors and diploma, a humiliation not only to him but to his father, who had driven to the old alma mater with imaginable pride, and arrived just in time to witness face to face his sons most flamboyant disgrace. The father never forgave the son or spoke an affable word to him again. Plainly told, this chasm between a headstrong son and a hurt, disappointed father might make for a primal scene out of an ONeill play, but Wolff buries it under a mound of cud-chewing commentary. My way or the highway is merely the most recent dumb version of Creons intractable ruling against the burial of Antigones brother . The emotional charge of the Doctors righteous shame and fury at his screwup son was better suited to Medeas response to Jasons want of gratitude, Orestes to Clytemnestras murderous treachery. A clunky way to make the simple point that the father overreacted. The door-busting entrance of OHara on the literary stage still makes for racy reading, no matter how many times its been rehashed. A sentence in The Art of Burning Bridges such as OHara first met Dorothy Parker, later his loyal pal and admiring fan, listening to the Hawaiian house band at an all-night joint called the Dizzy Club, which served the hardest of hard-core soakers, patrons who showed near dawn and drank till noon captures the Jazz Age in a flashbulb burst, and Wolff conveys the lurid jolt caused by OHaras debut novel Appointment in Samarra in 1934. Appointment in Samarra comes out of the gate with the speed and authority, he writes, and his analysis of the book gallops too. Hes less taken than I am by the rude smack of OHaras second novel, Butterfield 8 (1935), whose tawdry opening pages carry even more velocity than Samarras, the rest of the book barrelling erratically on and off course before arriving at the smash-bang finale where OHaras prize hussyGloria Vandrousis chewed up by a ship propeller after tumbling overboard, her mangled body sharing the polluted waters with dead dogs and orange peels. (Butterfield 8 was later made into an overstuffed cologne-ad of a film starring Elizabeth Taylor, who lolled around in a slip and snarled camp howlers such as, Face it, mother, I was the slut of all time!) Impressed as the more intelligent reviewers were by the nerve, narrative drive, sexual frankness, and social versimilitude of OHaras early novels, they puzzled over the opaque motives and compulsions of his protagonists. A psychological vacuum yawned at the core of his self-destructive hotheads. What propelled them over the brink? In his study of the hardboiled school of Hemingway and Hollywood, The Boys in the Back Room, Edmund Wilson went fishing without bait to deliver his own diagnosis: The girl in Butterfield 8 is a straight case of a Freudian complex, somewhat aggravated by social maladjustment; but we dont really know her well. Julian English of Appointment in Samarra is apparently the victim of a bad heredity worked upon by demoralizing influences . As for Mr. OHaras latest novel, Hope of Heaven, a story of Hollywood, I have not been able to fathom it at allthough here, too, there seems to be discernible a Freudian behavior-pattern. (As if to allay Wilsons confusion, OHaras later fiction would lay out the Freudian behavior-patterns as baldly as a plumbing manual, as the following jawbreaker in From the Terrace attests: What had happened to her was that she unconsciously abandoned the public virginity and, again unconsciously, began to function as a woman.) Completely lost as a lay analyst, Wilson was more astute on the literary side of the ledger, correctly identifying the central theme of OHaras work as the cruel side of social snobbery, and noticing with concern the flab collecting around the waistlines of his fiction. Each of his novels has been less successful, less ambitious and less well-disciplined than the one that went before; but while the long stories have been deteriorating, the short stories have been improving. Had OHara taken Wilsons hint and rationed the word-intake on his novels, he might have spared literature the gobs and blobs of undigested matter his later work became. Instead, he harkened to the tremulous bugle call of another illustrious critic, Lionel Trilling. Reviewing the collection Pipe Dream, Trilling granted that OHaras stories had gotten neater, tighter, and more economical, but, unlike Wilson, he found this slimming-down regimen unfortunate. I cannot observe the development with pleasure, not merely because the span, tempo, and rhythm of the stories in Pipe Dream need to be varied to avoid monotony but because this increasing brevity seems to tend away from the novel and it seems to me that for OHaras talents the novel is the proper form. Here was the criticisms most eminent ruminator counseling OHara to be bold, stretch his wings, and flap. OHara was not promiscuous in his gratitude for admiring reviews, but this time he laid out his heart for a stranger to see, Wolff writes. He wrote Trilling three days after the review appeared, thanking him effusively. More important, he took to heart Trillings call to glory, removing his girdle and banging at the typewriter unrestrained.[2] The bestselling quartet of blockbusters that eventually followedA Rage to Live, Ten North Frederick, From the Terrace, Ourselves to Knowwere a boon to OHaras bank account and a bane to fiction, so galumphing, tediously spelled-out (A master of inference in his short work, Wolff writes, OHara steps all over punch lines in his tomes, explaining puns as well as anecdotes), and so sardine-packed with for- gettable, extraneous characters that the cumulative impact of their collective dead weight left many wondering what it was they had ever liked about OHaras stuff in the first place. Boredom on an epic scale can have that amnesia effect. (A similar mist descended on the reputation of James Jones, the blaze of From Here to Eternity dimming with each dud like Go to the Widow-Maker and The Merry Month of May.) The larger OHaras fictional canvas became, the fewer the grace notes its owner bestowed, choking OHara Country with crabgrass and complaint citations. He laid down the law to his characters rather than let them live, giving female characters the harshest sentences, pun intended. The young aspirant who could do a quiet, character sketch about a Polish girl who works in a cafeteriawiping tables, filling water glasses, collecting dime tips, and coming home to a rented room each night with sore feet and hurt feelings (Pleasure, first published in The New Yorker, March 10, 1934)coarsened into a misogynist who wrote about women as if they had fallen off the meat truck. Typical is The Instrument, a 1967 novel that Wolff charitably ignores, where a Broadway producer waxes nostalgic about a former lover, once slim. [S]he didnt have that big fat belly then. You didnt have to have a thing ten inches long to get the red part in. It would be unfair to lay the blame for OHaras sprawl entirely on Trillings troubled lap. OHara had inner limitations that he fortified over time rather than confronted. Unlike Hemingway or Dreiser, who also began as reporters, OHara never broke through to a deeper, suppler level of perception about people and power relations. He remained on the journalistic surface, which became thicker and thicker as he deposited all of the inside dope and amateur sociology he had squirreled away since busting out of the womb. And unlike Hemingway, a voracious, receptive reader despite his Man of Action persona, OHara had a skimpy appetite; great literature didnt nourish and inspire him, as it did Hemingway. The personal and critical articles on writers and writing collected in An Artist Is His Own Fault reveal a very utilitarian mind. When he does move beyond the mechanics of the writing process, the results are risible, as witness his notorious hallelujah for Across the River and into the Trees in The New York Times Book Review, where he anointed Hemingway the most important, the outstanding author out of the millions of writers who have lived since 1616i.e., since Shakespeare. One raging bull of the literary ring toasting another, OHara warned all those young punks out there sipping their sissy drinks to think twice about challenging Papa for the post-Shakespeare crown. [H]e may not be able to go the full distance, but he can still hurt you. Always dangerous. Always in there with the right cocked. Real class. Hemingway, no fool, greeted OHaras garland with a wounded groan, wondering how OHara could be so dumb. Saul Bellow once said in an interview that talent takes a writer only part of the way. After a certain point, character takes over. OHaras character was mostly crust. The older he got, the more he seemed to stew in his own resentments and stir up quarrels. He became a monster about money (when Colliers magazine was interested in serializing A Rage to Live, OHara told them it would cost $15,000 just to look at the manuscript), and a petty despot in his personal dealings, almost incapable of gratitude. A writer who had achieved so much seemed to appreciate so little. He even took numerous little digs in print at Gene Kelly, to whom much of the Broadway success of Pal Joey was due. Gene Kelly got his big break in a musical show for which I wrote the libretto, but I never had any trouble restraining my enthusiasm for him. OHaras spite makes even his sympathetic biographer run out of excuses and patience. More than two-thirds of the way into The Art of Burning Bridges (is it really an art or a pathology?), Wolff confides, [S]ometimes I cant like this man . [W]hatever provocations can be debited to his enemies among editors, critics, night-club patrons, and unrequiting women, there is no excuse for his self-indulgent brutality, his sullen refusals to discuss with his antagonists the very grievances he brought to their uninvited attention. Yet Wolff cannot bring himself to begrudge OHara the ponderous flatulence of the later phase. Even one brash enough for the biographical enterprise knows better than to presume to dictate the dreams of another. Wolff is always his least convincing when he goes lofty on us. Its an odd shuffle Wolff does throughout The Art of Burning Bridges, defending OHara from hostile attitudes that he ends up having himself, only to hop back on defense. In the ten years it took to do this biography, Wolff didnt warm to his subject, he chilled, yet he insists on chastising others for feeling the chill before he did (and with better justification, since their opinions were shaped by actual awful contact with the man). Hes particularlypeculiarlypeevish about Katherine White, fiction editor at The New Yorker, who recorded her memories of OHara in a sketch written a year after his death. She remembers him condescendingly as an importuning young cub, difficult and drinking badly and making his way in the big city by his talent, plus arrogance and bravado. Since the evidence of Wolffs own book testifies that the young OHara was indeed a brash, hard-drinking handful, its unclear whats condescending about her recollection. He gets sniffier in the next sentenceThen, tempering disapproval with justice, Mrs. White notes that he quickly developed into one of our most brilliant short-story writers, and I assume our refers possessively to a magazine rather than to the perhaps grander universe of American literatureand quotes from a letter she wrote to OHara upon rejecting a story of his: I sound so violent because I am so disappointed, and I dont mean to be rude for you to know I really do think you are a first-rate writer and only suffer from haste or something. Whites sweet reason has Wolff spitting tacks. It is the combustible combination of dismay expressed with regretful and self-justifying delicacy that inflames rejected writers beyond any pain rejection itself can cause. To be told nonope, not for usis disappointing and can bring a flush to the cheeks. But when rejection comes bundled with hand-wringing, how-can-I-tell-you and what-can-I-say-to- make-you-understand and have-you-any-idea-how-unpleasant-this-is-for-me, wellthe correspondence is soiling. Soiling? Its as if weve been suddenly pulled out of the saloon into a Victorian parlor. Katherine White may have been a genteel priss as an editorit was to her that Edmund Wilson addressed his magnificent outburst over the fiction departments dainty, nitpicky treatment of Vladimir Nabokovbut her knuckle-rapping letter seems to me a model of modesty and tact in dealing with a prickly author who wrote fast and regarded what came out of his typewriter as the hot gospel.[3] (Wolff himself cites an interview where OHara boasted of never spending more than two hours to knock out a New Yorker story.) And recall that Whites boss at The New Yorker then was that roaring, testy, puritan genius Harold Ross (What Im running here is a goddam bughouse), who disliked OHara personally and waged constant war against obscurity, indirection, fuzzy meaning, and sloppy usage. She understood what would get past Ross and what wouldnt. Yet when she balances her dismay over the lax hurry she spots creeping into OHaras work with encouragement to continue submitting to the magazine (We wish you could send us some more stories. Cant you bring yourself to write some?), Wolff accuses her of hypocrisy: Behind his back she wrote her colleagues that shed stake [her] reputation that both OHara will not go down as a first-rate writer unless he reforms on both dirt and clarity. Well, was the old bat wrong? For all of his extenuations, Wolff recognizes that something did go woefully askew with OHara and his work. Near the end of The Art of Burning Bridges, he has an audience with William Maxwell, The New Yorkers other legendary fiction editor of the Harold Ross-William Shawn era and OHaras chief ally at the magazine. Maxwell is cast in the book as the good angel to Katherine Whites bad angel: tolerant, understanding, benign. Wolff asks Maxwell what part alcohol consumption may have played in OHaras choice of literary expression, but hes probing for something profounder. [W]hat I none-too-subtly meant was, What happened to John OHara? Maxwell stared at me, turned to his typewriter, and typed with bravura speed, It would be indecent to speculate. This courtly rebuke (to me it sounds as schoolmarmish as anything out of Katherine Whites prim lips, but never mind) subdues and satisfies Wolff, who lists a number of fine stories from OHaras late period as proof that he hadnt lost his crisp touch or junked his craft. So at the very time the tomes were bloating , OHara was writingabout many a thing under his and your sunsome of the best and best-finished of his fiction. Speculation, then, is not only indecent; it is futile and unnecessary. A conclusion intended to close the lid on OHaras casket and send all those smirkers and scorners home chastened. Wolffs laments leave the impression that OHara received a raw deal beyond the grave. I would contend that posterity dealt this sour pickle a fairer hand than most. Compare his literary afterlife with Irwin Shaws. Like OHara, Shaw was associated with The New Yorker, established himself as a short-story writer (The Girls in Their Summer Dresses, The Ninety-Yard Run), caused a sensation with his first novel (The Young Lions), did the obligatory Hollywood novel (Two Weeks in Another Town), turned to potboilers (Rich Man, Poor Man), catted around, and drank too hard. (What Isaac Rosenfeld wrote about Shaw could have been said about OHara: He knows everything; that is to say, sex and liquor.) Since his death Shaw has slid off the radar, the subject of sympathetic biography in 1989 but otherwise adrift in limbo, just another name in the rollcall of postwar novelists. OHara has never been housed in purgatory, much less litcrit hell. Hes had a staunch advocate for decades in his fellow Pennsylvania native John Updike, and the core holdings in his list of creditsAppointment in Samarra and Butterfield 8, both of which have just been reprinted in Modern Library editions with forewords by Fran Lebowitz; Pal Joey; the novellas in Sermons and Soda Water; the strongest of his short storiesstill compel, keeping their period flavor and hotblooded ferocity. Among his contemporaries in American letters, OHara belongs today where he always did, lodged below the trinity of Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner, bracketed in the second tier with such durable pros as James M. Cain, Dawn Powell, and John Cheever, not exactly shabby company. No critical or historical injustice has been done to OHara and needs rectifying. William Maxwell is right, good writers should be remembered. OHara isjust not affectionatelyand theres little that Wolff has done or can do thats going to change that. Some S.O.B.s just cant be cuddled.
Notes
This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 22 September 2003, on page 59 Copyright © 2008 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/sobstory-wolcott-1696
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