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Inventing the Truth
Inventing the Truth
THE ART AND CRAFT OF MEMOIR RUSSELL BAKEr/aNNIE DILLARD
ALFRED KAZIn/tONI MORRISON LEWIS THOMAS Edited with a memoir and an introduction ^3;
WILLIAM ZINSSER
BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB
NEW YORK
Copyright
©
Book-of-the-Month Club, Inc. All rights reserved. Writing
1987
and Remembering, copyright copyright Dillard.
©
1987
William K. Zinsser. Lije With Mother,
To Fashion a
The Past Breaks Out, copyright
Memory, copyright 1987
©
1987 Russell Baker.
Lewis Thomas.
©
1987
No
©
Text,
copyright
©
Toni Morrison. A Long Line
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical
and recording, or by any information storage and
of Cells, copyright
Book-of-the-Month Club, 485 Lexington
York,
New
retrieval
Inc.
Avenue York
10017
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Inventing the truth. 1.
Autobiography.
3.
Authors, American
United States— Biography. —20th century— Biography.
2.
Baker, Russell, 1925-
II.
Zinsser,
William Knowlton. CT25.158
1987
973.9i'o92'2 [b]
© in
—including photocopying system —without
written permission of the publisher.
I.
Annie
book may be reproduced or transmitted
part of this
New
1987
1987 Alfred Kazin. The Site of
87-3875
ISBN 0-395-44526-4
Printed in the United States of America
Nou
This book originated
duced by Book-of-the-Month Club, at
The New York
Inc.
The talks were held
Public Library in the winter of 1986.
earlier series, held in 1985,
resulted in the
conceived and pro-
as a series of talks
on the
art
book Extraordinary
The Club would
like to
and
An
craft of biography,
Lives.
thank Vartan Gregorian, presi-
dent of the Library, and David Cronin, coordinator of public
education programs, for the Library's gracious collabora-
tion as host of the series.
Two of the talks,
those of Russell Baker and
Toni Morri-
son, are followed
by excerpts from the question-and-answer
made
further points about the writing process.
period that
TONI MORRISON The Site of Memory lOI
LEWIS THOMAS
A
Long Line
of Cells
125
Bibliography 149
Contributors 16"]
WILLIAM ZINSSER
Writing and
Remembering
In the early 1960s
book.
I
was
The book was
sisted of
invited to write one-fifth of a
called Five Boyhoods,
con-
it
men who grew up in twentieth century. The first
memoirs written by
successive decades of the
and
five
by Howard Lindsay, described his turn-ofthe-century boyhood in Atlantic City, a sunny Victochapter,
rian
world not much
inhabited
many
different
from the one
years later as the co-author and star of
one of Broadway's longest-running Father.
The second
Golden, evoked
a
chapter
world
as
Lower
East Side. Chapter
3,
as Lindsay's
on the
was
New
1920s,
was
to an Irish clan that
to be in perpetual migration
port and Philadelphia
by Harry
immigrant Jews on
by Walt Kelly, who belonged seemed
plays, Life with
("1910s"),
cramped
spacious: the dark ghetto of
York's
that he
between Bridge-
—hardly the twenties of
F. Scott
WILLIAM ZINSSER Fitzgerald's "Jazz Age," but could Fitzgerald have
My
created Pogo?
hood spent
chapter ("1930s") was about a boy-
in a prosperous vale of
north shore of
John Updike,
Long
Island,
recalled
what
and the it
was
WASPs fifth
like to
on the
chapter,
by
grow up
in
the 1940s as the only child of schoolteachers in a small
town
in Pennsylvania;
fear of poverty,
poorhouse
—
if
Updike's father, haunted by the
was glad the family
lived next to a
necessary he could walk there.
Five boyhoods, as unalike as American boyhoods
could be. Yet what struck
me
about the
five
accounts
common. One was
was how many themes they had
in
loneliness, the universal plight.
Another was humor,
the universal solvent.
memory, one
I
was
also struck
by the
fact that
of the most powerful of writers' tools,
is
one of the most unreliable: the boy's remembered truth
was often truth.
My
diff^erent
from
his
mother, after reading
parents'
my
remembered
chapter, cried be-
my memory of my boyhood was less golden than her memory of my boyhood. Had I subconsciously reinvented my early years to make them lonelier than cause
they really were?
Had
she subconsciously never no-
ticed?
Mine was
the most privileged of the five boyhoods.
my
parents had built a large and unusually
In 1920
pleasant house
houses with
—one of those summery, white shingled of screened porches — on four acres of
a lot
[12
Writing and Remembering
end of King's Point, overlooking
hilly land near the
Manhasset Bay and Long Island Sound. Boats and water were
my
location for a
view;
home
was
as beautiful a
My
for.
York withstood the Depres-
my three older sisters and I were sheltered from
cold winds, and
its
it
any child could ask
as
New
father's business in
sion, so
thought
I
we grew up
loved and well provided
in a
happy
family, well
for.
But the beautiful house was two miles from the nearest
town and not near any other
on
a block, like
was
also the
delian fluke,
nearby that's
everybody
house.
wanted
I
doing block things.
else,
no males had been born
was
a
what our house was
to
any of the
neighborhood of full of:
my
One
of the
and
sisters
first
never
knew and never
Outflanked, that
I
dared to
words
else.
in their direction or
got thrown out. girls
13]
Once
Sometimes during the long summers
Brown, ever optimistic
I
that they
throw
a
mean?
I
entered
thought about
I
cajole the girls into playing ball.
it
I
can
I
ask.
escaped into baseball.
world of flanneled heroes
their
language
remember hearing was "organdy." What did I
and
girls,
friends, giggling over girlish secrets, talking a
laden with mysteries.
I
By some Men-
only boy for miles around.
families. It
to live
was
I
tried to
a proto-Charlie
would catch
runner
little
out.
a fly hit
But no runner
learned very early the dismal fact that
"throw funny." They explained
that
it
was
be-
WILLIAM ZINSSER cause their arms were "set different."
tomical
was stuck with the So began the of
my
a
I
result.
solitary ballgames that
boyhood. Every day
for hours against the side of
with
school food and poison
like saltpeter in the
center of the golf ball? Whatever the reason,
at the
much
an ana-
this
or just another strand in the folklore of
fact,
growing up,
Was
huge glove the
were
threw
I
occupy
to
a tennis ball
our house, adroitly fielding
line drives
and grounders that
sprang out of the quivering shingles, impersonating
whole major league teams and keeping elaborate box scores.
did
Little
booming home, grass wasn't me.
my
parents,
realize that the
trapped inside their
person out there on the
That impeccable
stylist at
second base
was Charlie Gehringer of the Detroit Tigers; zelle in the outfield
was Joe DiMaggio.
If
that ga-
my
family
had only looked out the window they could have seen greatness.
Being
a baseball addict in those
work than
days was harder
today. Television hadn't been born, and
it is
games weren't even broadcast on the
was nine
my
parents sent
me
Cape Cod, probably hoping ness for canoeing or
some
I
to a
radio.
When
I
summer camp on
would develop
a
fond-
other, less tyrannical sport.
camp I made a wonderful discovery: an announcer named Fred Hoey on a Boston radio station did play-by-play accounts of all the home games of the But one day
at
[14
Writing and Remembering
Red Sox and
the Braves.
near Boston; no
How idyllic, I thought, to live
wonder
it
was
America. For years afterward dial like a
called the
Athens of
fiddled with
I
my
radio
crazed ham, hoping that some atmospheric
quirk would bring Hoey's magical voice through the air to
me. Once
I
even thought
heard him, very
I
faintly.
In such a deprived environment printed word.
At
baseball stories
and box scores
Tribune and the
waited for his
New
breakfast
New
on the
gorged myself on the
I
in the
New
York Herald
York Times. In the evening
I
my father to come home so that I could grab I
was, and in between
of Baseball magazine, to
which
I
I
would reread copies
subscribed, and study
with monkish dedication what was biggest Big League
from those
a
life's
I
was
It
glimpsed what
it
my first
who nudged me down
the
work.
But the memoir that
I
wrote for Five Boyhoods was
only indirectly about baseball.
boy contending with
was another
becoming the
newspaperman; they were
"influence," the mentors
my
fast
Gum collection in the East.
baseball writers that
might mean to be
a
subsisted
York Sun, a paper as ludicrously devoted to
baseball as
path to
I
It
was
really the story of
certain kinds of isolation. Size
isolating factor. I
was one of the
smallest
of boys, late to grow, living in a society of girls
who
shot up like mutants and were five-foot-nine by the age
>5]
WILLIAM ZINSSER Nowhere was the disparity sharper than at the dances I was made to attend throughout my youth. The tribal rules required the girls to invite the boys to of twelve.
these rites
the
boy
—another Amazonian
to bring the girl a gardenia,
bosom
pin to the
the bosom,
I
of her dress.
was
just tall
pressed into the gardenia
—and required
which she would
Too young to
enough
so that
was
like
nose was it.
The
floor.
me
Talk was
my partner was just as isolated and
What I remember most
resentful.
my
chloroform to
lurched round and round the dance
out of the question:
appreciate
had bought to adorn
I
sickly smell of that flower as I
detail
the quality of time standing
still. I
about those nights
thought they
is
literally
would never end. In Five Boyhoods
cloaked
I
all
unhappy mo-
these
—an old habit of mine. Humor the writer's armor against the hard emotions — and therements
in
humor
is
fore, in the case of
memoir,
the truth. Probably
I
my
family.
When
half paralyzed
I
also
still
used
another distortion of
humor
as a
kindness to
my chapter I that my parents
started writing
by the awareness
my shoulder,
was and
my
sisters
ally
perched there, and would read whatever version of
their life
were looking over
came out of
were impossibly
warmer with each
my
stiff,
typewriter.
and though the
rewriting,
never really enjoyed
it.
My
I
if
not actu-
first
style
drafts
became
never really relaxed and
Since then, reading the
mem[i6
Writing and Remembering
oirs of other writers, I've
always wondered
how many
passengers were along on the ride, subtly altering the past.
My
grandmother,
presence in our
lives.
my
A
mother, was a stern
father's
second-generation American,
she hadn't lost the Germanic relish for telling people off,
and she had
a
copious supply of grim maxims to
reinforce her point. "Kalt Kaffee
would
declare,
wagging her
macht schon," she
forefinger, leaving us, as
always, to deconstruct the dreadful message. "Cold
makes
coffee
beautiful,"
some kind of
it
hot coffee were
said, as if
self-indulgence, or perhaps a
known
The maxim was a cousin of "Morgen Gold im Mund," or "The morning hour has
cause of ugliness.
Stund hat gold in
mouth," delivered to grandchildren
its
slept late. Frida Zinsser
was
a
woman
who
of fierce pride,
bent on cultural improvement for herself and her family, I
and
also
in
my memoir
made
it
I
duly noted her strength. But
clear that she
was no
After Five Boyhoods came out, straight. "
'Grandma' wasn't
shy,
from
easy.
my
who had made
"She was unhappy and
and she very much wanted to be
the truth
is
somewhere between
and mine. But she was
my
set
me
her
own
really quite
liked."
Maybe
so;
mother's version
—
me and that's the memoir can work with.
like that to
only truth that the writer of a
17]
mother
really like that," she said,
defending the mother-in-law life far
fun.
WILLIAM ZINSSER was probably only
All else being subjective, there
one part of
my memoir
that
got "right"
I
tively accurate to all the principal players
—objec-
—and that
was the part about the much-loved house and the it
occupied.
rooms and
its
I
described the house, with big
that enabled us to
motor
sailboats,
windows and
its
sunlit
its
agreeable porches
watch an endless armada of boats,
excursion
six,
boats,
boats:
launches,
and barges, navy de-
freighters, tankers, trawlers, tugs
stroyers and, every night at
site
one of the two night
steamers of the Fall River Line, aging belles the Priscilla and the Commonwealth.
I
named
described the
sounds of the water that were threaded through our lives:
the chime of a bell buoy, the mournful foghorn
of Execution Light, the unsteady drone of an out-
board motor, which, even more than the banging of a screen door, the
hill in
still
means summer
froze over
A
One
War
II
to the city.
—my
By then
sisters'
my
described
down on
Island
parents began to
few of
—had
Sound
ice.
and they sold
quite a
children
I
sledded
Long
winter
find the house hard to manage,
children
me.
and cars drove around on the
decade after World
moved
we
front of the house that
our Flexible Flyers.
to
it
and
their grand-
played on those
porches and watched those boats and heard the foghorn at night.
The home had become
generation would remember
it. I
a
homestead; another
only went back to see
[i8
Writing and Remembering
it
—
once
in 1980, after
my
My own
family church.
mother's funeral
children were with me, and
down the once-rural road
drove
that led to our house.
suburb anywhere.
I
at the old I
—King's Point Road
could have been in any affluent
The
sloping fields that
remem-
I
bered on both sides of the road were so dense with
ranch houses and three-car garages and swimming pools that
knew At
it
I
had no sense of their topography;
my
in
hill. I
had heard that
tor
to be
was
show how interior
Hills
between occupants
there.
He
the
was
still
had changed hands
again.
this
day
Only
it
hap-
a contrac-
and took us around
invited us in
new owner had
and was preparing
it
and on
several times over the years,
pened
only
bones.
the end of the road, however, our house
king of the
I
much
torn out
to reincarnate
it
to
of the
in Beverly
modern. Terrazzo squares were piled on the old
wooden
floors that they
would soon
cover; unassem-
bled parts for several Jacuzzis awaited the plumber. Fair
enough
—
gone, but
I
had no claim on the house. at least
children, "This
is
it
was
still
the house
I
there.
Its I
could
grew up
But the Jacuzzi man must have
sister
New
it
my
in."
for sale again;
advertised in the section of the
York Times Magazine that features "luxury es-
tates."
19]
Nancy saw
tell
was
tired of his pleasure
dome. Several years ago the house was up
my
integrity
Somebody
later told
me
it
had been bought by
WILLIAM ZINSSER an Iranian.
I
wondered how much more improving the
old house could take.
summer an unexpected errand took me
Last
the family church.
My
wife, Caroline,
out to
was with me.
I
had an uneasy feeling about the house and didn't want to confront the pain of finding out to
it.
But Caroline urged
once again
At
I
pointed the
what had happened
me to put the past to rest, and car down King's Point Road.
end of the road
I
turned into our driveway.
Something was missing:
it
was the house. Without the
crowning house, the
hardly seemed to be a
the
hill
our Flexible Flyers really hurtled cline?
We
walked up the former
down
hill
that
many months.
it
I
looked
as
if it
mere
had in-
and stared into
huge hole where the house had been. The
was unkempt;
hill;
a
entire place
had been abandoned for
could only guess that some Iranian
holding company, having cleared the land, was holding it
for development.
We walked around the big hole and went and sat on the seawall.
was
It
was
a perfect blue
as beautiful as I
July day.
The view
The
waters of
had ever seen
it.
Manhasset Bay and Long Island Sound
glittered in the
summer
sun, and there
sailboats
and power boats and fishing boats and excur-
were boats
as far as
I
could
sion boats and freighters and tugs and barges.
I
see:
heard
buoy and an outboard motor. I was at ease and only slightly sad. The view was intact: the unique a bell
[20
Writing and Remembering configuration of land and sea
dream about
I still
I
is
a
so well that
it.
But the house survived only This
remember
book by
as
an act of writing.
Americans
five
who
looking for their past with acts of writing. originated as a series of talks, called of Memoir,"
The book
"The Art and
Craft
conceived by the Book-of-the-Month
New
Club, co-sponsored by the
and held
have gone
at the library
York Public Library
on successive Tuesday evenings
"Memoir" was defined as some Unlike autobiography, which moves
in the winter of 1986.
portion of a
life.
in a dutiful line
from birth
to fame, omitting nothing
memoir assumes the life and ignores most it. The writer of a memoir takes us back to a corner his or her life that was unusually vivid or intense
significant,
of of
childhood, for instance events.
By narrowing
focus that
—or
that
was framed by unique
the lens, the writer achieves a
isn't possible in
autobiography; memoir
is
a
window into a life. What I hoped these talks would tell us was how other writers had wrestled with the form: how they had sorted out their memories and their emotions
was
and arrived
at a
version of their past that they
felt
true.
Russell Baker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist
of the
New
York Times, had written in Growing
only a superb memoir;
21]
it
was
a classic
Up not
book about the
WILLIAM ZINSSER Depression
—
good memoir
a perfect illustration of the fact that a is
also a
moment
tinctive
society. Baker's
work
of history, catching a dis-
both a person and a
in the life of
memoir took
strength from
its
public
context.
Annie and
five
Dillard, the author of Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
other books,
is
writing a
memoir
called
American Childhood, in which she places her
An
lively
Pittsburgh childhood in the larger frame of the Ameri-
can landscape, "the vast setting of our
Her memoir,
tory."
about what
down
in a
it
she says,
feels like to
is
common
his-
"about waking up"
"notice that you've been set
going world."
Alfred Kazin, dean of American literary
critics,
has
written three memoirs covering successive phases of his
life,
which Jews
the most enduring being
A
Walker in
dealt with his childhood as the son of
the City,
immigrant
in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn.
I
still
remember how sensual that book was. Kazin wrote with his nose, making me smell what his mother was cooking for the Sabbath dinner when, at sundown, "a
—
healing quietness
would come over Brownsville"
—and
how his father's overalls smelled of shellac and turpentine when he came home from his job as a housepainter. Seldom has a writer put memory to such evocative use. Toni Morrison identified
is
a novelist
with memoir,
and therefore not usually
a nonfiction form.
Yet
mem[22
Writing and Remembering
ory
is
one of the animating currents of her work, and
few American writers have tapped it with such richness of language. In her novels such as Song of Solomon
we
hear voices far older than her own: the fragments of recollection
and imagery and handed-down
constitute the black oral tradition.
my
things
"When
mother or father or aunts used
once remarked,
"it
lore that
think of
I
to say," she
seems the most absolutely striking
thing in the world."
Lewis Thomas, with Lives
of a Cell,
tion of
American readers
in 1974 as a
as that
even rarer species
—the
caught the atten-
born writer and
scientist
who
is
a hu-
manist. In a subsequent book, The Youngest Science, the life
cycle that Dr.
result
was
a
Thomas studied was his own, and the
double memoir: the coming of age of an
American doctor and the coming of age of American medicine. In
its
early chapters he recalled
accompany-
ing his father, a general practitioner, on his rounds in the days
when medicine was
"a profoundly ignorant
occupation" and his father carried only four medications in his black
that
were known
"I'm glad
/
bag because they were the only ones to
do any good. Reading
it,
I
thought,
wasn't treated by those doctors."
remembered, "I was treated by those doctors."
Then I Memoir
puts lives in perspective, not only for the writer but for the rest of us.
The sixth writer in the 23]
series,
William L. Shirer, had
WILLIAM ZINSSER to
drop out because of
and Fall
illness. Shirer,
of the Third Reich
is
whose The
Rise
the Book-of-the-Month
Club's all-time best-seller, recently returned to that
theme
in The Nightmare Years, ip^o-ip^o, this time tell-
ing the story in the form of a memoir, recalling that nightmarish decade looked to a
young
how
foreign cor-
Shirer had been a reporter and
respondent. All his
life
a writer of history;
now,
in his old age,
he was putting
the same events in the frame of personal experience. "I
think most of us in this business want to have a final
we never had time to stop and ask what it all meant. And I'm sure there are other reasons, like egotism, which you deny having." Deny say," he told me, "because
it
or not,
it's
there.
why anybody a
pamphlet or
we
Ego
is
writes a memoir, whether a letter to
reasons
at the heart of all the it's
a
book or
our children. Memoir
is
how
validate our lives.
These were some of the suppositions
that
went
into
What came out of them were five trips to the of memory that touched deep emotions. One cen-
the talks.
well tral
point also emerged: the writer of a
become
the editor of his
own
His duty
is
He must
life.
prune an unwieldy story and give
memoir must
it
cut and
a narrative shape.
to the reader, not to himself.
"The
autobi-
ographer's problem," Russell Baker says, "is that he
knows much too much; he knows
the whole iceberg.
[24
Writing and Remembering
not just the
any
"The writer of work must decide two obvious ques-
first-person
what
tions:
Annie Dillard
tip."
to put in
and what
says,
to leave out."
Nor is it enough just to decide what to put in; to the facts
is
no
free pass to the reader's attention, as
Russell Baker discovered
writing of Growing journalist.
in
What
which he
when he approached
Up with
he wrote was "a reporter's book," one
faithfully re-created the
propriety, story.
What
it.
was
he
his
Reviewing
left out,
Depression era
who had
make
it
more
nephew.
with
a
that disastrous
had
first
vitality
who had
good
mother and himself
that the only chapter that
uncle
The
colorful.
lesson
Baker rewrote
his
—in short, the
version, he
only
know
How much
that
it felt
of that
was not
memoir
lost it
life
to
on the
became
a
woman and
drama was
artifice? I
true.
Toni Morrison, another searcher buried past, also
saw
was one about an
dramatic story about an "extremely strong
weak male."
lived
reporter's
largely invented the story of his
When
the
the reflexes of a lifelong
after interviewing all his older relatives
through
fidehty
knows
that
it
for truth in the
can only be quarried by
an act of imagination. She takes
as her literary heritage
the slave narratives written in the eighteenth and nine-
teenth centuries to persuade white Americans that blacks
were "worthy of God's grace and the immediate
abandonment of
25]
slavery."
But because those writers
WILLIAM ZINSSER wanted
argument and not anger
to elevate the
"dropped
masters, they
a veil"
no
of their daily existence;
their
over the terrible details
and
trace of their thoughts
emotions can be found. Toni Morrison wants access to that interior
life
—
contains the truth about her past
it
that she needs for her work.
imagining
by an
it:
She can only get
fiction,
was
Toni Morrison
real.
Unlike Russell
act of writing.
Baker, heightening reality to give
by
it
drama of
the
it
uses fiction to conjure
up what
Both of them have skipped over research and
landed on the truth. Putting
"My
advice to
oir for the
memoir
writers
same reason
that
like to
into a text.
itself
reau
we
went back
Pond and
just
It
to
is
to
embark on
The
We
Concord
wrote up
mem-
advice sounds too
think that a good
won't.
a
says,
you would embark on any
other book: to fashion a text."
academic;
Annie Dillard
in formal terms,
all this
like to
life
will fashion
think that
after his sojourn at
his notes.
Tho-
Walden
He didn't. He wrote
seven different drafts of Walden in eight years, finally piecing together by what Margaret Fuller called the
"mosaic" method
a
book
even chatty. Probably no
was more
texts.
classic of
deliberately fashioned.
woodsman by a year;
that strikes us as casual
vocation
American
and
literature
Thoreau was not
when he went to
the
woods
a
for
he was a writer, and he wrote one of our sacred
By
the time he had written
it,
in fact, he
had
[26
Writing and Remembering
almost surely forgotten what he did If
you
prize
takes so
Walden Pond.
your memories, Annie Dillard
memoir
write a
at
much
—the
act of writing about
longer and
is
so
itself that
have written,
just as the
an experience
much more
you're
the experience
left
says, don't
intense than
only with what you
snapshots of your vacation
become more real than your vacation. You have cannibalized your remembered truth and replaced it with a
new
one.
For Alfred Kazin, the son of Russian Jews, these
memoir
in
exercises
finicky
Emerson's journals and
essays.
—Thoreau's
Walden,
The Education of Henry
Adams, Whitman's Leaves of Grass and his Civil War were the door that he walked diary. Specimen Days
—
through to claim struck
his
own American
him was how personal
heritage.
What
these writers were; they
used the most intimate literary forms to place them-
American
selves in the landscape of
history.
Their
books brought Kazin the news that was to shape life:
"One could
Every
taxi driver
wanted
be a writer without writing a novel.
and bartender
to be a novelist. It
Thing, in America." Kazin.
A
He
It
Personal history
is
his story
was the expected, the Big
was not the Big Thing
found
the City,
"obstinately refuses to
27]
who told you
recalls that Leslie Fiedler, in his
Walker in
his
it
become
to
review of
perverse that the book a novel."
the one true form for Kazin.
He
WILLIAM ZINSSER tells
US that since he was a boy he has started every day
by pouring
into his journal "everything that
describing and writing about." effort to think
think his
life
in.
was, he says, "some
It
But
like
was
it
also
an effort to
and mind of the country
His daily journal became "a cher-
with something fundamental to
connection
American
out."
into the heart
was born
that he
ished
way
my
I felt
literature
—the writing of personal
diaries, journals, letters,
memoirs.
ritanism had created a habit of
The
mind
history:
influence of Pu-
that
had persisted
into the 'American Renaissance' and the peculiarly per-
sonal reverberations in Emerson, Thoreau,
and
how many others
—the need to present
Whitman
to
God, the
Eternal Reader and Judge of the soul's pilgrimage on earth, the veritable record of one's inner life."
Obvi-
him when he wrote sequels. Starting Out in the
ously Kazin took this habit with
A
Walker
Thirties
in the City
and
New
and
its
York Jew.
Memoir was
his
way
of
planting his roots alongside those of his literary idols in the memoir-rich
No his
American
soil.
such connections matter to Lewis Thomas. In
chronometry, centuries
nationality has
rise
and
fall
in a flicker
no meaning. Dr. Thomas
a cell biologist,
by training
and when he turns reminiscent he
thinks of himself as a collection of division of cells
is
and
went
cells.
What
into his being here at
massive
all?
What
miracle of cellular activity enabled this bundle of cells
[28
Writing and Remembering
to acquire the gift of language? "It
guage," he says, "that
back into
my
I
am
able
because of lan-
is
now
to think farther
lineage, to the family stories of
men, back into the shadows when
all
Welsh-
Welsh were
the
(maybe
kings," back to the beginnings of writing
lo,-
ooo years), back to the beginnings of speech ("100,000 years, give or take 50,000"), cell biologist to talk
satisfied until
"We
are
back to
.
.
.
where? Ask
a
about memoir and he won't be
he gets back to the original bacterial
cell.
he concludes, "in the same family:
all,"
and voting
grasses, seagulls, fish, fleas
citizens of the
republic."
What
a trip
Lewis Thomas takes us on!
ney of unimaginable length oir of life
on
earth.
At
—nothing
am," he
here only a few
than a
says, "a
moments
sured, a juvenile species.
cells
member
known
as
our
moment
fossils,
mem-
Homo
of a fragile species,
as evolutionary
time
is
mea-
We are only tentatively set in
place, error-prone, at risk of fumbling, in real at the
jour-
the end, however, his thoughts
turn back to the collection of sapiens. "I
less
It is a
danger
of leaving behind only a thin layer of
radioactive at that."
Like every good practitioner of memoir, he has placed himself in context.
29]
RUSSELL BAKER
Life with
Mother
I'm primarily find
odd
it
a journalist, a
commercial writer, and
to be talking as a memoirist.
remembrance.
And
they take book form, are what
then
met" books. In
many what we But
in
call
I
I
whom
whom
terribly
was
men
—
think of as "and
at least celebrated
was not
met" book.
brate people I
I
my time as a journalist I have met
great
Growing Up
"and then
are for
the remembrances of journalists,
when I
Memoirs
I
men.
interested in doing an
My prime interest was to cele-
nobody had ever heard fond
of, for
of.
And
the most part, and
thought deserved to be known.
Why did I write this book? other day,
"What should
Library next week?"
why you
I
And
say
I
asked
when
she said,
I
my daughter the talk at the Public
"You should
say
thought you had something so interesting to
say that a large
number
of people
would want
to read
RUSSELL BAKER And
it."
I
said
I
people wo.uld want to read write a book that a
number
two very
My
feh
I
I
at birth.
the cradle, because
families.
of
it;
what
I'd
wanted was
to
had to write.
grew out of
It
my Hfe,
of things that had been happening in
perhaps starting
into
number
hadn't anticipated that any
The
father
a writer
I
was blessed from
had the good fortune to be born
I
large,
As
some people would say immense,
sort they don't
was one of
make anymore.
thirteen children, twelve of
whom were boys. My mother was one of nine children, seven of whom were boys. So I came into the world well equipped with uncles. if
Twenty
you count my uncle Emil and
of
them
—
Sister,
respectively.
What's more,
a lot of these uncles got married,
has provided
me
if
a healthy
and
supply of aunts.
you're destined to have a not very interesting
and
I
was so destined
going to be
you up
a
a writer,
chance to learn
—the next
is
to have a
a lot
is,
my uncle Harold, who
married Aunt Sally and Aunt
with
that
best thing,
if
huge family.
this
Now life
you're
It
gives
about humanity from close-
observation.
I
worry about people who get born nowadays,
cause they get born into such tiny families into
no family
at
all.
When
be-
—sometimes
you're the only pea in the
pod, your parents are likely to get you confused with the
Hope Diamond. And
that encourages
you
too much. Getting into the habit of talking too
to talk
much [34
Life with
is
fine
if
Mother
you're destined to be a lawyer or a politician
or an entertainer. But
We
death.
realize this. life if
have
if
you're going to be a writer,
many
it's
nowadays who don't
writers
Writers have to cultivate the habit early in
of listening to people other than themselves.
you're born into a big family, as
well learn to
listen,
you much chance dozen aunts,
all
was, you might as
because they're not going to give
With twenty
to talk.
enough
old
I
And
uncles and a
to have earned the right to
speak whenever they wanted to open their mouths,
was not
there
demand
a great
for us three children to
put in our oar and to liven up the discussion. I've
of the
never been able to complete an accurate count
number
of cousins
I
have. But
the utmost degree. In addition to
I
first
have cousins to cousins,
second, third and fourth cousins, plus cousins times removed. to be
my
I
have
my
to be
cousins
who were
verted
I
cousins
have
born when else.
I
about the
why 35]
I
first
my
cousins
attention I
young
cite these battalions fertility
of
spent most of
was
di-
learned that the
Johns Hopkins lacrosse team
my first cousin Myrtle, him my great-grandcousin.
Now
many
who are old enough
Just recently
grandson of
makes
have
children. I'm constantly discovering
somewhere
star of the
and
parents,
enough
first
I
is
the great-
which
I
suppose
of relatives not to boast
my blood line, but to my childhood learning
illustrate
to listen.
RUSSELL BAKER
When
the grown-ups in a family that big said that
children were born to be seen and not heard, they
weren't just exercising the grown-up right to engage in picturesque speech and tired old maxims.
they trying to sion.
children's right to creative expres-
For them holding
of survival.
going to be off
stifle
and be
And
it
a writer: a
down the uproar was a question
was wonderful training
if
you
are
having to give up the right to show
childhood performer and
quietly watching
Nor were
just sit there,
and listening to the curious things
grown-ups did and
said.
Out of this experience, at least in my family, there grew a kind of home folklore tradition, which was sustained among those of us who had been children together a habit of reminiscent storytelling, whenever we got together, about what we remembered from childhood. About the lives, deeds, sayings and wisdom
—
of elders.
About
aunts, strangers
who
—
awful
as the
aunts, uncles, grandparents, great-
who would come
phrase always went
courting,
—put
women
up with an
lot.
Putting up with an awful lot was what
seemed
to
Lillian,
who was
do
in the days of
my
nearly eighty
for
Growing Up about
my
father, said,
my
childhood.
when
I
women
My cousin
interviewed her
mother's relationship with
"Well, Russell, people said Betty was
hard to get along with. But she had to put up with an
[36
Life with
awful
Mother
lot."
Indeed she
did.
had
I
my own stock of these
when
family tales and was fond,
dining out and the
wine was flowing
a little too generously, of telling the
company about
the
my
time
grandmother Baker
scolded a visiting delegation of the
Ku Klux
making
sheets.
a
mess of their mothers' bed
Klan
for
Or the time
the Jersey City cops arrested Uncle Jim for running a
away his shoelaces so he wouldn't try hang himself in the cell. With that many uncles you
red light and took to
had
a great variety of material.
My
editor,
these dinners a
Tom when
Congdon, was present I
was
me
it
was
antique time in a big family. as "the
it.
I
a
I
sand words was hardly
a year for
1960s
—
that
my
Tom
waters, something had
My
an it
a
newspaper
my job.
idea of
Spending
hundred thou-
amusement.
started stirring the creative
begun
to bother me.
To
wit,
children arrived at adolescence in the
slum of a decade
the vintage decades either.
—and the And
observe, as elderly folk usually do
37]
in
had no intention
leisure writing another couple of
middle age.
some
week, which meant grinding out
hundred thousand words
But long before
into
began referring to
was already turning out
column three times
my
He
them
after
growing up
like
growing up book." Of course
of writing
a
to put
few of
and
telling old stories,
while he began cajoling
kind of book about what
at a
I
1970s,
not one of
was dismayed
to
when the children hit
RUSSELL BAKER adolescence, that the values I'd been bred to cherish
and
my
live
by were now held
children's age.
in
What was
contempt by people of
even worse, those values
—remnants of the despicable,
were regarded
as squalid
social-political
system that
my
generation had con-
nived in creating for the suppression of freedom. It
seemed
to
me
that these views
found ignorance of
came out of
a pro-
Not uncommon among
history.
As I vaguely recalled from my own experience, adolescence was a time when you firmly believed that sex hadn't been invented until the year you started adolescents.
when
high school,
the very idea that anything interest-
ing might have happened during your parents' lifetime
was unthinkable. cent myself.
was
that
youth
I
I
knew
because
I
had been an adoles-
remembered how ludicrous
anybody could have
thought
it
tolerated spending their
in the dreary decades of
Woodrow Wilson
I
Theodore Roosevelt,
War
and World
I,
as
my
parents
had.
With my
children in this insufferable phase of
became harder and harder father
ought to speak to
them and undertook took
to speak
his children.
to advise
my
life it
with them
as a
When I corrected
them on how
to
do
example from the way things
things right,
I
were done
my days. Which produced a great deal of
in
invisible but nevertheless palpable sneering. Adoles-
cence was finishing
its
nasty
work
of turning
them
[38
Mother
Life with
from dear sweet children into the same ornery people
you meet every day
who
of people
behaving
you go through life. The kind on disagreeing with you. And
as
insist
like people.
In the hope of breaking through that communications blackout
For
a few.
I
letters that
I
tried writing a
I
different
from; to lived
letters to
bore the eyes right out of an adolescent. descriptions of
tried to
convey
to
my own
childhood, in
them some sense of how
and remote was the world that tell
them. Just
soon realized that these were the kind of
They were long which
few
them about
their
own
I
had come
forebears,
who had
and died before they were born, so they might
glean at least a hint that
life
was more than
journey from the diaper to the shroud. children to
know
that they
were part of
a single
wanted
I
a
my
long chain
of humanity extending deep into the past and that they
had some responsibility for extending
it
into the future.
Going through the carbons of some old correspondence recently, I was astonished to come across a couple of these letters that
I
had written the kids a long
time ago and to recognize long blocks of writing that
would appear again, not much changed, in Growing Up, which I wrote ten years later. And I realized that I'd
been writing that book to
Tom
children long before
Congdon heard me writing
dinner.
39]
my
it
over the wine
at
RUSSELL BAKER But what
book was what of
my
prompted the book
finally
mother
though every
came
I
—whose
circuit in
to
become
a
to think of as the living death
mind went out one day as the city had been blown. I was
Key West at the time; my sister Doris called me and told me what had happened, and I flew up to Baltimore in
and went
what to
I
my
to the hospital
was going
—completely unprepared
to encounter.
She was suffering from something
have since come to recognize derly folks but that
I
started talking
I
mother, and she was completely gone.
speechless.
tainly
And
I
as
very
was
I
that
common
I
to el-
had never seen before and cer-
my
had never thought would happen to
was so astonished
for
that
my
mother.
only reaction was to
taking notes on what she was saying.
I
start
had stopped
at
the hospital gift shop, as people sometimes do, to take
some knickknack up going to
find,
and
I
tore the paper bag
could write on the back of
it.
record of our conversation.
What I was I
stuffed
found
it
it
it
I
I
a
It's
on the back of
in a raincoat
many weeks
and again
And
forgot
it
Growing Up
—
that
I
making
a
reporter's reflex. I
instinctively
When
this bag.
I left
pocket and forgot about
later
and put
it
for a long time.
in a
it.
I
desk drawer
And
that turned
out to be the conversation that appears in the ter of
was
I
open so
started
hearing was so amazing that
began recording
what
to her, not realizing
first
chap-
that disjointed conversation.
[40
Mother
Life with
When I
was
what had happened
realized
I
in a kind of intellectual shock,
and
my
to I
mother
didn't
know
how to deal with it for a long time. Gradually it seemed to me that the way to deal with it was to write about two of us had passed through
the times that the gether.
And
reporter, I
I
began
that.
knew nothing about So
piece.
interviewed
many
—people nineties — about living
took
I
of
it; I
But being the good
how
had no concept of
I
magazine
do
to
only
my
to-
to write a
knew how
memoir.
to report a
tape recorder out and
I
my relatives, those who were still
in their eighties,
one or two
the family, things
I
in their
had never been
interested in before.
And my
doing the genealogy.
Who were these people? I had no
wife
Mimi and
notion of who they were or where they had
And
in the process
they were.
I
They were
began to learn people
I
began
come from.
how
interesting
who would be extremely
boring to read about in the newspaper, but they were fascinating.
notes.
I
And
I
transcribed
I
these interviews
and
reported everything very carefully: a long piece
of newspaper reportage.
what
all
wrote was
Then
a reporter's
I
started writing,
book
in
which
I
and
quoted
these elderly people talking about
what
was
like
long ago in that time and place.
was reporting
my
own
life
out of
it.
and, being the
And
because
good I
I
life
journalist, I
was uneasy about what had
always been an awkward relationship with
41]
kept myself
my mother
RUSSELL BAKER and because she wasn't there to her out of it
it.
And
wrote
I
a rather
ran to four hundred and
was very pleased with
I
my
and
editor and
it
testify for herself, I
I
sent
it
thought, "Well,
I
twenty-four hours to
up
sit
I
think
pages in manuscript.
fifty
and
long book.
kept
off to
my agent
night and read
all
them
give
I'll
it
and
phone me back tomorrow." You always have
they'll
that feeling of euphoria just about having finished any-
thing. Well, there
Nobody
the day after.
week
was no phone
call
the next day, nor
called the next
week, nor the
A month passed and nobody called. By
after that.
then
Tom Congdon had his own publishing company,
and
I
knew he was
"Tom
myself,
in financial trouble,
too busy trying to raise
is
And
bother reading this great manuscript." the drawer and forgot
Eventually
down
in
my
on about page thing
.
.
."
office
20.
But
Everything in
I
told
money
to
put
in
I
it
it.
began to sense that there was something
I
wrong, and one night sat
and
it
it
took
I
it
out of the drawer and
and started
And
I
to read.
thought, "If
I
nodded
off
can't read this
I
was an intensely responsible book.
was
correct, the quotations
were accu-
rate,
everything had been double-checked. Finally,
Tom,
in despair, asked for a conference.
worked together figured out to tell
for
how
somebody
any
editor,
I
Tom and I had
a long time, but he has never quite
to
tell
that a
me something whole book
is
is
no good, and
no good
is
tough
guess.
[42
Mother
Life with
But by
that time
had made
I
second judgment
a
myself that the book was in terrible shape and
what was wrong with were
it:
my mother wasn't in
I
it.
knew There
these interesting relatives, the uncles and the
all
aunts and people talking from the present about the old days, but
was
it
nothing but journalism
really
iscences of today about yesterday.
Tom and
I
book and
that
it
was
said that
book about
a
had lunch with
I
knew what was wrong with
I
would rewrite the whole
I
a
—remin-
boy and
thing.
his mother. It
I
the said
was about
the tension between a child and his mother, and every-
thing had to hinge on that
was
—
right
that
I
And Tom
that.
had made
thought
said he
a grievous mistake in
trying to write a book about myself in which
He
appear.
didn't realize the strength of the
character as
mother
did,
I
and
I
knew
I
Now and
I
told at
pass
to write
didn't
mother
brought the
if I
and made her the hinge on which everything
in
swung, the book would be book.
that
I
Tom
that's
one point
it
a story. It
what
Tom
gave
I
as a
intended to do.
I
on to any of you who
your memoir. As
would work
me
a piece of advice,
are tempted
say, I
had given
someday
Tom
this
manuscript of faithfully reported history of what people
remembered of the
written what
uncle Harold.
was famous
I
thought was It's
I
and a
and
'30s,
in
it
I
good chapter about
had
my
the one that begins: "Uncle Harold
for lying."
chapter because
43]
'20s
And
I
knew
that
"got" Uncle Harold
—
I
was
a
good
turned him
RUSSELL BAKER into a character.
man whose memory hved book
the
made
I
made him the me. At some point in
hadn't reported him;
I
inside
I
a conclusion about him:
I
said that
Uncle Harold, an uneducated and an unread man, was famous for being he
just
He
wanted
a great liar.
to be
life
lived a very dull
time
—and he
very well.
I
life
liked to
more
—he was
sent that page back to
that I
it,
at the
fiction.
me
at that
tell
them
way Uncle Harold achieving art
lie
And Tom Congdon
underlined in red, and he
honor Uncle Harold."
"I
time
I
I
knew, and that
though
it
Tom didn't
resolved to rewrite the book,
had been dishonest about
written,
but he didn't
liar;
was.
it
gravedigger
possibilities of
Well, the problem that
know
a
said that in his primitive
not in reporting, but in
really a
interesting than
tell stories,
had perceived that the
wrote on
But he wasn't
was
my mother. What I had
was accurate
to the extent that the
reporting was there, was dishonest because of what
had
left out. I
I
had been unwilling to write honestly.
And that dishonesty
left a
great hollow in the center of
the original book.
you when you really start to research something like this. I made a couple of well, my serendipitous discoveries. One was that
Funny
things happen to
.
mother kept ladies kept a life,
and
my
a trunk.
I
knew
that. All
.
.
good Southern
trunk that they carried with them through
mother was no exception.
When
she be-
[44
Mother
Life with
my
came incompetent,
took custody of this
sister
my sister has no interest in that sort of thing, and she called my younger son, who was a pack rat, and trunk, but
told
him
come over and
to
ested in out of
He was
1933,
inter-
He went
through the trunk and
among
other things, a series of love
had been sent to
my mother in the years 1932
he came back with,
and
was
it.
delighted.
letters that
take anything he
the depths of the Depression, by an immigrant
Dane named
Oluf.
I
love with this man.
mated love
affair
had never It
known
that she
was
in
was obviously an unconsum-
because he was away most of the time.
He moved to western Pennsylvania and they never saw each other after the most casual encounters.
Now
knew
I
that
what
I
about the Depression, and yet about dull
it.
knows the out any way to make
the Depression this
I
book.
I
it,
letters.
I
was the very essence of the
writing in terms of
my
They were
book
extremely
this interesting.
kept worrying about
went through
is
and
statistics,
handle the Depression chapter.
a
dreaded having to write
Writing about the Depression
—everybody
figure
was writing was
I
how
made
I
couldn't
And
yet
setting of
was going
to
several passes at
statistical reports.
Then my son
mother's trunk and found Oluf's almost illegible
—he wrote
in a frac-
tured English that was hard to read, in a big flowing script,
45]
and there were many of these
letters.
I
gave
RUSSELL BAKER them
my
to
"Read these and
said,
I
anything in them," and
there's
evening
when
"This
said,
wife.
got
I
home
if
went off to work. That
I
she was visibly moved. She
the story of a
is
me
tell
man who was
destroyed by
the Depression."
So
was
It I
read them, and
I
was
was the most moving
also delighted, because
of problems and
The second
prise call.
grinning.
it:
I
my
the Depression
Depres-
meant
to
my
mother.
came from
was
One summer day "You won't
my
son came in the yard
certificate.
March
was
sitting in the back-
guess what I've got," he
mother's marriage
I
was
I
And
of the year in
fifty-four years old
I
said. It
looked
which
and
I
I
at
was
realized
a love child.
Well, I
was moved,
serendipitous discovery that
in August.
was
had solved
some mysteries about
she was married in
born
I
chapter which cleared up a lot
a
yard sunning myself, and
my
while
story.
my mother's marriage certificate, which brought me in Nantucket. He paid me a sur-
that trunk
son
it
Here was what
one man. That made
was
And
a self-contained story.
sion problem.
my
it
was.
it
made me
And
it
mysteries that
also cleared I
hadn't been able to solve in the
version of the book.
mother (my deeply.
father's
Why my
more interesting than up a number of things
feel a little
Why my
mother and
my
first
grand-
mother) detested each other so
mother
left
that part of the
world so
[46
Life with
Mother
my father
rapidly after that he
was dead, she
and announced
died.
The morning
called her brother in
was going
that she
to
she learned
New Jersey
come
live
with
him. All of these things that had left
suddenly
fell
into place.
And
woman who was
thing
fell
Could
write this?
I
made
I
a story.
hadn't written
too,
why
relationship with
ultimately to be
into place,
utterly baffled
I realized,
my own
she had opposed so deeply the
then
me
my
The it
wife. Every-
question was,
in the book,
and
made that first book a lie. So, in revising, I determined I would write that story. I thought, "If I want it
to
my
honor
But
did
I
it
mother
in this
book
I
must be
truthful."
with great trepidation. Because you could
be accused of vulgarity, of airing dirty linen and ex-
your dying mother
ploiting
And
yet
So
I
body's
I felt
life
makes any it
stairs to
writing, I
to
commercial purposes.
dishonored her to it.
I
as
my
if
about
you're going to
well
it.
make
it
make
a
into a story.
am now going upmy life." And I started
wife, "I
invent the story of
on the days when
lie
decided that although no-
sense,
you might
remember saying
and
it
decided to do
book out of I
that
for
I
wasn't doing
rewrote that whole book
my column,
—almost
the entire
thing, with the exception of a couple of chapters
—
in
about six months. That was the book that was eventually published.
47]
RUSSELL BAKER But the it.
took the manuscript to
first I
my
Doris
sister
—
two of us had grown up together and had her read I anticipated that she was going to raise violent
objections to
my
mentioning the
had been pregnant before her marriage. thought that was
And
Mother.
you: that
And
she did
I
I
a disgraceful thing to publish
told her pretty
it
would make her
book, in which she might right.
And
"So be
it,"
worked cared.
Still, I
much what
my
plausible in this
anyhow, nowadays, no-
said Doris,
and we published.
was very worried about the public
God knows what was
mother
longer than most of us
live
that
about
I've just told
thought honesty would serve
best in the long run;
body
mother
but not violently. Rationally, she said she
object,
if it
my
fact that
reaction.
going to happen about
that. I
worried about that more than about anything
else in
the book.
And I remember being deeply moved the day
the Wall Street Journal ran
Michael Gartner.
The
first
its
review, which was by
sentence began: "Russell
Baker's mother, a miraculous
woman
." .
.
Q. What were the reactions of your children? A.
I
don't know. Although
we
are very close to our
children, there are certain things children don't their parents.
The
children liked the book, surely.
they were proud of
it, I
think.
tell
And
My daughter, our oldest, [48
Life with
said she
Mother
was
her grandmother,
was
it
gave her
whom she had only known when she
a baby.
Q^ is
book because
grateful for the
How
much
of your book
is
truthful
and how much
good writing? A. Well,
that has certain things in
thing that
phy.
The
is
A
the incidents are truthful.
all
common
autobiographical
is
biographer's problem
with
book
like
Any-
fiction.
the opposite of biograis
that he never
knows
The autobiographer's problem is that he knows much too much. He knows absolutely everyenough.
knows the whole iceberg, not just the tip. I mean, Henry James knew all the things that have puzzled Leon Edel for years; he knew what that tragic thing; he
moment was
about yourself, the problem I
just left
it
is
what
out almost everything
half a percent in that book.
thing;
So when you're writing
that happened.
would be
But the incidents
like
—
And
to leave out.
there's only about
You wouldn't want
every-
reading the Congressional Record.
that are in the book, of course they
happened.
For example, father's death, said,
happen
the curtain
49]
account of the day of my
which occurred when
"How could you
That was the to
there's a long
first
as if I
have
thing
was
I
known
I
was
that?"
five. I
People
knew
that.
knew. That whole day began
sitting in the theater of life
was going up.
It
was the
start of
my
and
life. I
RUSSELL BAKER can
Still
hear people talking that day.
I
know what
the
know what people's faces looked like. How they were dressed. What they were eating. Don't ask me what I did yesterday I'd have to look in my air
smelled
like. I
—
diary
book Q^
—but
knew.
that I
I
didn't
do anything
in the
that wasn't right.
How did you decide what to put in and what to leave
out?
A.
I
decided that the story line was the mother and
the son: this extremely strong
There
and weak male.
women in the book—the grandmother and the woman that the son mar-
are three strong
mother, the ries at the
end
these various figure.
woman
I
—and
it's
the story of the tension that
women put on each other and on the male
don't have a lot in the book that doesn't con-
tribute to that point of
view of what the story material
was.
Q^ I wanted to ask you about another woman that I found unforgettable: your wife. Was she version as she
was
the business about
saw her
that to
I
—she was
my
didn't
make
in the first
in the book that I read?
A. She didn't appear in the
need Mimi.
in the book
version. Because of
mother and
want
the
first
to
my
go that
book an
birth, I didn't
far.
integral
But
work
I I
finally
needed
the logical completion of the series of
events that started with material because
it
my
birth. I
was material
hated to use the
for another
book
that
[50
Life with
Mother
I'd often
thought of writing.
And
I
threw
away
it
in
ten or fifteen thousand words.
Mimi was a good sport, though. When I
thought the book needed
told her that
I
she was very support-
this,
"Do you mind if I write about "No, go ahead." And I interviewed
and she
ive. I said,
it?"
said,
her just the
way
I
She
lied like a politician.
did everybody
She was
else.
But
a terrible interview.
interviewed her and
I
went up and wrote those concluding
went very
quickly.
And
said,
"Read through
want
cut,
thought it
more
I
I'll
cut
had
it."
left
interesting.
it,
I
brought
and
it
to her finally
Well, after reading
it
she said she
out certain events that would make I
"Look, I'm
a writer
tive material
—
sion
was not
to
was
sort of
shocked
who's used
at
some of the
book
one, took
add
all
to the
afternoon.
with sensi-
we
got the
first
copies of
and Mimi immediately grabbed
bedroom, closed the door and read
When
she
came out she looked
"Well, what do you think?"
I
said to her,
"That's what they always say,"
I
appalled.
and she
"It looks different in print."
51]
said,
a thing.
in the mail, it
to dealing
I
me make the decision." And my deci-
Well, after several months the
and
anything you
things she suggested ought to be added, and
let
They
chapters.
there's
if
I
told her.
said,
ANNIE DILLARD
To Fashion
a Text
I'm here because I'm writing a book called An American
which
Childhood,
is
any account, usually that
and
happened it
isn't
a
memoir
a
—insofar
as a
memoir
is
in the first person, of incidents
while ago.
"memoirs."
I
It isn't
an autobiography,
wouldn't dream of writing
memoirs; I'm only forty years
old.
Or my
my
autobiogra-
phy; any chronology of my days would make very dull reading
—
book or
I've spent
a desk.
about thirty years behind either a
The book that I'm writing is an account
of a childhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
grew
where
I
up.
The best memoirs, I think, forge their own forms. The writer of any work, and particularly any nonfiction work, in
must decide two
and what
So
I
crucial points:
what
to put
to leave out.
thought,
"What
shall I
put in?" Well, what
is
ANNIE DILLARD the
book about? An American Childhood
passion of childhood. originality,
about the
is
about a child's vigor, and
It's
and eagerness, and mastery, and
It's
about waking up.
again,
and notices that
loving the exuberant
joy.
A child wakes up over and over she's living.
life
She dreams along,
of the senses, in love with
—and then sud-
beauty and power, oblivious of herself denly, bingo, she wakes notices her set
down
own
up and
And
awareness.
she notices that she
here, mysteriously, in a going world.
world
is
collect
and enjoy.
full
She
feels herself alive.
is
The
of fascinating information that she can
And the world is public;
its
issues are
moral and historical ones.
So the book
—
is
about two things: a child's interior
vivid, superstitious
and timeless
ing awareness of the world. the
book
own
is
from the
The
idiosyncratic topography
—
sees
child pinches the skin
where God made
painter.
Adam
city's bridges,
yet, she
and
—one
brain's
American land-
common
from
on
as a detective, or
Older
motion of
history.
The
on the back of her hand and
older child explores the city
on her future
structural
to the
grow-
a child's
interior landscape
scape, the vast setting of our little
—and
life
foot
spit
and
and
clay.
starts to
The work
an epidemiologist, or a
runs wild and restless over the
finds in
Old Testament poetry and
French symbolist poetry some language sounds she loves.
56
To Fashion a Text
The
interior life
trombone.
above; and
The
It
every hour like
below;
and
too,
itself,
scales
down
dreams
notices
it
in constant vertical motion; con-
up and down the
sciousness runs a slide
is
its
it
notices
own
up
alertness.
motion of consciousness, from inside
vertical
outside and back, interests me. I've written about
once before,
wanted For
to
do more with
simply
I
years ago, while in
Maine,
tive,
cause
I
I
was walking
thought
I
could make
it all
it
on the
because
I
decided to write
around
—
a prose narra-
this
it
do what
I
wanted, and
coast of Maine.
fifties.
it
I
decided
man,
first
was Pilgrim
whole shebang
of writing about myself.
in Vir-
Then I man. Not
Virginia.
chapter and showed
at Tinker Creek
— did
I
in the first person as a
I
I
a
A month or so later
in the first person, as a
wasn't out to deceive people;
57]
Acadia National Park
knew more about
up the pretext of writing I
in
set the
had written the
—
About twelve
in the third person, about a
decided reluctantly to
I
at
to write prose. After a week's
sort of metaphysician, in his
until
—almost
decided to write mostly about nature, be-
decided to set
ginia,
I
aside, this isn't as evident as
like to write books.
wanted
I
further to write
I
picked
decided to write a narrative
because
thought
I
I
I
it
it.
—my own. As an
may seem.
and
a solar eclipse,
a private interior life, I've
random it
an essay about
in
to
it
give
man.
just didn't like the idea
knew
I
wasn't the subject.
ANNIE DILLARD So
own was
in this book, for simplicity's sake, I've got
interior
myself. I
I
it
—
loved to
put in what
it
feel its
a baseball
many
I
life
in
things in
put in what
it
ball fly off as if
it
I
found
their force.
throw
at the target
were your own head.
my
drawing pencil studies of
baseball mitt
and fooling around with
lecting insects
all
feels like to
—you aim your whole body
watch the
which
play with the skin on your
feels like to
mother's knuckles.
in
my
put in what
I
had
loved the power of the
I
fall.
a lively one.
me so excited all the time the sensation pelting me as if I were standing under a water-
that
of time
was
life. It
I
and
and put col-
a microscope.
my study on Cape Cod, where I write, I've stuck above my desk a big photograph of a little Amazonian In
boy whose
face
White water
is
is
sticking out of a waterfall or a rapids.
pounding
of wreath, but his face
and
his black eyes are
That
little
boy
is
I
think he
around
his head, in a
absolutely
still,
distance.
alive; he's letting
on him. He's having
knows
it.
kind
looking up,
open dreamily on the
completely
tery of existence beat
hood, and
is
all
the mys-
his child-
And I think he will come
out of the water strong, and ready to do some good. see this
photograph whenever
I
look up from
I
my com-
puter screen.
moment of waking up and noticing that you've been put down in a world that's already under way. The rushing of time wakes you: you play So
I
put in that
[58
To Fashion
a Text
along mindless and eternal on the kitchen
time streams in
flood beside
full
down
rages beside you,
wakes you you're so
When you wake "Here," in
my
its
you
you
when
It it
fall in.
notice that you're here.
was Pittsburgh.
case,
and
the floor.
swollen banks, and
startled
up,
you on
floor,
put in the
I
The Allegheny from
three rivers that meet here.
the
north and the Monongahela from the south converge to
form the Ohio, the major tributary of the
Mississippi,
which, in turn, drains the whole continent east of the divide via the Missouri River rising in the
Mountains.
The
Rocky
great chain of the Alleghenies kept
pioneers out of Pittsburgh until the 1760s, one hundred
and I
fifty
years after Jamestown.
put in those forested mountains and
way
the three rivers
lie flat
and the way the low land the
way
hills,
and the
and moving among them,
lies
wooded among them, and
the blunt mountains rise in the darkness from
the rivers' banks. I
put in Lake Erie, and summers along
New
its
mild shore.
home of Dixieland jazz, where my father was heading when he jumped in his boat one day to go down the river like Huck Finn. I
put in
I
the
Orleans, the
put in the pioneers
who
"broke wilderness," and
romance of the French and Indian Wars
tered around Fort
59]
Duquesne and Fort
Pitt. I
that cen-
put in the
ANNIE DILLARD brawling rivermen I
—the flatboatmen and keelboatmen.
put in the old Scotch-Irish families
Pittsburgh and always have. Irish,
I
The Mellons
are Scotch-
and so were Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay They're
Frick.
world
who dominate
—
think
Presbyterians.
all
at the lunatic fringe of
it's
important.
I
think
—that mixture of piety and
it
—and
it's
fascinates me.
American
acquisitiveness, that love of
think
I
in this
I
—
just like the
Mas-
can make a case that
on American thought was greater than
their influence
the Puritans'.
—and
it
peculiarly
work. They're Calvinists, of course sachusetts Puritans
grew up
I
There were
byterians, after
far
and they
all,
more Scotch-Irish
settled
all
Pres-
over the Ameri-
can colonies and carried their democracy and pragmatism with them. In Pittsburgh the Scotch-Irish constitute a world of
many
families
whose forebears knew each
respect each other's discretion and
who
withdrawn, the
their world; they
women
all
are ironic.
who
admire each
fuss.
The men
They
believe in
and
their chil-
other for occupying their slots without are
other,
stay in Pittsburgh,
am escaped to tell thee. I and David McCuUough, who grew up a few houses away. And James Laughlin, the publisher. All of us Pittsdren stay there.
alone
I
burgh Scotch-Irish Presbyterians.
in
My
sisters
An
American Childhood.
and
I
grew up I
in this world,
and
I
put
it
put in our private school
[60
To Fashion a Text
and quiet club and hushed neighborhood where the houses were stone and their roofs were
dancing with at the
little
boys
at
put in
slate. I
dancing school, and looking
backs of their interesting necks at Presbyterian
church. Just to
make
mother used
trouble,
to tell
me
I
My
put in money.
never to touch
grand-
money with my
bare hands.
put in books, for
I
with an essay
I
that's
interests,
and
all
as
I
doing
my many
work
passionate
made
to
my-
the world
for Scotland Yard,
in freshwater streams, rock collecting
in the salt desert, painting in Paris.
me
I
me away from
dreamed about working field
started,
York Times Magazine
many vows
Nonfiction books lured
self.
of
book
this
my many changes of mind, came through
books. Books prompted the
—
New
wrote for the
on reading books. Almost
where
back into the world
—because
And novels dragged I
would read what-
ever was handy, and what was handy in those years
were novels about the Second World War.
I
read so
many books about the Second World War that I knew how to man a minesweeper before I knew how to walk in high heels. You couldn't read much about the war without figuring out that the world was that required I
a
moral arena
your strength.
had the notion back then that everything was
inter-
Now,
writ-
esting
6i]
if
you
just learned
enough about
it.
ANNIE DILLARD ing about
it, I
have the pleasure of learning
and finding that
it is
interesting. I get to
and any readers about such esoterica
which
I
as
it all
again
inform myself
rock collecting,
hadn't thought about in almost thirty years.
When I was twelve a paperboy gave me two grocery bags
full
of rock and mineral chunks.
At
of a year to identify them.
cards of
what they
a
took
It
museum shop
me most I
bought
And I people who
thumbnail specimens.
called
read books about a fairly absurd batch of
called themselves rockhounds; they spent their even-
ings in the basement sawing
wavy
slices suitable,
Now, mance that
in this
they
memoir,
up
slabs of travertine into
wall hangings.
said, for I
get to recall
where the
ro-
of rock collecting had lain: the symbolic sense
underneath the dreary highways, underneath
Pittsburgh,
were canyons of
find treasure
reading
I
crystals
—
that
you could
by prying open the landscape. In
my
learned that people have cracked knobs of
granite and laid bare clusters of red garnets and topaz
spudomene and emerald. They hands crystals that had hung in a hole in
crystals, chrysoberyl,
held in their
the dark for a billion years unseen. that. I
would lay about me
and bash the landscape to crust like a piiiata
right
bits. I
and spread
to the light. That's
what
I
and
I
liked the idea of
left
with
a
hammer
would crack the
earth's
vivid prizes in
chunks
its
wanted
to do.
So
I
put that
in.
[62
To Fashion a Text also a great pleasure to write
It's
about
because they're both great storytellers tually
—which gives me
stories.
We
were
all
chance to
a
young,
my
—comedians,
tell
their
ac-
wonderful
our house, and
at
parents,
we
en-
joyed ourselves.
My
was
father
a
dreamer; he lived differently from
men around him. One day he abruptly quit family firm when I was ten and took off down other
—
the
by himself
to search out the roots
—
Ohio River of jazz in
in a boat
New
He came
Orleans.
back after several
months and withdrew from corporate
knew
the
the world well
—
all
life
forever.
sort of things,
He
which he
how people build bridge pilings in the middle of a river, how jazz came up the river to be educated in Chicago, how the pioneers made their way westward from Pittsburgh, down the Ohio taught us to take an interest
River, sitting
"Bang Away,
My
on the tops of
My
their barges
a thinker
and what one might
she lay on the beach with friends and
found the conversation push with her heel and
would give a little away. People were stunned.
dull,
roll
she
She rolled deadpan and apparently arms and
legs
distant water's
and singing
Lulu."
mother was both
call a card. If
in:
extended
tidily,
down
edge where she lay
effortlessly,
her
the beach to the
at ease just as
she had
been, but half in the surf, and well out of earshot. She
was not only
63]
a card but a wild card, a force for disorder.
ANNIE DILLARD She regarded even tiny babies
hked
to step
gown, so
men, and
as straight
on the drawstring of
a
crawhng baby's
baby crawled and crawled and never
that the
got anywhere except into a
little ball at
the top of the
gown. She was interested I
were
father
in the kitchen listening to a ballgame
rates playing the utility
Once my
in language.
infielder
New
—the
and Pi-
York Giants. The Giants had
named Wayne
a
Terwilliger. Just as
Mother walked through the kitchen, the announcer said,
and said,
"Terwilliger bunts one." Mother stopped dead
"What was that? Was that English?" Father "The man's name is Terwilliger. He bunted."
said,
Mother thought
that
was
twelve years she made her own.
If
terrific.
For the next ten or
this surprising string of syllables
she was testing a microphone, or
pretending to whisper a secret in "Terwilliger bunts one."
my
if
she was
she said,
ear,
she had ever had an occa-
If
sion to create a motto for a coat of arms, as
Andrew
Carnegie had, her motto would have been "Terwilliger bunts one." Carnegie's was "Death to privilege."
These
fine parents taught
courage, insofar as to
dance
partner,
all
we
have
my
it,
sisters
and
me
moral
and tolerance, and
how
night without dragging your arms on your
and
how
to time the telling of a joke.
by writing this book, not only about writing but about American history. Eastern woodland I've learned a lot
64
To Fashion a Text
many more
Indians killed
By
did.
the time settlers
than plains Indians
settlers
made
it
to Sioux
and Apache
country those Indians had been so weakened by disease
and by
much
with the army that they didn't have
battles
fight left in
them.
sylvania forests and in
was the
It
settlers in the
Penn-
Maryland and Virginia who
kept getting massacred and burned out and taken cap-
and tortured. During the four years the French
tive
held Pittsburgh
at
them out from
ans and sent
English-speaking Irish,
Fort Duquesne they armed the Indithere, raiding
if
killing
These were mostly Scotch-
settlers.
because the Penn family
sylvania only
and
let
them
they would serve
between Quakers and Indians.
settle in
Penn-
as a "buffer sect"
When
the English held
Pittsburgh at Fort Pitt they gave the Indians unwashed blankets from the smallpox hospital. I
put in early industry, because
interesting.
Before there was
made out
wrought iron
Railroad
of
ties
iron
is
all
made by
steel,
—which
I
Men
had
you
everything was
find just amazing.
to carry
iron, as
if
they
wrought iron
up and down the country. Wrought iron puddlers,
who
puddlers' union, the Sons of Vulcan. process:
was unexpectedly
were made out of wrought
were candle sconces. railroad ties
it
stir slag
skilled labor because
belong to the iron It's
a
very
back into iron, and
it
difficult
requires
carbon monoxide bubbles up.
The
To sinter, for instance, is to convert flu dust to clinker. And I finally learned what coke language
65]
is
also nice.
ANNIE DILL ARD is.
a
When
was
I
a child I
thought that Coca-Cola was
by-product of steelmaking. I
learned about the heyday of the big industrialists
and the endless paradox of Andrew Carnegie, the only one of the great American moguls
who
not only read
books but actually wrote them, including one with very American Steel to
J.
man who
P.
title.
a
He sold U.S. and he said, "A He gave away
The Gospel of Wealth.
Morgan
for $492 milhon,
dies rich dies disgraced."
ninety percent of his fortune in the few years he had left.
While he was giving away money, many people
were moved, understandably,
to write
admirer
God P.S.
to be in prosperity.
a dollar
&
a half to
will bless you.
I
feel
it.
It said:
a
hymn-book with?
know
it.
Don't send the hymn-book, send the money.
Carnegie was only
weighed
133
pounds.
five feet three
He
and museums and an
built the
inches
workers
art gallery at the
at
tall.
He
free libraries
same time
he had them working sixteen hours a day,
week,
He
Could you lend an
buy I
letters.
Mark Twain.
got one such letter from his friend
You seem
him
six
subhuman wages, and drinking water
that
days a full
of
typhoid and cholera because he and the other business
owners opposed municipal works plants.
By
like
water
filtration
1906 Pittsburgh had the highest death rate in
[66
To Fashion a Text the nation because of wretched Hving conditions, and
yet
it
was the
seat of
weahh beyond
"weahh beyond computation,
imagination." People built stables for
with gold mirrors in the
their horses
stalls.
Scotch-Irish families were horrified at the
The old new mil-
who popped up around this time because they things pretty quiet. One new millionaire went to
lionaires
liked
a barber
on Penn Avenue
for his
first
shampoo and the
barber reported that the washing brought out "two
ounces of
fine
Mesabi ore and
a scattering of slag
and
cinders."
And what
to leave out?
Well, I'm not writing social history. This of those books in the
titles
TV
on the
radio.
want
names
the
I
don't like
all that.
to direct the reader's attention in equal parts to
—
the text
as a
formal object
interesting place in
The
—and
which we
So another thing myself.
Or
programs, or advertising slogans or
product names or clothing fashions. I
not one
which you may read the lyrics or even
of popular songs
of radio and
is
I left
to the world, as an
find ourselves.
out, as far as I could,
was
personal pronoun can be the subject of the
verb: "I see this,
I
did that." But not the object of the
verb: "I analyze me,
I
discuss me,
I
describe me,
I
quote
me. In the course of writing this
67]
memoir
I've learned all
ANNIE DILLARD about myself and
sorts of things, quite inadvertently,
various relationships. But these things are not impor-
book and
tant to the
subject of the follow.
book
them
easily leave
out. Since the
not me, other omissions naturally
many
leave out
I
is
I
things that were important to
my life but of no concern for the present book, summer I
spent in
Wyoming when I was fifteen.
the action in Pittsburgh;
body
off to
about a
and I
Wyoming
my summer
memoir not say,
to
like the
see
I
just
because
vacation.
hang on the
"And then
I
no reason
to drag every-
want
I
You have
keep
I
them
to tell
to take pains in
reader's arm, like a drunk,
did this and
it
was so
interesting."
don't write for that reason.
On
the other hand,
I
dig deeply into the exuberant
heart of a child and the restless, violent heart of an
adolescent
—and
I
was
that child
and
I
was
that adoles-
cent. I
leave out
young men.
I
my
private involvement with various
didn't
want
to kiss
and
tell. I
did put in
several sections, however, about boys in general
the fascination they exerted.
crowd most
and
ran around with one
I
of older boys so decadent, so accustomed to the
glittering of social lives, that
with him
one of them carried
at all times, in his jacket pocket, a canister of
dance wax so that he could be ready for anything.
Other boys carry Swiss sions
wax
Army
knives for those occa-
which occur unexpectedly; for the
same reason.
He
this
could
boy carried dance just sprinkle
it
on
[68
To Fashion a Text
room
the dining
floor
and take you
in his
arms and
whirl you away. These were the sort of boys
they had
worn
from the moment
ties
their
I
knew;
mothers
could locate their necks. I
family.
My
watching about
is
parents are quite young.
book
this
alive
and
carefully.
My
my
sisters are
Everybody I'm writing
well, in full possession of his faculties,
and possibly willing I
anything that might trouble
tried to leave out
Things were simpler when
to sue.
wrote about muskrats.
Writing
in the first person can trap the writer into
When
airing grievances.
taught writing
I
of time trying to convince literature
is
an
art, it's
young
I
spent a lot
writers that, while
not a martial art
—
that the pages
of a short story or a novel are no place to defend yourself
from an
attack, real or imagined,
which to launch an the very people
and no place from
attack, particularly
who
an attack against
painstakingly reared
you
to
your
present omniscience. I
have no temptation to
no grievances
left.
air
grievances; in fact,
Unfortunately,
I
seem
I
have
to have writ-
my impassioned adolescence so convincingly that my parents (after reading that section of my book) think I still feel that way. It's a problem that ten the story of
I
have to solve
parents and I
—one of many
my
youngest
have to handle
As
it
My
sister still live in Pittsburgh;
with tongs.
a result of all of this, I've
69]
in this delicate area.
promised
my family that
ANNIE DILLARD each
may
pass
on the book.
promised to take out
I've
anything that anyone objects to
When burgh
was growing up
I
society,
and
any other world
I
I
find.
throw myself
to
But
I
guess
my family may think that I
because
at
I
know
who
writer
a
and
his short stories
all
his
mother
father
is
confuse them with
still
pleases
them
but
I'll
a writer's
make
all
advice to
memoir
that better yet.
for the
They
memoir
writers
same reason
to preserve
memories
they
as
that
by
You
It's a
named peo-
don't believe in
embark upon
Don't hope If
you
means avoid
it is
your
a certain
prize
in a
your
—eschew way
to lose
memoir without canniparts. The work battens on them.
matter of writing's vividness for the writer.
you spend
a
can't put together a
own life for your memories. And it replaces balizing
I
you would embark on
a text.
all
writing a memoir. Because
them.
to
is
your memories.
are,
had,
can't defend themselves.
any other book: to fashion
memoir
I
all
I
who don't have access
kicking around people
to a printing press.
My
both, because
pleased to see his father look bad and his
thought, nothing but good to say about ple,
'50s.
cruelly sticks his parents into
pleased to see his mother look bad.
is
into
can't say so,
conventional Pittsburgh society people in the I
all.
didn't really take to Pitts-
I
was happy
could
—anything
a
couple of days writing
a tricky
If
paragraph,
[70
To Fashion a Text
and
if
you spend
a
week
or two laying out a scene or
more time writing
describing an event, you've spent
about
it
than you did living
much more
it.
The
writing time
is
also
intense.
After you've written, you can no longer remember
anything but the writing. However true you make that writing, you've created a monster. This has
me many, many
to
happened
times, because I'm willing to turn
events into pieces of paper. After I've written about any experience,
my
memories
—those —
patches of color and feeling replaced by the work.
on the doorstep baby rather
like
elusive,
are gone; they've
The work
is
—not your baby
it,
fragmentary
different in
a sort of
changeling
but someone
some way
been
that
you
else's
can't
pinpoint, and yours has vanished.
Memory Your batch
memory
is
of snapshots will both
fix
from your
The
You
trip except this
painting
will forever alter the
can't
and ruin your
remember anything
wretched collection of snap-
you did
of the light
on the water
way you see the light on the water;
so will looking at Flemish paintings. If
you describe
dream you'll notice that at the end of the verbal tion you've lost the tion.
up
it.
of your travels, or your childhood, or your
children's childhood.
shots.
Things keep replacing
insubstantial.
You have
dream but gained
descrip-
a verbal descrip-
to like verbal descriptions a lot to keep
this sort of thing. I like verbal descriptions a lot.
71
a
ANNIE DILLARD
me
Let
put in a word
genre: literary nonfiction. I
try to write
it
now
It's
and because
for a
misunderstood
interesting to
me because
respect the art of
I
it
very
much. I
like to
aware of
want it.
I
tion
be aware of a book as a piece of writing, and
its
structure as a product of mind, and yet
to be able to see the represented
admire
artists
more or
books and the
who
I
world through
succeed in dividing
my
atten-
evenly between the world of their
less
we might Henry James and Herman
art of their books. In fiction
say that the masters are
Melville. In nonfiction the writer usually just points to
the world and says, "This
Lincoln. This
is
its
own
make
also
and crafted works of
of his
work an
may
original
study the
well as the world that
it
de-
of nonfiction can be coherent
literature.
not simply that they're carefully written, or vivid
and serious and pleasing, say, or St. tion,
biography of Abraham
right, so that a reader
work with pleasure as scribes. That is, works It's
a
what Abraham Lincoln was about."
But the writer may object in
is
like Boswell's Life of Johnson,
Exupery's wonderful memoir of early avia-
Wind, Sand, and
Stars. It's
not even that they
may
contain elements of fiction, that their action reveals itself in
scenes that use visual descriptions and that
often use dialogue.
It's
not
just these things,
although
[72
To Fashion a Text these things are important.
may
be Kterary insofar
as the parts of their structures
cohere internally, insofar the sake of the
work
that nonfiction accounts
It's
as the things are in
itself,
and insofar
exists in the service of idea. (It
is
as the
them
for
work itself
especially helpful
if
the writer so fully expresses the idea in materials that
only a trained technician can find stract structure of a
to the writer
given
text,
Because the ab-
it.
which
is
of great interest
and serves to rouse him out of bed
morning and impel him
to the desk,
is
of
little
in the
or no
and he'd better not forget
interest to the reader,
it.)
Nonfiction accounts don't ordinarily meet these teria,
but they may. Walden Pond
is
cri-
the linchpin of a
metaphysic. In repeated and self-conscious rewritings
Thoreau hammered
at
its
unremarkable and rather
dreary acres until they fastened eternity in time and stood for the notion that the physical world presses a metaphysical one.
and ran with
it.
something
—
do quite
else
a bit
He
He
itself
ex-
picked up that pond
could just as readily have used
a friend, say, or a chestnut.
You can
with language.
Hemingway
in Green Hills of Africa
narrative account of killing a kudu, the
wrote
a sober
whole of which
functions as an elaborate metaphor for internal quests
and conquests. Loren Eiseley with
a trowel, splashing
they hold. In his essay
73
lays in narrative
mortar
all
symbols
over the place, but
"The Star-Thrower,"
Eiseley's
ANNIE DILLARD beachcomber who throws dying surf stands for
any hope or mercy that
of harsh natural law.
gant
He
back into the
flies
in the face
stands finally for the extrava-
behind creation
spirit
starfish
as a
whole; he
is
god
a
hurling solar systems into the void. I
my
only want to remind
great deal can be
done
writing colleagues that a
in nonfiction, especially in first-
person accounts where the writer controls the materials absolutely. Because other literary genres are shrinking.
Poetry has purified erary fiction
be
like
fiction
can do
and
art.
All that the
is
its
to
map and
is
up your own form every
I
sur-
most engage
literary nonfiction
is all
over
has been for three hundred years. There's
forbidden, no structure
I
book he has
narrow
subject matter to such
nothing you can't do with
When
writer of
"Good idea." going the way of
some extent
our hearts and minds. But
getting to
is
can't handle the things that
it
it's
unknown
that his friends can say
all
poetry, limiting
the
—
to tell his friends about the
is
short story
faces that
right out of the ballpark. Lit-
scarcely being published
conceptual
written,
The
is
itself
it.
No
proscribed.
You
get to
is
make
time.
gave up writing poetry
had devoted
subject matter
fifteen years to the
I
was very study of
sad, for
how
the
poems carry meaning. But I was delighted nonfiction prose can also carry meaning in
structures of to find that its
structures and, like poetry, can tolerate
all
sorts of
[74
To Fashion a Text
and even
figurative language, as well as alliteration
rhyme. The range of rhythms grander than
it is
and
in poetry,
and plain information
ideas
it
as
can do everything.
story. It
in prose
I
is
larger
and
can handle discursive
well as character and felt as
though
switched from a single reed instrument to a
had
I
orches-
full
tra.
me common Let
close with a
notion
word about
that
peculiarity of writers
process. There's a
self-discipline
—
freakish
a
is
that writers differ
from other
people by possessing enormous and equal portions of talent
and willpower. They
and go into
their
little
grit their
rooms.
powerful teeth
think that's a bad mis-
I
understanding of what impels the writer. the writer
is
a
about in sentences
powerful
thing.
You
impels
deep love for and respect for language,
for literary forms, for books.
off a
What
morning.
all
effect,
don't do
It's a
it
or to
privilege to
It's a
tell
challenge to bring
the truth about some-
from willpower; you do
an abiding passion for the
field.
muck
I'm sure
it's
it
from
the
same
in every other field.
Writing has very
a
book
little
to
is
like rearing children
do with
it.
If
you have
crying in the middle of the night, and
if
—willpower a little
baby
you depend
only on willpower to get you out of bed to feed the baby, that baby will starve.
75]
You do
it
out of love. Will-
ANNIE DILLARD power
is
a
weak
idea; love
is
strong.
You
don't have to
scourge yourself with a cat-o'-nine-tails to go to the baby.
You go
to the
baby out of love for that particular
baby. That's the same
way you go to your desk. There's
nothing freakish about
something
human
isn't
nature.
it.
Caring passionately about
against nature,
It's
and
what we're here
it
isn't
against
to do.
[76
ALFRED KAZIN
The
Fast Breaks
Out
A
Walker
memory
published in
in the City,
of
boyhood
Brooklyn, began Hitler's war,
was
as
1951 as a
in the Brownsville district of
something
over,
I
else.
When
the war,
returned from wartime report-
ing in England to find that there was no in
sensory
room
for
me
New York except in a ramshackle painter's studio on
Pineapple Street in Brooklyn Heights, indifferently left to
me when
commercial
art.
the painter
He
which consisted of series of
clenched
even
The house
left
me
to big
money
camp
in
his old paintings,
violently colored images, a
concentration fists
moved on
whole
prisoners standing with
behind barbed wire. itself
had seen better days. The greasy,
spattered front steps, just off the Chinese in the basement, led into
hand laundry
what must have been the
vestibule of a traditionally stately
Brooklyn Heights
ALFRED KAZIN mansion. Despite the metal shields holding up the battered front door,
you could
a beautiful door, like the
old brownstones Street
and the other
it
many beautiful
streets
had once been doors of grand
Columbia Heights, Hicks
lining
still
see that
veering toward the harbor
and Brooklyn Bridge. a
poor way
street, just
above the
Pineapple Street, just off Fulton, was in just then,
and so was
I.
Across the
garbage cans put out by the local coffeeshop, hung the lopsided bronze plaque put up by the Authors League
commemorating
the exact site
where
in
1851
Walt
Whitman himself helped put Leaves of Grass into type. Whenever I went up to my top floor studio I could smell the remains of
once been
a fire.
two rooms on
The
some ancient smoke. There had building
still
smelled of
fire.
My
the top floor had obviously been cut out
of something larger, and despite the makeshift wall
between the Puerto Rican carpenter next door and
woke me every morning when Pineapple was still dark just by the racket he made on the
myself, he Street
other side of the wall getting himself ready to leave for
work. I
would
lie
in
bed listening to tugs hooting three
blocks away; the harbor was it
rained,
my
all
around me, and, when
windows were The floors went every
painter's great north
awash with foggy
sea light.
which way, but there was
a skylight; the place
was
full
[80
The Past Breaks Out
of light.
The
evenings were lonely and even a
room staring colored concentration camp prisoners, on
terrible as I lay at the violently
a
couch
grim behind barbed wire. paintings, but
Much
as I
little
would not
I
in the other
had no respect for these
take
them down.
had always loved the neighboring
streets
and walking the promenade below Columbia Heights, with of
its full
view of
New York,
I
ment had come
bridge of bridges and the port
was unsure of everything
into
A
else.
mo-
my life, as can happen to men after
when only the opening of Dante's Inferno spoke
thirty,
to
the
my
condition: "In the middle of our
myself in a dark wood, for the straight
A marriage
had broken
down
would never be over
I
was
still
for me.
found
I
way was
during the war;
not recovered. Hitler and his war had it
life,
come
On April
15,
to
lost." I
had
an end;
1945,
when
reporting political discussion groups in the
Army, a British detachment in the north of Germany had stumbled on the deeply hidden Belsen concentration camp in the vicinity of Hanover to find British
typhus raging, forty thousand
sick,
starving,
prisoners, thirteen thousand corpses stacked
ground.
The London Times
carried a dispatch
dying
on the from
a
correspondent with the army unit: "I have something to report that lies
A
week
or so
beyond the imagination of mankind."
later,
waiting out in the rain in the en-
trance to a music store,
81]
I
heard a radio playing into the
ALFRED KAZIN Sabbath service from Belsen.
Street the first
When
the
Hberated Jewish prisoners in unison recited the Shema
— "Hear, O One" — feh a
Lord Our God, the Lord
home, when with the Sabbath
at
New
In Pineapple Street, surrounded by
which
the harbor through
I
unknown
my
to each other
parents as
York and
young
rebels
had entered the country,
dreamed of putting
my life in order by writing a book
New
York background. This was no
set against the
from the
great departure
for years. Criticism for a
sundown
at
would come over Brownsville.
healing quietness
still
Is
myself carried back to the old Friday
I
evenings
the
Israel,
criticism
me was
I
had been writing
not a theory,
theory holding academics together.
of literature, a
my
life,
mode
I felt
like describing
What
liked
most about
it,
spontaneity and naturalness,
life
It
was
and thinking about.
this intimate
lifelike
and
me away from
dogmas about
this, at least,
had
which went everyrecord was
at the quick, as
represented some effort to think
out. It also got
subjective
I
thing every morning, in complete
first
the French say.
of writing,
since boyhood, a voluminous
thing that
writing in
branch
and almost physical empathy.
daily journal, or sketchbook, into
I
a
of writing like any other
Far from feeling confined to one all
was
—of cha-
way
racterization, analysis
been keeping
It
least of all
all
editors
and
my
their
the public taste and capacity;
for myself.
At
the
same time
it
was
[82
The Past Breaks Out a cherished
connection with something fundamental to
American Hterature
—the writing of personal
diaries, journals, letters,
memoirs.
ritanism had created a habit of into the
The
mind
history:
influence of Pu-
that
had persisted
"American Renaissance" and the peculiarly
personal reverberations in Emerson, Thoreau, Whit-
man and how many
others
—the
need to present to
God, the Eternal Reader and Judge of the grimage on
soul's pil-
earth, the veritable record of one's inner
life.
At fourteen or raphy
fifteen
as narrative
my
fascination with autobiog-
had accelerated when The Education
Abraham and Straus department store on Fulton Street in downtown Brooklyn. Without being able to say why, I knew that this particular book was more for me than the other
of
Henry Adams went on
book on
sale.
sale at the
The Autobiography of Benvenuto
Cellini.
There was something odd and even comic about
what was
to develop into a lifelong passion for every-
thing to do with the Adamses.
I
was the
first
child of Russian Jews, lived in the mostly Jewish
mostly black) Brownsville
district
native
(now
near the end of the
I.R.T. subway, a notoriously rough, tough neighbor-
hood trailing out into haunts of the Mafia.
If
my mother
had known the sour opinions of Jews developed by the violently disillusioned patrician
Henry Adams,
the
grandson and great-grandson of presidents, the most
83]
ALFRED KAZIN descendant of the most gifted American
brilliant
cal family, she
would have thrown The Education
Henry Adams out of the house But
my
anything.
mother gail
of
politi-
—and me right
after
of it.
mother didn't read English; she didn't read It
that
might have been interesting
to
my
inform
Henry Adams's great-grandmother Abi-
had written to her husband John during the Battle
Bunker
Hill,
"The
race
is
battle to the strong, but the
giveth strength and
not to the swift, nor the
God
of Israel
power unto His
is
He
that
people. Trust in
Him at all times, ye people pour out your hearts before Him. God is a refuge for me — Charlestown is laid in ashes." After the Civil swift,
Henry Adams
War, when the
felt
likened himself to a Jew.
race was to the
himself so out of
it
"Had he been born
that he
in Jerusa-
lem under the shadow of the Temple, and circumcised in the
Synagogue by
high
his uncle the
priest,
under
name of Israel Cohen, he would scarcely have been more distinctly branded, and not much more heavily handicapped in the races of the coming century."
the
There was never
a
chance to go into such interesting
items of American history with
my mother—to explain
why Henry Adams so came to associate capitalism with Jews that he habitually referred Jew. treds.
My
mother
lived apart
She had come
to
to
J.
from such
America
as a
P.
Morgan
as a
intellectual ha-
young
seamstress
because she believed herself to be unmarriageable, a
[84
The Past Breaks Out
plain girl in a family
named Shana
where
good-looking
a
was the
("Beautiful"),
main unmarried was unthinkable
favorite.
sister,
To
re-
good Jewish
for a
girl.
my mother found my father-to-be. That,
In America so to speak,
was the
limit of her acquaintance
with the
my
mother's
country. But getting to America did save life;
Shana and her husband were
by the Nazis
my
in a
to be horribly killed
roundup of their village. In any
mother's America, though not extensive, was cer-
tainly intense. It consisted of her family alive in ica,
in
Amer-
dead or dying in Russia, and the sewing machine
our kitchen, where
my
event,
sister
when my
and
me
as a
"home" dressmaker she kept
in college
during the Depression
father, a housepainter,
day jobs only when the painting of
subway
My debt to
New
stations
could find occasional
Deal shelled out for the
and bridges.
The Education of Henry Adams and other
"personal" American classics
—the essays and journals
of Emerson; Walden and the journals of cially;
Thoreau espe-
Leaves of Grass and Whitman's diary of the Civil
War, Specimen Days
—
is
simply
stated.
One
could be a
writer without writing a novel. Every taxi driver and
bartender ist.
It
told
you
his story
wanted
to be a novel-
was the expected, the Big Thing,
especially;
85]
who it
had raised to the heights
in
America
literary
prima
ALFRED KAZIN Norman
donnas from Mark Twain to
seemed
positively perverse to Leslie Fiedler,
my A
reviewed
Walker
nately refuses to
At
the
my
in the City, that the
become
when he
book
York, so different from the Depression life
in Brownsville, I
ing to write something about the city
would do I
"obsti-
a novel."
in Pineapple Street to the glare of
early working-class
range
It
moment, however, waking up uneasily every
morning
New
Mailer.
postwar '30s
and
was
try-
at large that
justice to the color, the variety, the imperial
encountered walking about the city every day.
Every next day
Whitman
I
my
tried to get into
in his greatest
New
York poem, "Crossing
Brooklyn Ferry," had called "the beads on
notebook what
glories strung like
my smallest sights and hearings—on the walk
in the street,
and the passage over the
There was some connection tween writing and roaming the
I
river."
had to
city,
establish be-
between writing
my ability to react to everything in the open street. To my delight and everlasting gratitude, I was assigned and
by Harper's Bazaar
to
work with
Henri Cartier-Bresson on
a piece
Bridge and the different worlds
at
later to describe this great artist as
the photographer
about the Brooklyn each end of
it. I
was
an aristocratic radi-
new mass housing projects crowding the view of the Lower East Side from the Brooklyn Bridge many of them named after cal;
he was gently disdainful of the
—
[86
The Past Breaks Out
my father worshiped.
labor and Socialist heroes
New
York,
still
visible in the late '40s,
gave particular
pleasure to Cartier-Bresson's genius eye as
the
wooden boardwalk down
But old
we walked
the center of the bridge.
"It breathes!" Cartier-Bresson said happily about this
central
devastating clarity and
we
how
promenade. "See
it
breathes!"
ries,
his
my zeal for those leftover streets
brought home the Brooklyn Bridge
in the iron age, the
With
"Swamp"
still
anchored
district of leather facto-
old assayers' shops, dealers in perfumes and wines,
the ornamental
fire
escapes
still
sculptured with John
L. Sullivan prize-fighter figures out of the old Police Gazette. Cartier-Bresson
thought of doing tout
New
never worked out, and
book on It
my
and
I
got on so well that
York in a book. But this
soon began writing such a
New
York,
like
a sort of
mid-
noon and
first
in the rush hour, the crowds, the
libraries.
New
section
in Pineapple Street, the blaze of
town
in
and Hart tried
morning
Sunday
all
I
to cover
museums, the
personal epic
Leaves of Grass
Crane's The Bridge, in prose. In the
at
we
own.
was very ambitious,
around
I
The
York,
full
third section
was
all
about
of color, poignance and
what I thought was dazzling prose. The middle section, called "The Old Neighborhood," consisted of some dozen pages of childhood memories, which
I
had writ-
ten in a strange burst of enthusiasm in just one after-
87]
ALFRED KAZIN noon but which
didn't
seem grand enough
by comparison with midtown
at
as a subject
noon and
the city
on
Sunday.
What I went through for an absurdly long time trying to hammer the thing together does not deserve extended description here. But how I tried! I was a critic
with
a critic's
then was a
long time,
weakness for
ideas,
and
critic's ideas. Finally, after a I
realized that
I
all I
had
ridiculously
was not going
to write a
personal epic like Leaves of Grass or The Bridge or Paterson or
any other of the "Columbiads" that ever
since the eighteenth-century Joel
Barlow have tempted
our would-be Homers and Virgils. Carlyle sneered that
Whitman thought
he was a big poet because he lived
in a big country.
suddenly opted for
my
I
natal country.
The only
a small country,
thing emotionally authen-
my vast manuscript was those carelessly scribbled pages about growing up in Brownsville. On these, once
tic in
I
realized just
how
sensory the material really was and
how vivid the prose would have to be, book.
But Brownsville
—"Brunzvil,"
ous Jews long removed from
I
as the
it still
could build
my
newly prosper-
described
it?
It's
Meyer Schapiro had passed through it, along with various Nobel laureates, Danny Kaye and John Garfield in East New York next true that the splendid art historian
door.
Murder Incorporated, the crazy neighborhood
[
The Past Breaks Out
thieves
I
actually
saw skipping from roof
to roof just
ahead of the cops. But Brownsville? Poor ghetto Brownsville?
My
parents
the war, poor as ever. the spirit of
still
hung on
for years after
My father, no doubt praying that
Eugene Debs would
forgive him, timidly
complained that non-union black painters were taking
work away from him
at
lower
now so far behind the Jews,
rates.
Brownsville was
so far behind me, that after
one particularly sad Friday evening supper with parents it all
I
wrote in
feels like a
my notebook,
go back
I
foreign country."
But when
I
came
"Every time
I
go back
never been away."
to write the actual
It
to Brownsville
book
to
I
as
it is
was not behind me
White removed
E. B.
"Every time
my
at
began:
if I
all.
had
When
Maine from Manhattan he
described himself as "homesick for loneliness." That
was to
my case. As the past broke out in my book,
me more and more
solution to ness.
I
my
that there
was no
it
came
intellectual
long search for the meaning of Jewish-
would never
fully
fathom the hatred behind the
would never become pious in the orthodox Jewish fashion. I would never settle in a country that desired to be all-Jewish. I would never believe in Holocaust.
I
socialism's "final conflict."
I
would
certainly never ally
myself with the financially and politically powerful or the born-again patriots ideologies
89]
from the
who were
ex-Left.
picking up their
ALFRED KAZIN There was some enduring mystery, some metaphysical
conundrum about being
hkely to abandon.
Jewish, that
I
was not
could not get over the extraor-
I
dinariness of Jewish persistence through the ages, matter-of-fact continuity with
itself,
in
all
its
periods and
places.
The key was some heightened
sense of exis-
tence,
living
experience
through and
The
through.
Jewish
the
basic fact, as
Saul Bellow had
shown
my
exact contemporary
wonderful second book,
in his
The Victim, was the singularity for even a gifts, in
man
of small
our increasingly suspicious and disenchanted
world, of remaining a Jew, of remaining unsuspicious in one's deepest soul
Norman Walker
—unwearied.
Mailer was to complain that the boy in
was too
in the City
virtuous; Irving
he did not correspond to the original Trilling that the subject that there
too,
a
by going
what anyone
else
realized that
I
were its
correct; the
own
way.
would have
was thinking
physical sensations.
facts;
Lionel
It
in the book. All
book astonished
was
written.
definitely not
But early on
stirring
up
tangential, very slight, endlessly
memory of being taken to the old BrookChildren's Museum. Was it on Brooklyn Avenue?
reverberatory
lyn
I
in color, luxuriating in
The breakthrough was
from the depths some
that
"schmo"; Oscar Handlin
were not enough people
these Jewish sages
me,
was
Howe
A
[90
The Past Breaks Out
The
Children's
with
my
museum
Museum had some Audubon's
sight of
first
itself, as I
memory, was
a
followed
wooden
its
basic connection
prints of birds.
The
extensive filaments in
construction vaguely reminis-
cent of some old American farmhouse already stamped in
memory
standing alone on the prairie.
as
was writing
my
favorite section of the book,
my
Block and Beyond," on
"beyond" Brownsville
The day
earliest
itself, I
light
—
I
was
I
stirring
left
between
found
small
Audubon
in
"The
found myself writing:
Museum
wooden
were hazel
prints
I
walks into the city
they took us to the Children's
dripping on the porch of that old lined with
When
—rain was
house, the halls
in the thin antique
with the distinct impression that
I
had been
my fingers dried earth and fallen leaves that
between the red broken paving stones of some
American town.
From straight
the
beginning
from the
—
I
wanted physical images,
—
memory again "It's mem"the memory that goes with
belly. In
ory," said Willa Cather, the vocation"
I
step off the train at
Rockaway Ave-
nue, smell the leak out of the men's room, then the pickles
from the stand
these opening pages feelings involved in
I
just
am
below the subway
eager to get
all
homecoming— "an
steps.
In
the contrary instant rage
comes over me, mixed with dread and some unex-
91]
ALFRED K AZIN pected tenderness." This
is still
the end of the city, the
faraway place that thought of everything
making every journey
city,"
the verv old
It is
seem
alwavs the old
me. In their
Only
left:
women in their shapeless flowered house-
dresses and ritual wigs to
into the city a grind.
have been
to
else as "the
soft
I
see
dumpy
first;
they give Brownsville back
bodies and the unbudging
way
they occupy the tenement stoops, their hands blankly folded in each other as
if
they had been sitting on these stoops from
the beginning of time, all
I
mv
life
would be
remember
"We
I
sense again the old foreboding that
like this.
my mother's earliest complaint against me:
are iirime yidn,
poor Jews.
What do you want
of
us
But not forgetting or forgiving some early hopelessness,
I
am
grabbed by the aliveness of the scene, the
inextinguishable contrasts, the absurdity. There in the
shadows of the El-darkened canvas sign
still
listing the
street
boys
is
the torn flapping
who went
to war, the
stagnant wells of candy stores and pool parlors, the torches flaring at dusk over the vegetable stands and pushcarts, the neon-blazing fronts of liquor stores, the piles of
halvah and chocolate kisses in the
the candy stores next to the
old drugstores
windows
of
News and Mirror, the dusty
where urns of rose and pink and blue [92
The Past Breaks Out colored water
still
swing from chains, and where next
door Mr. A's sign
still
Rockawav Avenue
tells
anvone walking down
that he has pants to
anv color
fit
suit.
These
details
now make me happy;
much packed-up humanit\% makes
street, so
tuously commercial lent transactions,
In the
last
street, all these
something
make minute on
to
tumul-
automatic and vio-
a pleasure to unravel,
it is
paper.
all
their
wares
street of everv personal
in a
cosmetic smile, but
a single
flame the acid smell of half-sour pickles in their brinv barrels,
strip the
shadow and concealment. The
ches over the pushcarts hold in
sheets
this
crazv afternoon light the neons over the delicat-
essens bathe
per
the energ}^ of the
There
is
a
drv
tor-
breath of vellow
and herrings floating
rattle of loose
newspa-
around the cracked stretched skins of the
"chinev" oranges. Through the kitchen windows alon^ everv ground floor the fresh
I
can alreadv see the containers of milk,
round poppvseed evening
rolls.
Time
for supper,
time to go home.
On
this last
note
I
have found
toward home and the
pull
awav
mv
rhvthm, the push
again, the longing for
the secret treasure of familv and Jewish togetherness,
and the that
93
is
contran,-
motion of seeking the open treasure
the great citv. infinite Xe\^-
York
that
belonged
ALFRED KAZIN
A
not to "us" but to "them."
my
key to
book
is
of
course this constant sense of division, even of flagrant
home
contradiction between wanting the enclosure of
and the open
city,
both moral certainty and intellectual
independence. This conflict has never ended for me, confess,
which may be one reason why,
ago in Pineapple
Street,
I felt
that
I
was
I
thirty-six years at last
discover-
ing an inescapable truth about myself and no doubt
about other Jews of
my
generation brought up on the
old immigrant poverty and orthodoxy. the tradition
To want of the
was somehow
it
whom
to hold fast to
it.
both ways was also to span a good deal
vehemence of Jewish history
unimaginable
To rebel against
just
in a
way
perhaps
now to those children of suburbia for
Jewishness
is
psychology and troubled
self-
defense. Or, wearing a chic inch of yarmulke, relishing
the ballet and the nudes at the as for so
many Jewish
museum
of
art.
For me,
writers and intellectual trou-
blemakers of a certain age and condition,
life
in the
twentieth century has been essentially political
—with
Jews usually
When
at
every crux of our turbulent century.
Captain Alfred Dreyfus was accused, on the
basis of forgeries gleefully
committed by
ultra-rightists,
of betraying French military secrets to imperial Ger-
many, he was driven out of the army liating public
and shrieked,
in the
most humi-
ceremony. The crowd looking on hooted
"A
bas les Juifs!"
The
future state of
[94
The Past Breaks Out
Israel
was
in the
Theodor Herzl.
mind
of one observer in that crowd,
When
Dr.
Sigmund Freud
found himself virtually ostracized for insights he proudly said,
"Being
a
Jew,
in
Vienna
his professional I
knew I would
be in the opposition." Leon Trotsky, Rosa Luxemburg,
Gregory Zinoviev, Osip Mandelstam were confident that their being Jewish
was
historically insignificant;
those
who
cant.
Replacing nineteenth-century
destroyed them did not think
it
insignifi-
illusions that the
"Jewish question" would disappear under socialism, the twentieth century everywhere has seen the perse-
cution and even the extermination of Jews wherever the state has total control.
The crowd
that cheered
Dreyfus's disgrace was replaced by the crowd in occupied
Warsaw
cheering as Jews locked into the ghetto
flung themselves out of windows to escape deportation.
A child of poor Russian Jews living a commonplace life
in
Brooklyn nevertheless feasted on every scrap of
my innocent, literary associations with a Russian life that my parents had not Russian memory. But beyond
—imagine not speaking —my the language of the country you were born really experienced themselves
in!
real passion
was hearing
West from my
way
95]
to
As
a
of the early
American
young immigrant painting
Union Pacific Railroad he had gone all Omaha, had heard his beloved Debs making
boxcars on the the
father.
tales
ALFRED KAZIN fools of
Bryan and Taft
in the 1908
campaign, had been
offered a homestead in Nebraska!
"Omaha" was
the most beautiful
"Homestead" was almost
heard.
never forgive
my
word
I
had ever could
as beautiful. I
father for not having taken that
homestead.
"What would I have done "You should have taken it!
there? I'm
Why
no farmer."
do we always
live
here!" "It
body
would have been unnatural," he wound I
knew."
"What
a
chance!"
"Don't be
childish.
Nobody
"Why? Why?" "What do you want Under
eleven,
my
more
my
with
hero
—the
a stray
when
book was The Boy
's
I
Life
Year by year T.R., the only
American president born
New
knew."
of us poor Jews?"
favorite
of Theodore Roosevelt.
identified
I
the cover of those Friday evenings,
was about
ever
"No-
up.
in
New
York
City,
became
police commissioner
Jewish policeman
who
as "straight
York," the historian and author, the only
New
who could write an essay on "Dante in the Bowery." He was my guide to that other New York, the New York of Herman Melville, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Frederick Law Olmsted, AlYork
politician in history
fred Stieglitz
—the New York
to be achieved, in
Whit-
[96
The Past Breaks Out
man's words, by "the passage over the river." This was a
New York that began
ium
that
had
first
became the immigrant receiving
it
had been the opera house where Whitman had
been intoxicated by
"Beyond," can
old Aquar-
been Castle Clinton, then Castle Gar-
den, which before station
at the Battery, the
—the
Italian sopranos.
as I wrote,
name
"was anything old and Ameri-
Fraunces Tavern repeated to us on a
school excursion; the eighteenth-century muskets and glazed
paintings
oil
on the
wall; the very streets, the
deeper you got into Brooklyn, named after generals of the Revolutionary
War— Putnam,
Gates, Kosciusko,
my
DeKalb, Lafayette, Pulaski." "Beyond" was covery in the Brooklyn
Museum
of "a circular
dis-
room
upstairs violently ablaze with
John Singer Sargent's watercolors of the Caribbean" and a long room lined with dim farmscapes of old Brooklyn
itself in
the early
"And I knew I would come would have to come back."
nineteenth century. that
I
The more
I
got into
my book,
the happier
getting back into the Metropolitan
old
American Wing (not so
Museum,
I
back,
became into the
lavishly laid out as
it is
now). Far in the back, in an alcove near the freight elevator,
hung so low and
light that
New
I
the figures so
crouched to take them
York sometime
in,
after the Civil
dim
in the faint
were pictures of
War. Skaters
in
Central Park, a red muffler flying in the wind; a gay
97
ALFRED K AZIN crowd moving round and round Union Square
Park;
horsecars charging between the brownstones of lower
my eyes. Room on room they had painted my city, and this city was my Fifth
Avenue
at
dusk.
I
couldn't believe
Winslow Homer's dark oblong of Union soldiers making camp in the rain, tenting tonight, tenting on the old campground, as I had never thought I would get to see them when we sang that song in school; Thomas Eakins's solitary sculler on the Schuylkill, country:
resting to have his portrait painted in the yellow light
bright with patches of
showing on the other
raw spring
side of him.
in Pennsylvania
Most wonderful
to
me then was John Sloan's picture of a young girl standing in the
wind on
the deck of a
—surely Staten —looking out
Island,
to
birth?
to
become
When
I
Brown
Decades, a
just
York ferryboat
my
about the year of
to water.
America between the
War" was
and
New
Civil
my
War
and the "Great
favorite period for study.
eventually discovered Lewis Mumford's The
prime book on the
subject,
with
its
loving portraits of Emily Dickinson, John August Roebling, the creator of
Brooklyn Bridge, and the painter
Albert Pinkham Ryder (in those days you could
still
on University Place the Hotel Albert, named after the mystical painter by his brother), I was hooked for see
life. It
as
had everything to do with such
Park
Row
on
historical items
a winter afternoon in the i88os, the
[98
The Past Breaks Out
snow
falling into the
dark stone streets under the
Brooklyn Bridge, newsboys running under the maze of telegraph wires that darkened every street of the lower
How those wires haunted me in every photograph found of old New York. Indescribably heavy, they
city. I
sagged between the poles; the very sink under their weight.
The
past
seemed
streets
was
to
that forest of
hung over lower New York at five o'clock. Ever more vivid to me as the years went on were certain prime figures moving against that dark, brood-
wires
ing landscape: Melville the customs inspector checking
cargoes on newly arrived ships to
Harlem,
that
Gansevoort
was named ary
bitter at the
War
Street,
after his
all
along the
ignoramuses
who
Hudson up
didn't
where Melville took
own
know
his lunch,
grandfather, the Revolution-
hero. Later, seeing the ghosts of
writers in their old neighborhoods,
it
New
was easy
York
to imag-
Mark Twain still living at Tenth Street and Fifth Avenue, more picturesque than anyone else as, with silk hat perched on his snowy white hair (washed every ine
morning with laundry nue
just
walked up Fifth Ave-
ahead of the crowd that always recognized and
followed him. there
soap), he
And
finally,
joining one past to another,
was Henry James on
Lower East
Side of
his native's return to the
New York in 1905, studying the fire
escapes heaped with Jewish immigrants just like father
99]
and mother.
He would
describe
them
all
my
in that
ALFRED KAZIN most majestic of
me
unlike
travel books, The
American
But
Scene.
he would see them only in the mass,
as
faintly repellent intruders, agents of "future ravage."
All this did not complete the circle of memories;
Out
forays into the past continued with Starting Thirties still
my
in the
and New York Jew. Now, past seventy,
I
am
make a book out of my lifetime notebooks Too Much Happens. Mrs. Hines, Joe Christmas's
trying to
called
grandmother his death: "It
is
much
because so
What happens
happens."
Too much
happens.
still
that
I
have to put
in writing. Let the future decipher
it is
My
it.
volvement with so much personal history has cuse:
after
every day, virtually every
moment, can be an amazement
down
muses
in Faulkner's Light in August,
in-
this ex-
about someone taken up in history, someone
—
who was in history born. And I cannot
like all his
people
—before he was which
fully explain the necessity,
me than to the people I write there was a moment when I felt
can be more unnerving to about.
But recently
repaid for
A
my
Walker in
courses,
lege
all
I
struggles.
the City
and while
I
was
is
much used
in
composition
teaching
at
Hunter Col-
still
was asked by some freshman students
questions about the book. angrily: "I
the place.
to
answer
A black girl said to me, a little
come from Amboy and Teach me to write like
Sutter.
I
sure
know
that."
[
100
TONI MORRISON
The
Site
of
Memory
My inclusion in memoir
is
a series of talks
not entirely
on autobiography and
misalliance.
a
Although
it's
probably true that a fiction writer thinks of his or her
work
as alien in that
suggest
why
one thing,
between
I
company, what
I
have to say
may
I'm not completely out of place here. For
might throw into
self-recollection
also
some of the
two
crafts
relief the differences
(memoir) and
similarities
fiction,
and
—the places where those
embrace and where that embrace
is
symbi-
otic.
my presence here lies in the part of my own literary heritage
But the authenticity of fact that a is
very large
the autobiography. In this country the print origins
of black literature (as distinguished from the oral origins) tives
were
slave narratives.
(autobiographies,
These book-length narra-
recollections,
memoirs),
of
TONI MORRISON which well over
a
texts to historians
hundred were published, and students of black
range from the adventure-packed
dah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa,
history.
life
Equiano's The Interesting Narrative of
are familiar
They
of Olaudah
the Life of
Olau-
Written by
the African,
Himself (1769) to the quiet desperation of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl:
Written by Herself
(1861), in
which Harriet Jacob ("Linda Brent") records hiding for seven years in a room too small to stand up in; from the political savvy of Frederick Douglass's Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass,
an American Slave, Writ-
Himself (1845) to the subtlety and modesty of
ten by
Henry
whose
Bibb,
Henry
Bibb,
(1849),
is
voice, in Life
an American Slave,
and Adventures
surrounded by ("loaded with"
phrase) documents attesting to
its
of
Written by Himself is
a better
authenticity. Bibb
is
careful to note that his formal schooling (three weeks)
was
short, but that he
adversity, whips,
was "educated
and chains." Born
in the school of in
Kentucky, he
put aside his plans to escape in order to marry. But
when
he learned that he was the father of
watched the degradation of
his wife
and
a slave
child,
and
he reac-
tivated those plans.
Whatever the tives,
style
and circumstances of these narra-
they were written to say principally two things.
One: "This
is
example that
my is
historical life
—my
singular, special
personal, but that also represents the
[104
The
Site of
Two:
race."
—you, the are
Memory
human
"I write this text to persuade other people
reader,
who
is
probably not black
—that we
beings worthy of God's grace and the im-
mediate abandonment of slavery." With these two missions in mind, the narratives
were
clearly pointed.
In Equiano's account, the purpose
Born
in 1745 near the
is
quite up-front.
Niger River and captured
at the
age of ten, he survived the Middle Passage, American plantation slavery, wars in
Canada and the Mediterra-
nean; learned navigation and clerking from a Quaker
named Robert King, and bought twenty-one.
and is
living
freedom
his
at
He lived as a free servant, traveling widely
most of
his latter life in
England. Here he
speaking to the British without equivocation: "I hope
to have the satisfaction of seeing the renovation of lib-
on the
erty and justice resting
...
to
government.
hope and expect the attention of gentlemen of
I
power. is
British
.
me
.
.
May the time come
pleasing
—when the
—
at least the
speculation
sable people shall grate-
commemorate the auspicious era of extensive freedom." With typically eighteenth-century reticence he
fully
records his singular and representative pose: to
change things. In
did change things. Their that abolitionists
More ary
difficult
critics.
105]
were
fact,
life
for
one pur-
he and his co-authors
works gave
fuel to the fires
setting everywhere.
was getting the
The writings
fair appraisal
of
liter-
of church martyrs and confes-
TONI MORRISON sors are
and were read
for the eloquence of their
mes-
sage as well as their experience of redemption, but the
American
slaves' autobiographical narratives
were
fre-
quently scorned as "biased," "inflammatory" and "improbable." These attacks are particularly difficult to
understand in view of the important, as
fact that
you can imagine,
it
was extremely
for the writers of these
narratives to appear as objective as possible
—not
to
offend the reader by being too angry, or by showing
too
much
recently
outrage, or as
by
Edwards,
Paul
1966,
As
calling the reader names.
who
edited
and
abridged Equiano's story, praises the narrative for
its
refusal to be "inflammatory."
"As
a rule,"
Edwards
writes, "he [Equiano] puts
no
emotional pressure on the reader other than that which the situation strain after
itself
contains
—
his
language does not
our sympathy, but expects
it
to be given
naturally and at the proper time. This quiet avoidance
of emotional display produces
many
of the best pas-
sages in the book." Similarly, an 1836 review of Charles Bell's Life
and Adventures
which
of a Fugitive Slave,
appeared in the "Quarterly Anti-Slavery Magazine," praised Bell's account for
the
...
its
book the more, because It
objectivity. it is
not
"We rejoice in
a partisan
work.
broaches no theory in regard to [slavery], nor
proposes any
mode
As determined
or time of emancipation."
as these black writers
were
to per-
[106
The
Site of
Memory
suade the reader of the
mented him by assuming high-mindedness.
they also compli-
evil of slavery,
They
and
his nobility of heart
tried to
summon up
his
his finer
him to employ it. They were the people who could
nature in order to encourage
knew that their readers make a difference in terminating
—of
brutality, adversity
slavery.
and deliverance
popularity in spite of critical hostility in
and patronizing sympathy
when five
in others.
stories
—had
many
was
great
quarters
There was
the hunger for "slave stories"
quiet, as sales figures
Their
a time
difficult to
show. Douglass's Narrative sold
thousand copies in four months; by 1847
it
had sold
eleven thousand copies. Equiano's book had thirty-six editions
between
1789
and
had ten editions from
1850.
1837
to
Moses Roper's book 1856;
Brown's was reprinted four times
omon
in
William Wells
its first
Northrop's book sold twenty-seven thousand
copies before
two years had
Henson (argued by some
passed.
A
book by Josiah model
to be the
"Tom" of Harriet Beecher Stowe's (77zc/e had
year. Sol-
for the
Tom's Cabin)
a pre-publication sale of five thousand.
In addition to using their
own
lives to
expose the
horrors of slavery, they had a companion motive for their efforts.
The
prohibition against teaching a slave to
read and write (which in
many Southern
states carried
severe punishment) and against a slave's learning to
read and write had to be scuttled at
107]
all costs.
These
TONI MORRISON writers
knew that literacy was power.
was inextricably connected acy was
a
way
Voting, after
all,
to the ability to read; liter-
of assuming and proving the
"human-
why the
ity" that the Constitution denied them.
That
narratives carry the subtitle "written
by himself," or
"herself,"
is
and include introductions and prefaces by
white sympathizers to authenticate them. Other narratives,
as
"edited by" such well-known anti-slavery figures
Lydia Maria Child and John Greenleaf Whittier,
contain prefaces to assure the reader
how
little
editing
A literate slave was supposed to be a con-
was needed.
tradiction in terms.
One
has to
remember
that the climate in
which they
wrote reflected not only the Age of Enlightenment but its
twin, born at the same time, the
Racism. David Jefferson, to
Age
of Scientific
Hume, Immanuel Kant and Thomas
mention only
a few,
had documented
their
conclusions that blacks were incapable of intelligence.
Frederick Douglass refutations of
what
a
otherwise, and he wrote
Jefferson said in "Notes
"Never yet could
State of Virginia":
had uttered
knew
thought above the
never see even an elementary ture."
A sentence
be engraved
that
at the
I
I
on the
find that a black
level of plain narration,
trait
of painting or sculp-
have always thought ought to
door to the Rockefeller Collection
of African Art. Hegel, in
1813,
had said that Africans
had no "history" and couldn't write
in
modern
lan-
[108
The
Site of
Memory
guages.
Kant disregarded
a black
man by
from head
a perceptive
observation by
was
saying, "This fellow
quite black
what he
to foot, a clear proof that
said
was
stupid."
Yet no slave society in the history of the world wrote
more
—or more thoughtfully—about
own
its
enslave-
ment. The milieu, however, dictated the purpose and the style. The narratives are instructive, moral and obviously representative. Some of them are patterned after the sentimental
time.
novel that was in vogue
But whatever the
popular
taste
level of
at
the
eloquence or the form,
discouraged the writers from dwelling
too long or too carefully on the their experience.
Whenever
more sordid
details of
was an unusually
there
violent incident, or a scatological one, or something "excessive," one finds the writer taking refuge in the literary
conventions of the day. "I was
left in a state
distraction not to be described" (Equiano).
now leave the rough usage
of the field
attention to the less repulsive slave
the house of
my
.
.
.
"But
of
us
and turn our
life as it
existed in
childhood" (Douglass). "I
about to harrow the feelings of
let
am
not
my readers by a terrific
representation of the untold horrors of that fearful sys-
tem of oppression.
... It
is
not
my purpose
to descend
deeply into the dark and noisome caverns of the hell of slavery"
(Henry Box Brown).
Over and over, the writers pull the 109]
narrative
up short
TONI MORRISON with
a phrase
such
"But
as,
let
us drop a veil over these
proceedings too terrible to relate." In shaping the expe-
make
rience to
palatable to those
it
position to alleviate
they were silent about
in a
many
and they "forgot" many other things. There
things,
was
it,
who were
a careful selection of the instances that
they would
record and a careful rendering of those that they chose
Lydia Maria Child identified the problem
to describe.
in her introduction to
am
abuse: "I
indecorum
"Linda Brent's"
well aware that
many
tale of sexual
will accuse
me
of
for presenting these pages to the public; for
the experiences of this intelligent and much-injured
woman jects,
belong to
and others
a class
which some
indelicate.
sub-
call delicate
This peculiar phase of Slav-
ery has generally been kept veiled; but the public ought to be I
made acquainted with
am
monstrous
features,
and
willing to take the responsibility of presenting
them with the
veil
drawn
But most importantly mention of For
its
me
—
their interior
—
[aside]." at least for
me
—there was no
life.
a writer in the last quarter of the twentieth
much more than a hundred years after Emancipation, a writer who is black and a woman the exercise is very different. My job becomes how to rip
century, not
—
that veil late." is
drawn over "proceedings too
The
black, or
exercise
who
is
also critical for
terrible to re-
any person
who
belongs to any marginalized category.
[
no
The
Site of
Memory
we were seldom invited to participate discourse even when we were its topic.
for, historically,
in the
Moving
that veil aside requires, therefore, certain
things. First of I
must
also
must
all, I
depend on the
my own
trust
find to be significant.
I
in
how I begin
Zora Neale Hur-
ston said, "Like the dead-seeming cold rocks,
memories within
went
to
came out of the
that
Thus
recollections of others.
memory weighs heavily in what I write, and in what
recollections.
I
have
material that
make me." These "memories within"
are the
subsoil of
my
won't give
me total access to the unwritten interior life
work. But memories and recollections
Only
of these people.
the act of the imagination can
help me.
writing
If
is
thinking and discovery and selection
and order and meaning, mystery and magic. last
four
I
also
it is
suppose
I
awe and reverence and
could dispense with the
were not so deadly serious about
if I
to the milieu out of
which
I
fidelity
write and in which
ancestors actually lived. Infidelity to that milieu
absence of the interior
from the records precisely the
without
what
us.
drives
III]
I
me and
distinguishes
my
—the
the deliberate excising of
that the slaves themselves told
problem
How
life,
in the discourse that
the part of this talk
fiction
—
it
is
proceeded
gain access to that interior is
my
life is
which both
from autobiographical
strate-
TONI MORRISON and which
gies
strategies. It's a
embraces certain autobiographical
also
kind of literary archeology: on the basis
some information and
of
journey to a
and
What makes
my
act:
it
is
ply
on the image
"image," of course,
mean
left
behind
the nature of the imaginative
—on
addition to recollection, to yield
By
you
of guesswork
world that these remains imply.
fiction
reliance
little bit
what remains were
site to see
to reconstruct the
a
don't
I
up
the remains a
—
in
kind of a truth.
mean "symbol";
"picture" and the feelings that
I
sim-
accompany
the picture. Fiction,
bly
it's
by
definition,
is
distinct
the product of imagination
from
fact.
Presuma-
—invention—and
it
claims the freedom to dispense with "what really hap-
pened," or where
it
really
happened, and nothing in able,
although
much
in
it
happened, or it
when
it
really
needs to be publicly
verifi-
can be
verified.
By
contrast,
the scholarship of the biographer and the literary critic
seems to us only trustworthy
when the events of fiction
can be traced to some publicly verifiable research of the "Oh, yes, this
from" school, which gets
its
is
fact. It's
the
where he or she got
own
credibility
it
from ex-
cavating the credibility of the sources of the imagination,
not the nature of the imagination.
The work
that
I
do frequently
most people, into that realm of
falls,
in the
minds of
fiction called fantastic,
com-
or mythic, or magical, or unbelievable. I'm not
[
n2
The
Site of
Memory
fortable with these labels.
consider that
I
my
gravest responsibility (in spite of that magic) lie.
When
I
hear someone say, "Truth
fiction," I think that old chestnut
know, because fiction; just that
may
stranger,
it's
be excessive,
important thing
may
it
that
is
we
truer than
is
meaning
not to
is
stranger than
is
doesn't say that truth
it
single
is
that
truer than
odd.
it's
It
be more interesting, but the
random
it's
—and
fiction
is
not
random. Therefore the crucial distinction for difference
between
human to find
people
between
fact
and
fact
truth.
and
fiction,
Because
who
they didn't have
it); if
not the
facts
can exist without
So
if
I'm looking
about the interior
a truth
didn't write
is
but the distinction
intelligence, but truth cannot.
and expose
me
life
(which doesn't mean that
it
I'm trying to
that the slave narratives left
—
fill
in the blanks
to part the veil that
was
so frequently drawn, to implement the stories that
heard
—then the approach
most trustworthy
from the image
for
me
that's
Not from
to the text.
I
most productive and
the recollection that
is
of
moves
the text to the
image.
Simone de Beauvoir, don't
know why
death."
When
I
"3]
A
Very Easy Death, says, "I
was so shocked by
she heard her mother's
called at the funeral
seized
in
by the
me by the throat.
.
.
.
priest,
my
mother's
name being
she says, "Emotion
'Frangoise de Beauvoir': the
TONI MORRISON words brought her to from birth
Hfe;
to marriage to
Frangoise de Beauvoir
summed up her history, widowhood to the grave.
they
—that
retiring
named, became an important
woman,
which the
Mme. de
Unlike
The book own grief and
person."
becomes an exploration both into her into the images in
so rarely
grief lay buried.
Beauvoir, Frederick Douglass asks
the reader's patience for spending about half a page the death of his grandmother
found
he had suffered
loss
ing, in effect, "It really
hope you
no attempt
it,
which
leaves
is
my
indulgence." its
no room
relationship to his father, "All of texts
and songs, which
I
were ranged before me for
me."
its
he can make
life
my
and
his
had decided were meaningless, at his
death like empty bottles,
would
give
And then his text fills those bottles.
Like
image that
it
comes
and
I
I
can't
was
tell
own
father's Biblical
life
Simone de Beauvoir, he moves from the event
first
mean-
in Notes of a Native
waiting to hold the meaning which
them
I
for subjective speculation.
recording his father's
says, in
me.
to
He makes
images or
as close to factual as
James Baldwin, on the other hand, Son,
most pro-
was very important
to explore that death:
His narrative
ing.
easily the
—and he apologizes by say-
bored by
aren't
—
on
left.
My
route
is
to the
the reverse: the image
me what the "memory" is about. you how I felt when my father died. But tells
able to write Song of Solomon
and imagine, not
[114
The
Site of
Memory
him, and not his specific interior hfe, but the world that
he inhabited and the private or interior hfe of the people in
it.
And
can't tell
I
you how
my
reading to
I felt
grandmother while she was turning over and over
in
her bed (because she was dying, and she was not com-
but
fortable),
she lived that
my
I
could try to reconstruct the world that
I
And I have suspected, more often than not,
in.
know more than she
grandfather and
know
also
that I'm
my
I
know more than
great-grandmother did, but
no wiser than they were.
whenever
I
and prove
to myself that I
my own,
I
on
And
know more, and when I have
their interior
life
and match
it
compared
to
my own.
Like Fred-
and
erick Douglass talking about his grandmother,
James Baldwin talking about
his father,
and Simone de
Beauvoir talking about her mother, these people are access to me; they are life.
them
Which
is
first,
pellingly that
my
why
—the remains, so
—surface
up
have been overwhelmed every time by
the richness of theirs
rior
I
have tried earnestly to diminish their vision
tried to speculate
with
did, that
entrance into
my own
my
inte-
the images that float around
to speak, at the archeological site
and they surface so vividly and so comI
acknowledge them
as
my
route to a
reconstruction of a world, to an exploration of an interior life that
was not written and
kind of truth.
115]
to the revelation of a
TONI MORRISON
my
So the nature of as ineffable
and
research begins with something
dimly recalled
as flexible as a
corner of a room,
began
a voice. I
to write
figure, the
my
second
book, which was called Sula, because of my preoccupa-
I
heard her
and
I
woman and
way in which name pronounced. Her name was Hannah,
tion with a picture of a
think she was a friend of
my
the
mother's.
I
don't
remember seeing her very much, but what I do remember
is
the color around her
—
a
—and her
of something violet
kind of violet, a suffusion eyes,
which appeared
to
remember most is how the women said her name: how they said "Hannah Peace" and smiled to themselves, and there was some secret
be half closed. But what
I
about her that they knew, which they didn't talk about,
my
at least
not in
way
which they
in
she was a in
little bit
said her
it
name.
seemed loaded
And
I
in the
suspected that
of an outlaw but that they approved
some way.
And
then, thinking about their relationship to her
and the way in
hearing, but
in
which they
which they talked about articulated her
able in the
And what
world of women.
I
me
name, made
about friendship between women. forgive each other for?
her, the
What it is
is it
that
is
don't want to
way
think
that they
unforgiv-
know any
more about Miss Hannah Peace, and I'm not going to ask my mother who she really was and what did she do and what were you laughing about and why were you [ii6
The
Site of
Memory
my
smiling? Because
my
mother
is
you ever
their
keep
all
my
of
mystery when
That way
I
this
with
you
the
most
heard, and
my
remains and begin. Later
I
do
I
so crushing: she will give
pedestrian information like to
when
experience
images intact in
will get to the facts.
I
can explore two worlds
would
I
—the
and the
actual
possible.
What
want
I
from picture
to
to
do
this
evening
is
—
meaning
to text
a
to track an
journey which ap-
now, which
pears in the novel that I'm writing
image
is
called
Beloved.
I'm trying to write a particular kind of scene, and see corn
mean
on the
that
it
cob.
I
this
"see" corn
suddenly hovers;
keeps coming back. is all
To And
in trying to figure out
corn doing?"
I
where
I
see the house
house, and they didn't
discover what
grew up
some
parents had a garden
on the cob doesn't
only means that
it
it is
because
we were
the things that they didn't, so
able to hoe, or weed, until see
looking
them walking, at their
117]
when
My
much
together,
not able to
wanted
we were
to
not
later.
away from me. I'm
backs and what they're carrying in
their arms: their tools,
times
doing.
away from our
distinguish between the things that they
I
"What
in Lorain, Ohio.
distance
it
welcome me and my sister there,
when we were young, grow and
I
and maybe
they walk away from
a
peck basket. Some-
me
they hold hands,
TONI MORRISON and they go to
some
to cross
this
at night.
my
that
odd hours because works
my
what
when
And
later
from the
and
nagging us in any way. In
to do, or is
some
feeling of pleasure in
aware
They're very
of.
they take these naps.
on
in the
which
to eat corn,
jobs
nobody's giving us chores, or
that I'm only vaguely
rested
works many
at
And these naps are times of pleasure for
addition to which, there
them
mother and father sleep
father
me and my sister because telling us
They have
railroad tracks to get there.
am aware
I also
other place in the garden.
is
summer we have an opportunity
the one plant that
and which
others,
is
I
can distinguish
the harvest that
food that no child
best; the others are the
I
like the
likes
—the
collards, the okra, the strong, violent vegetables that
now. But
would give
a great deal for
because
sweet, and because
and
it,
cold, in,
it's
it's
finger food,
it's
and there are neighbors
and
The
it's
easy,
and
it's
in,
I'm
it
now
became
a
do
like the
all sit
and
hot,
down
it's
corn
to eat
even good
and there are uncles
nice.
picture of the corn and the
surrounding script
and
we
I
I
nimbus of emotion
powerful one in the manu-
completing.
Authors arrive
at text
and subtext
in thousands of
ways, learning each time they begin anew ognize a valuable idea and
how
how
to rec-
to render the texture
that accompanies, reveals or displays
it
to
its
best advan-
[ii8
The
Site of
tage.
The
Memory process by which this
endlessly fascinating to me. as
an editor for twenty years
ter
than their most careful
the manuscript in each of the author's process,
was a
I
understood writers bet-
I
subsequent stages
had
that the critic Still,
for
to
result
least
—the book—was
"fictional" the ac-
how much
of invention, the act of imagination
was
it
is
a
product
bound up with
memory. You know, they straightened out the sippi River in places, to
places.
"Floods"
not flooding; it
make room
word they use, but in fact it is remembering. Remembering where
is
it is
the
where
ran through, what the banks were
was there and the route back
remember
memory
as well as
imagination
is
is
was. Writers are
like,
valley
we
the light that
to our original place. It
—what the nerves and the skin how
it
appeared.
And
a rush of
our "flooding."
Along with personal
119
it
memory and
remembering where we were, what
emotional
and
Occasionally the river floods these
forever trying to get back to
is
Missis-
for houses
used to be. All water has a perfect
like that:
to
important aspect of
no matter how
count of these writers, or
livable acreage.
knew
go on.
me, that was the
the work. Because,
I
where the "solution"
time,
problem came from. The end
all
because in examining
how his or her mind worked, what
what took
effortless,
is
have always thought that
critics, its
accomphshed
is
recollection, the matrix of the
TONI MORRISON work I do
is
the wish to extend,
fill
like water,
I
and complement
But only the matrix.
slave autobiographical narratives.
What comes of all that is not least among them the
in
dictated
own
novel's
remember where
by other concerns,
I
integrity. Still,
was before
was
I
"straightened out."
Q.
/
would
like to ask
about your point of view as a
novelist. Is it a vision, or are
you taking
the part of the
particular characters?
A.
I
try
ters just
sometimes to have genuinely minor charac-
walk through,
easily distracted
like a
by them, because
tion goes like that: every
adventure, and once it,
it
walk-on
you begin
looks like more, and
I
get
a novelist's imagina-
road looks to
little
But
actor.
to claim
it
me
like
an
and describe
you invent more and more
mind doing
my first draft, but
and more.
I
afterward
I
distracted,
and people have loomed much larger than
don't
that in
have to cut back.
I
have seen myself get
had planned, and minor characters have seemed bit
more
reveal,
a little
interesting than they need to be for the pur-
poses of the book. In that case there are
I
little
I let
I
endow them:
try to
pieces of information that
them do some of the work. But
to get carried
away;
the texture
consistent and nothing
is
I
try to restrain
it,
want
I I
if
to
try not
so that, finally,
is
wasted; there
[
I20
The
are
Site of
Memory
no words
no people who
As that
are not absolutely necessary.
for the point of view, there should be the illusion
isn't;
who is there my case) known in
really the narrator
it's
make
doesn't
herself (in
it,
and you think and
voice. It's a comfortable voice, it's
but
a
it's
it's
pen next
it
doesn't
know
So you have
either.
that role. a voice
your
own
guiding voice,
and you have to this voice
feel
But that
can only have a sound,
it
comfortable with this voice, and
can easily abandon
interior dialogue of a character.
itself
So
it's
and reveal the a
combination
of using the point of view of various characters but retaining the
when I'm
power
to slide in
reader
is
I
want
really
is
It's
unfolding, and he's always
is
participating in
characters and right
Q^ You have
on
fingers
it
two
which the
isn't really read-
as
he goes along.
beats ahead of the
target.
said that writing
you go into steady
little
that intimacy in
this; that
]
out, provided that
under the impression that he he
still
text.
ing
121
and
"out" the reader doesn't see
pointing to what's in the
What
is
what's going to hap-
this sort of guide.
guide can't have a personality;
it
who
alarmed by the same things that the reader
alarmed by, and
then
in fact
where you hear
the feeling of a told story,
but you can't identify
and
when
the characters' point of view,
it's
I like
and
in the final text that are unnecessary,
seclusion
is
a solitary activity.
when you're
Do
writing, so that
TONI MORRISON your feelings are
sort of contained, or
away, and go out shopping and A. I
I
do
of
all
it.
I've
been
go out shopping, and
goes away. Sometimes
mean,
I
I
don't.
up
I
and
I
throw
just
it
know how
working.
thought
I
I
I
walk
you
And
up.
go do
it,
away. But
and
I sit
if I
don't like
down and do
had was interesting
—
sometimes I
get
it
the next
it.
By now
where something
always know;
It
outside
write long hours every day.
I
didn't
do whatever.
I
jump up and run
to get to that place
I
for three years.
very intense and
it's
sort of beats
Sometimes
at 5:30
day,
it
book
and
stare,
I
to get
?
.
.
at this
write a sentence and
or something;
.
do you have
is
thought every
I
—because
it
was mine.
Now I know better how to throw away things that are not useful.
can stand around and do other things and
I
think about
same time.
at the
it
I
mind not
don't
writ-
ing every minute; I'm not so terrified.
—and think of beginning writers —you're scared
When you for a lot
first start
writing
I
you don't get that sentence right never going to show up again. And
that
if
doesn't matter better.
And
I
days because
—another one
don't I
again and again, and
passages that
I
and
—and
I
can
it
will be better.
fix it
minute
it's
But
it
probably be
for a couple of fix it
I
true
to death
isn't.
it
it'll
mind writing badly
know
hysteria that used to
will,
that
it's
again and
don't have the
accompany some of those dazzling
thought the world was
just
dying for
[
me
122
The
Memory
Site of
remember. I'm
to
more sanguine about
a little
it all,
cious part,
and then doing
finishing
it
the thrill of a lifetime for me: that first phase
change it
I
it.
looks like
touched
it,
rewrite a I
if I
and then have lot,
never did.
and that takes
it
over. That's
done with
just get
time to
fix it
and
over and over again, so that
make
a lot of
In ''Song of Solomon, "
Q^
can
infinite
try to
I
now.
the absolutely most deli-
Because the best part of is
it
look like
it
time and
what was
I
never
a lot of sweat.
the relationship
between your memories and what you made up?
Was
it
very tenuous?
A. Yes,
it
was tenuous. For the
first
time
I
was
writ-
ing a book in which the central stage was occupied by
men, and which had something
my
perception of
world that disappeared with him. that his
it
did.)
So
I
was re-creating
—not biographically
whatever's around. But
that
was about men because
had had sense I
seemed
void after he died, and
this big
it
women
(It didn't,
I
was
loss,
or
and the
but
I felt
time period that was
anything in to
me
I filled it
my two
it; I
that there
with
a
use
was
book
previous books
So
was about my memories and the need
in that
to invent.
in such a rage because
my
was dead. The connections between us were
threads that
I
either
mined
were purely invention. But
123]
my
father)
as the central characters.
had to do something.
father
a
his life or it
do with
man (my
of a
loss,
to
for a lot of strength or they I
created a male world and
TONI MORRISON inhabited
it
and
it
had
this quest
pidity to epiphany, of a
my way
of exploring
man,
all that,
a
—
a
journey from stu-
complete man.
It
was
of trying to figure out
what he may have known.
[124
LEWIS THOMAS
A
Long Line of
Cells
should be
It
a
easier, certainly shorter
work
memoir than an autobiography, and
to
sit
and
ography,
listen to the I
take
it, is
another, leading
a linear
other, discounting
compose
it is
easier
An autobi-
account of one thing
—progressively,
would run
surely
one than to the other.
personal state of affairs at the case this
to
one hopes
—
to one's
moment of writing.
to over seventy years,
maybe twenty-five
one
after
In
my
after the
of the seventy
spent sleeping, leaving around forty-five to be dealt with.
Even
so, a lot
of time to be covered
if all
the
events were to be recalled and laid out.
But discount again the portion of those 264,000 waking hours, spent doing not
thing
—reading the papers,
paper, walking from one
16,500 days,
much
of any-
staring at blank sheets of
room
to the next, speaking a
great deal of small talk and listening to
still
more, wait-
LEWIS THOMAS ing around for the next thing to happen, whatever. Delete
all this as
irrelevant,
then line up what's
the proper linear order without fudging.
with an autobiography,
now
left in
There you
are
relieved of an easy three-
fourths of the time lived, leaving only eleven years, or
4,000 days, or 64,000 hours.
but
now
But
much
too
still
take out
Not much
to
remember,
down.
the blurred memories,
all
all
the
you suspect may have been dressed up by
recollections
your mind
to write
in
your
favor, leaving only the events
you
can't get out of your head, the notions that keep leaping to the top of your
mind, the ideas you're stuck with, the
images that won't come unstuck, including the ones
you'd
just as
enough utes,
In I
to reduce 64,000 hours to
and
my
there's case,
find that
ries of
soon do without. Edit these
around
sharply
thirty
min-
your memoir.
going
down
most of what
my own
down
this
shortened
I've got left are
list
not
of items,
real
experience, but mainly the
memo-
remem-
brances of other people's thoughts, things I've read or
been
told,
metamemories.
A
surprising
number turn
out to be wishes rather than recollections, hopes that the place really did
work
the
way everyone
said
it
was
supposed to work, hankerings that the one thing leading to another has a direction of some kind, and a hope for a pattern
from the jumble
—an
epiphany out of
entropy.
128
A Long
To
Line of Cells
begin personally on
a confessional note,
I
was
at
my outset, a single cell. I have no memory of this stage of my life, but I know it to be true because one time,
at
everyone says
There was of course
so.
when
before that, literally half,
two half-endowed,
the
haploid gametes, each carrying half
were
on
off
and did
so,
their
own
looking to
my
bump
by random chance, sheer
do not remember
dividing.
I
skill
what
—
lot
I
I
got under way.
know
that
I
and
At
certainty.
all
it
of
began
a certain
very young, a matter of hours of youth,
myself out and became for
but
into each other
have probably never worked so hard, and
never again with such stage,
this,
chromosomes,
luck, for better or
worse, richer or poorer, et cetera, and I
a sort of half-life
was
to
a
become
system of
—brain
them signaling
their territories, laying
sorted
each labeled
cells,
cells,
I
limbs, liver, the
to each other, calculating
me out. At one stage
possessed
I
an excellent kidney, good enough for any higher then
I
thought better and destroyed
stalling in
didn't plan
with
on
this
when
memory,
Thinking back,
I
my
it
on
land. I
my cells,
was going on, but
did.
count myself lucky that
in charge at the time. If
mapping of
at once, in-
place a neater pair for living
its
a better
it all
fish;
it
had been
left to
me
I
was not
to
do the
would have got it wrong, dropped something, forgotten where to assemble my cells
neural crest, confused
129]
I
it.
Or I might have been stopped
LEWIS THOMAS
my tracks, panicked by the massive deaths, billions of my embryonic cells being killed off systematically to in
make room
for their
more
think of
a scale so vast that I can't
By
the time
survived.
time
I
It is
I
on
senior successors, death it
without wincing.
was born, more of me had died than
no wonder
can't
I
went through brain
remember; during that
after brain for nine
months,
one model that could be human,
finally contriving the
equipped for language. It is
because of language that
my
farther back into
remember two
lineage.
parents,
I
am
By
able
now
myself,
I
to think
can only
one grandmother and the fam-
Welshmen, back into the shadows when all the Welsh were kings, but no farther. From there on I must rely on reading the texts. of
ily stories
They
instruct
immediate
human
line,
its
I
go back
to the first of
through, or not quite
measure humanness
and
that
the beginner, the earliest
way
the
all
me
as I
my
Homo sapiens, human if you
do by the property of language
property, the consciousness of an indisputably
singular,
unique
takes me,
self.
I'm not sure
and no one has yet told
vincingly.
Writing
When is
did
my
how far back that me about this con-
relations begin speaking?
easier to trace,
having started not more
than a few years back, maybe 10,000 years, not
more. Tracking speech requires guesswork.
slow learners,
as
slow
as
we seem
If
much
we were
to be in solving
[130
A
Long Line
of Cells
today's hard problems, talking until
sometime within the
give or take 50,000. tific
my guess is that we didn't begin
That
is
time ago, and
I
am
100,000 years,
what's called a rough scien-
But no matter,
guess.
last
it
is
embarrassed
an exceedingly short at the
thought that so
—
many of my ancestors, generations of them all the way back to the very first ones a million-odd years ago may have been speechless. I am modestly proud to
—
have come from a family of tool makers, bone scratchers,
grave diggers, cave painters.
hurts to think of their lives tion,
them
Humans
as so literally
dumb,
all.
But
it
living out
without metaphors, deprived of conversa-
even small
arrive fully
talk. I
would
endowed, talking
prefer to have had
them
their heads off, the
mo-
ment evolution provided them with braincases large enough to contain words, so to speak. But it was not so, I
must
back to
guess,
and language came
late. I
will
come
this matter.
What
sticks in the top of
my
my mind
is
another, unav-
my memory, but remembered still, I suspect, by all my cells. It is a difficult and delicate fact to mention. To face it oidable aspect of
genealogy, far beyond
come from a line that can be traced straight back, with some accuracy, into a near-infinity of years before my first humanoid ancestors turned up. I go squarely,
I
back, and so do you, like
131]
it
or not, to a single Ur-
LEWIS THOMAS whose remains
ancestor
approximately
are
on display
thousand million years ago, born
3.5
billion or so years after the earth itself
began cooling down. That first of the
was unmistakably
uncle, I
the
cannot get
in rocks dated
this
a
took shape and
line,
our n-grand-
a bacterial cell.
my
out of
head.
It
has become, for
moment, the most important thing
I
know, the
obligatory beginning of any memoir, the long-buried
source of language. ria,
and
very long line
a
at that.
we came from
tury, that
Never mind our embar-
when we were
rassed indignation
chimps
We derive from a lineage of bacte-
as near-cousins.
accommodate, having
cen-
family of apes and had
That was
relatively easy to
at least the distant
new
of relatives. But this
a
first told, last
look of a set
connection, already fixed by
recent science beyond any hope of disowning the parentage,
is
something
news must come
else again.
as a
At
first
encounter the
kind of humiliation.
Humble
origins indeed.
But then,
it
is
some comfort
to
acknowledge
that
we've had an etymological hunch about such an origin since the start of our language.
Our word "human"
comes from the Proto-Indo-European root dhghem,
meaning simply
word
is
"earth."
The most
telling
cognate
"humus," the primary product of microbial
industry. Also, for
"humane."
It
what
gives a
new
it's
worth, "humble." Also
sort of English, in the sense
[132
A
Long Line
of Cells
of a strange spin, to the old cliche for an apology:
"Sorry, I'm only human,"
Where did that first microorganism, parent of us all, come from? Nobody knows, and in the circumstance it's
anyone's guess, and the guesses abound. Francis
Crick suggests that the improbability of itself
here on earth
drifted in
so high that
from outer space,
scientists in
some other
Others assert that itself
is
it
its
we must
shifting the
forming
suppose
it
problem to
part of the galaxy or beyond.
happened here indeed, piecing
together molecule by molecule, over a billion
years of chance events under the influence of sunlight
and lightning,
finally achieving
by pure luck the ex-
actly right sequence of nucleotides, inside the exactly
membrane, and we were on our way.
right sort of
No not
doubt the
first
much doubt
success occurred in water.
that the
first
event,
however
it
pened, was the only such event, the only success.
And hap-
It
was
Bang of the cosmophenomenon, a piece
the biological equivalent of the Big physicists,
very likely a singular
of unprecedented
good luck never to be repeated.
sheer improbability of the thing taking place
If the
more than
once, spontaneously and by chance, were not enough,
consider the plain fact that right
up
strings of
to
the cells that
our modern brain
cells,
came
later,
carry the same
DNA and work by essentially the same
netic code. It
133]
all
is
ge-
the plainest evidence of direct inheri-
LEWIS THOMAS
We
tance from a single parent.
family
—
are
in the
all
and voting
grasses, seagulls, fish, fleas
same
citizens
of the republic. I all
ought to be able to remember the family
my
cells are alive
tie,
since
with reminders. In almost every-
thing they do to carry
me
along from one day to the
next, they use the biochemical devices of their mi-
crobial forebears. Jesse
Roth and
his colleagues at the
National Institutes of Health have shown that the king-
dom
of bacteria had already learned, long before nu-
cleated cells like ours to each other
came on the
like insulin
the same peptides that
my
to signal
I
and
make use
for this
a brilliant array of
of today for instruct-
brain cells in proper behavior.
More than light,
how
by chemical messages, inventing
purpose molecules
ing
scene,
this, I
could not be here, blinking in the
without the help of an immense population of
specialized bacteria that
around
a billion years
swam
into cells like
ago and stayed there,
mine
as indis-
pensable lodgers, ever since, replicating on their own,
generation
after
generation.
These
are
chondria, the direct descendants of the
how
my
first
mito-
bacteria
make use of oxygen for energy. They occupy all my cells, swarming from one part to another wherever there is work to do. I could not lift that learned
a finger
to
without them, nor think
they live without me.
We
a thought,
are symbionts,
nor can
my
mito-
[134
A
Long Line
of Cells
chondria and
I,
bound together
for the advance of the
biosphere, hving together in harmony, affection.
and
I
For
sure,
I
am
fond of
my
maybe even
microbial engines,
assume they are pleased by the work they do for
me.
It
Or is it necessarily that way,
or the other
could be,
of
I
suppose, that
mented carapace
all
me
is
way round?
a sort of
orna-
for colonies of bacteria that decided,
long ago, to make a try
at real
evolutionary novelty.
Either way, the accommodation will do.
The
plants are in the
same
They have
situation.
same swarms of mitochondria
in
all
their cells,
the
and
other foreign populations as well. Their chloroplasts,
which do the work of tapping
solar
sugar, are the offspring of ancient
energy to make
pigmented microor-
ganisms called cyanobacteria, once green algae. These were the at least 2.5 billion years
from the
air
ago
first
—how
all
known
as blue-
creatures to learn to use
carbon dioxide
and plain water, and sunlight, to manufac-
ture food for the market.
I
am obsessed by bacteria,
of the horse chestnut tree in in general.
We
135]
my backyard,
We
but bacteria for the pro-
without the nitrogen-fixing bac-
most of them living
of legumes.
my own and those
would not have nitrogen
teins of the biosphere teria,
not just
like special tissues in the roots
would never have decay; dead
trees
LEWIS THOMAS would simply
lie
there forever, and so
would we, and
nothing on earth would be recycled.
keep cows, for
cattle can't
have worked
cycle the
wood; they
are, literally, alive
would not have luminous
over,
and
fish for
to
with bacteria.
our aquariums,
around
for the source of that spectacular light is
it
same reason there would be no termites
for the
eyes
couldn't
absorb their kind of food
until their intestinal bacteria
We
We
their
their private colonies of luminescent bacteria.
And we would breathe, for
all
never
the
have
oxygen
in
oxygen
obtained
our
air is
to
exhaled for
our use by the photosynthetic microbes in the upper waters of the seas and lakes and in the leaves of forests. It
was not
that
of cell with a
we
invented a sophisticated
modern nucleus and then
new
kind
invited in the
more primitive and simpler forms of life as migrant workers. More likely, the whole assemblage came together by the joining up of different kinds of bacteria; the larger that
had
cell,
the original "host,"
lost its rigid wall
defect.
Lynn Margulis
chetes
were part of the
the progenitors of the
may have been one
and swelled because of
has proposed that the spirooriginal committee, cilia
on modern
becoming
cells, also
organizers of meiosis and mitosis, the lining
chromosomes, the allocation of effect,
the reading of
this
all wills. If
DNA to she
is
the
up of
progeny
—
in
right about this,
[136
A
Long Line
of Cells
the spirochetes were the inventors of biological sex and
including conclusive death.
all that,
The modern
we thought It is an organism in its own right, not the single entity
cell is
it
was
a
condominium, run by
few years
a
ago.
trustees.
If all this is true, as I believe
earth
This
another thing on
these days that
my
life
feet
sit
straight
and then knocking
The whole
works.
up
of the
to think.
my mind, so much in my head
crowds out other thoughts
it
making me
have,
to be, the
more intimately connected than I used
is
is
it
earth
is
me
I
used to
now, bringing me off
them.
alive, all
to
The world
of a piece, one
living thing, a creature.
breathes for us and for
It
and what's more
itself,
regulates the breathing with exquisite precision.
oxygen way;
in the air
it is
is
random, any old
at precisely the
optimal concen-
tration for the place to be livable.
points
more than the present
would burst strangle. It
into flames; a
is
few
the
few percentage and the
and most
life
forests
would
held there, constant, by feedback loops of
dioxide, inhaled
low
A
level
less
information from the conjoined
bon
The
at
not placed there
maintained
it
level that
lifeless planet.
by the
life
plants,
of the planet. Caris
held at precisely
would be wildly improbable on any
And this happens to be the right concen-
tration for keeping the earth's temperature, including
the heat of the oceans, exactly right. Methane, almost
137]
LEWIS THOMAS all
of
it
the product of bacterial metabolism, contributes
greenhouse
also to the
steady. Statesmen
bers these days
CO2 by burning forest,
must keep
—we
and methane
effect,
is
held
eye on the num-
a close
are already pushing
up the
level of
much fuel and cutting too much may be in for a climatic catastro-
too
and the earth
phe within the next century. But there
it is:
except for our meddling, the earth
the most stable organism
we
can
know
about
—
plex system, a vast intelligence, turning in the of the sun, running infallibility
its
a
is
com-
warmth
internal affairs with the near-
of a huge computer.
Not entirely
infallible,
however, on the paleontological record. Natural
catas-
trophes occur, crashes, breakdowns in the system: ice ages,
meteor
volcanic
collisions,
eruptions,
clouding, extinctions of great masses of It
goes down, as
we
The newest of all things, parts,
global
living tissue.
say of computers, but never out,
always up again with something
working
its
new to display to itself.
the latest novelty
seems to be us
among
its
—language-speaking,
song-singing, tool-making, fire-warming, comfortable,
warfaring mankind, and I
can't
I
am
of that
ilk.
remember anything about learning language
as a child. I
do have
a
few memories of studying
and write, age four or recollection at
all
five, I
think, but
I
have no
to read earlier
of learning speech. This surprises me.
[138
A
Long Line
of Cells
You'd think
that the
remain fixed
moment
gest it
to
in
may have known came, I
at
just the
all,
my
day
be that
troubled.
Or
perhaps
mind. Being human,
I
along about language, from the faces,
and speech
The
just
reason
at that
time they were not mistakes
normal speech of childhood, no more
adult
like a
forever, the big-
have forgotten.
my
stunning
the learning process, the early mis-
memorable than the All
a
thing to do as breathing.
remember
may
I
memory
glimpse of human
first
takes,
in
itself in all
as natural a
can't
But
life.
never embedded
time of my
triumphant
first
would have been such
finished sentence,
landmark
word, the
first
first
life I
drawn
have hoped to speak French one
Frenchman, but
Why
breath.
I
am
near to giving up,
should any small French child, knee
do so quickly something
high, be able to
that
I
will
never learn to do? Or, for that matter, any English or
few months
Turkish child living for
a
the answer, but
much
as
well.
Childhood
about
good
it.
at
species,
Young it,
it is
is
like to
hear
children, the
child's play;
implying
have
lost as
I
younger the
better, are
one-time
gift to the
it is
withdrawn sometime
it all
I
it,
know
the time for language, no doubt
never to be regained.
spent I
don't
does that there are other knacks that
it
off,
I
in Paris? I
a
in adolescence, switched
must have had
it
once and
on ordinary English.
possessed a splendid collection of neurones, nested
139]
LEWIS THOMAS in a center
somewhere
in
my left hemisphere,
similar to the center in a songbird's brain left side
was
—used
still
on
also
his
song while he
for learning the species'
a nestling.
—
probably
Like mine, the bird's center
only
is
there for studying in childhood;
if
he hears the proper
song
in
mind
at that stage
menting his
own
it
later
he
is
for
orna-
life,
it
becomes
particular, self-specific song, slightly but per-
he can't hear
compose
it
with brief arpeggios so that
ceptibly different if
he will have
on
it
its
from the song of
all
his relatives.
But
young child, the center can't own, and what comes out later when
it
as a
ready for singing and mating
buzzing noise. This
is
is
an unmelodious
one of the saddest
tales in experi-
mental biology. Children
may do more
than simply pick up the lan-
guage, easily as breathing. Perhaps they first
place,
and then change
it
around
make
as
it
in the
time goes by,
so that today's speech will, as always, be needing scholars as translators centuries hence.
Derek Bickerton,
professor of linguistics at the University of Hawaii, has
studied the emergence of a brand-new language called
Hawaiian Creole, which spread across the sometime
up
after 1880,
when
for sugar export
the plantations
islands
were opened
and large numbers of polyglot
workers came from abroad to work the
fields.
The
languages brought in were Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, Spanish and Korean,
all
added
to the native
[140
A
Long Line
of Cells
Hawaiian and the then-dominant EngHsh speech. For while nobody could understand anyone
a as
always happens in such language
pidgin English developed (pidgin
is
else.
Then,
form of
crises, a
the mispronuncia-
tion of "business" English), not really a language,
more
crude system for naming objects and pointing
work
a
to be done, lacking structure
and syntactical
Within the next generation, between
1880
at
rules.
and the
turn of the century, Hawaiian Creole appeared. This
was
a
proper language,
flexible
and
fluent, capable of
saying anything that popped into the head, subtle metaphors
and governed by
its
matical rules for sentence structure.
guage, borrowing
words
its
own
It
was
filled
tight a
with
gram-
new
lan-
vocabulary from the original
in the various tongues but arranging
them
in
novel strings and sentences. According to Bickerton, the
new grammar
resembles that of Creoles in other
—the Seychelles, for instance, and places in New Guinea — formed by other multilanguage communities. places
It also
resembles, he asserts, the kind of sentence struc-
ture used
by
all
children as they
grow up
in the acquisi-
tion of their native speech.
Hawaiian Creole was entirely new the important sense that
it
to the islands, in
could not be understood or
spoken by the adults of the community. Bickerton's conclusion, logically enough,
is
that
it
had to be
a lan-
guage invented de novo by the young children of Ha-
141]
LEWIS THOMAS
He
waii.
uses this observation for the deduction that
children must possess in their brains what he calls a
"bioprogram" for language, generating of
Noam If
grammar (and
Chomsky's
Bickerton
is
mechanism
a neural
a confirmation,
on the
for
facts,
insight three decades ago).
right, the
way
is
open
for a
new
kind
of speculation about one of humanity's deepest secrets:
How
did language
talking,
develop?
Who
started
and under what circumstances? The
believe, tells I
first
imagine
were only
a time,
story,
when
thousands of years ago,
a million or so
humans on
place to place in search of food
Nobody
the I
itself.
and out of touch, traveling
scattered
all
there
the earth, mostly in families
from
—hunters and gatherers.
spoke, but there were
human sounds
every-
where: grunts, outcries imitating animals and birds, expletives with explanatory gestures.
ancestors
were an impatient,
Very
likely,
our
frantic lot, always indig-
nant with each other for lacking understanding. Only recently
down from
the trees, admiring their apposing
thumbs, astonished by intelligence, already studying fire,
they must have been wondering what was missing
and what was coming to
make
next. Probably they
the sounds needed for
plants, animals, fish
—but no
had learned
naming things
real speech,
—
trees,
nothing
like
language.
Then
they began settling
down
in places for longer
[142
A
Long Line
stays,
of Cells
having invented the beginnings of agriculture.
More famihes gathered together, settled in communities. More children were born, and ways had to be found to keep the youngest ones
and out of the way of the
safe
from predators
adults. Corrals
were con-
structed, fenced in, filled with children at play. I
imagine one special early evening, the elders
around the
sitting
grunting monosyllables, pointing
fire,
at
the direction of the next day's hunt or the next field
human
to be slashed, thinking as hard as
think
when
Then more ters,
they are
at a
permanent
beings can
loss for
words.
noise than usual from the children's quar-
interrupting the thought.
A
rising surf of voices,
and louder, exul-
excited, high-pitched, then louder tant, totally
incomprehensible to
all
the adults. Lan-
guage. It
must have been
sense.
resisted at
first,
regarded as non-
work so communication but only among the
Perhaps resented, even feared, seeing
beautifully for
it
children. Magic.
Then,
magic, parts of
learned by some of the adults from
their ical,
it
later on,
accepted as useful
own children, broken creole. Words became magsentences were miraculous,
grammar was
(The thought hangs on: the Scottish cognate
mar
is
sacred.
for
gram-
"glamour," with the under-meaning of magic
with words.)
"Kwei,"
143]
said a
Proto-Indo-European
child,
meaning
LEWIS THOMAS "make something," and later, our word "poem." But it all
how
word became,
the
did the children get
the time, and have
it still,
it? I
centuries
imagine they had
latent in their brains,
ready to make the words and join them together articulate, as a sufficient
—
to
we say. What was needed at the outset was
concentration of
young
children, a critical
mass, at each other day after day, experimenting, trying
words out
for sense.
Whatever happened
in the
human brain to make
talent a possibility remains a mystery. It
been
a mutation, a
new
all
earlier primates.
Or
might have our
set of instructions in
for the construction of a it
new
this
DNA
kind of center, absent in
could have been a more gen-
eral list of specifications:
i.e.,
don't stop now, keep
making more columnar modules of neurons, build
a
bigger brain. Perhaps any brain with a rich enough cortex can
become
a
speaking brain, with a self-con-
scious mind. It is a satisfying
ancestors all
whose
notion for a memoir.
brains evolved so far
their relatives that speech
this in
was the
I
come from
beyond those of result,
and with
hand they became the masters of the
earth,
God's image, self-aware, able to remember generations back and to think generations ahead, able to write things like "In the beginning lies
was the word." Nothing
any longer beyond reach, not even the
local solar
[144
A
Long Line
of Cells
system or out into the galaxy and even, given time,
beyond
that for colonizing the Universe. In charge of
everything.
But
this
kind of talk
is
embarrassing;
it is
the
way
I
must
children talk before they've looked around.
mend
the
and
don't
a
I
member
ways of
my
know how
mind. This it
of a fragile species,
ments
is
evolutionary time of a species.
very big place,
how I fit in. I am new to the earth, the
still
scale,
cies, a child
a
works, nor
youngest creatures of any as
is
We are only tentatively set in
place, error-prone, at risk of fumbling, in real
moment
at the
our
fossils,
With
so
as
radioactive at that.
much more
to learn, looking around,
be sure, but not so
much
we are.
We are differ-
because of our brains
in with each other, to
fit
life
seem
to get along,
accommodate, even
concede when the stakes are high. They
live off
niches, but always within set limits, with like restraint. It
is
a
each
to us a while back. If
can
see, all the
game
that
it
stan-
seemed
we look over our shoulders as far way past trillions of other species
to those fossil stromatolites built
145]
something
rough world, by some of our
dards, but not the winner-take-all
we
to
devour each other, scramble for ecological
other,
as
we
because of our discomfiture, mostly with each other.
All the other parts of the earth's to
danger
of leaving behind only a thin layer of
should be more embarrassed than ent, to
mo-
here only a few
measured, a juvenile spe-
by enormous com-
LEWIS THOMAS munities of collaborating microorganisms,
no evidences of meanness or vandalism
on
we
in nature. It
balance, an equable, generally amiable place
natured, as
We
we
can see is,
—good-
say.
are the anomalies for the
moment, the
self-con-
scious children at the edge of the crowd, unsure of our
We
place, unwilling to join up, tending to grabbiness.
much more But we are not
have
to learn than language.
bad
as
a lot as
some of us
say.
agree with this century's fashion of running
human
species as a failed try, a
we may
worst,
is like.
don't
down
sport.
the
At our
be going through the early stages of a
species' adolescence,
that
doomed
I
and everyone remembers what
Growing up
is
hard times for an individual
but sustained torment for a whole species, especially
one
as
brainy and nervous as ours.
get through the phase, shake off
century, wait for a break,
we can last it out, the memory of this If
we may find ourselves off and
running again. This
is
an optimistic, Panglossian view, and I'm
quick to say that
I
could be
indeed come our
full
all
wrong. Perhaps
we
have
evolutionary distance, stuck
forever with our present behavior, as mature as will be for as long as
we
last. I
doubt
it.
we
ever
We are not out
of options. I
am just enough
persuaded by the sociobiologists to
believe that our attitudes
toward each other are
in-
[146
A Long
Line of Cells
more than
fluenced by genes, and by
making grammar.
genes for
alone were our only wired-in
If these
guides to behavior,
just the
we would
be limited to metaphor
and ambiguity for our most important messages other.
we do some
think
I
From
earliest
expressions, and It
goes too far to
other, but
we
we
we
can smile and laugh
recognize faces and
we hanker say that we
for friends
facial
and company.
have genes for liking each
tend in that direction because of being a
biologically social species. are
other things, by nature.
infancy on,
without taking lessons,
to each
I
am
we
sure of that point:
more compulsively social, more interdependent and
more
inextricably attached to each other than any of
the celebrated social insects.
We
are not,
marginally so committed to altruism as a the bees or ants, but at least
trait,
way
of
we are able to sense,
tively, certain obligations to
One human
I fear,
even life as
instinc-
one another.
urging us on by our nature,
is
the
drive to be useful, perhaps the most fundamental of
our biological it
necessities.
wrong, confuse
but
it is
it
We make mistakes with
it,
there in our genes, needing only a better set of
So we
I
we
have yet agreed on.
are not entirely set in our ways.
may have more dominant
147]
get
with self-regard, even try to fake
definitions for usefulness than
others.
it,
all
suspect, glancing
Some
of us
genes for getting along than
around
my
life,
that
we
are
LEWIS THOMAS endowed with
also
other, inhibitory alleles, widely
spread for the enhancement of anomie. Most of us are a mixture. If
we
we
like,
can
sit tight,
trusting nature
come.
Or we can hope
for the best of possible worlds to
for better breeding, in both senses of the term, as our
evolution proceeds.
Our
made
microbial ancestors
use of quicker
ways
for bypassing long stretches of evolutionary time, I
and
envy them. They have always had an abundance of
viruses, darting lines,
from one
cell to
another across species
doing no damage most of the time ("temperate"
viruses, as they are called), but
and ends of
DNA
from
always picking up odds
their hosts
and then passing
these around, as though at a great party.
The
bits are
—new
then used by the recipients for their betterment tricks for I
coping with
new
hope our species has
to think of
of our
own
it,
maybe we
viruses,
a
contingencies.
mechanism
do. After
all,
like this.
we
most of which seem
no purpose, not even
to
make us sick.
Come
live in a sea
to be there for
We can hope that
some of them might be taking hold of useful items of genetic news from time to time, then passing these along for the future of the species. It
makes
feel a cold
may
a cheerful footnote,
coming on,
reflect
anyway: next time you
on the
possibility that
you
be giving a small boost to evolution.
[148
Bibliography
When we us that
were planning
we would
this series of talks,
like to
it
occurred to
know what books our
consulted or remembered or somehow found writing their list
own
authors
helpful in
We asked them for an informal
memoirs.
of their favorite first-person narratives or other works
that influenced their writing.
This bibliography
is
their an-
swer to our request.
RUSSELL BAKER Here
are
some of the books
that
were valuable
to
me
during
the writing of Growing Up:
Not So Wild a Dream by Eric Sevareid (Atheneum, 1976), Personal History Co., 1936),
(Harper
by Vincent Sheean (Doubleday, Doran
and In
& Row,
&
Search of History by Theodore H. White 1978). All three are journalists'
memoirs
Bibliography
distinguished by a great deal of frankness about their child-
hoods and private
perman
lives.
After thirty-three years as a newspa-
had trouble writing candidly about
I
history" and found encouragement to try fine
books by three of our best (Farrar, Straus
Exiles
&
Ararat (Farrar, Straus
Aden. The prose little
is
so
&
it
my
"personal
anyhow in these
journalists.
Giroux, 1970) and Passage
Giroux, 1975), both by Michael
good
that
better after reading them.
to J.
couldn't help writing a
I
The books are models of how
to write about sensitive family relationships
and the most
private emotions without falling into squalor
and vulgarity.
The Dream of Golden Mountains by Malcolm Cowley (Vi-
king Press, 1980) and Starting Out
Kazin
(Little,
sense of
1965). Because
I
wanted
what the Great Depression meant
only a child's
who had best.
Brown,
in the Thirties
memory
been adults
of
it, I
by Alfred to create a
to adults
and had
looked for memoirs by people
in the 1930s.
These were two of the
Because they dealt with an urban, intellectual America
totally different
from anything
1930s, they helped
world of
my
Because so generation,
best of
it
Exile's
I'd
been aware of in the
understand the simplicity of the
childhood.
much
of the book
which came
and the Jazz Age, a sense of
me
how
I
my parents' World War I
would be about
to maturity during
looked for material that would convey
that period
might have shaped people. The
included:
Return by Malcolm Cowley (Viking Press, 1934;
revised, 1951)
and The Twenties by
Edmund Wilson (Farrar,
[152
Bibliography
Straus
&
Giroux, 1975), with their picture of
Hterary Bohemia.
It
was
startling to
New
York's
be reminded that the
twentieth century was already blazing away so furiously just
250 miles north of the rustic backwater where
was
still
my
family
living so close to the nineteenth.
The Mauve Decade by
Thomas Beer
1926) was valuable in helping
me
(Alfred A. Knopf,
understand the social tyr-
anny exercised by women during the mother was born, and
how
1890s,
that tradition
when my
might have been
passed on to her.
Goodbye
to
All That by Robert Graves (Jonathan Cape,
War and Modern Memory by Paul
1929), The Great
Fussell
(Ojfford University Press, 1975), and Memoirs of an Infantry Officer
&
(Faber
&
Faber, 1930) and Sherston's Progress (Faber
Faber, 1936), both by Siegfried Sassoon, are invaluable to
an understanding of
how World War
I
shattered the nine-
teenth-century sensibility and prepared us for twentieth-
century brutality.
The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by ard,
McCann & Geoghegan,
Edmund
1979) conveys a marvelous
American
spirit
understand
how
sense of the optimism that characterized the
before
World War
I
and makes
Morris (Cow-
it
easier to
devastating the Great Depression must have been to adults
born
at the start
of the century.
Not having written much in a personal vein until I started the book, I read many books to see how the thing was done, to see if I could discover the trick, as it were. The best of these were:
153]
Bibliography
Dispatches
report from
by Michael Herr (Alfred A. Knopf,
Vietnam by
a
man
trapped inside
a
1977), a
nightmare.
This extraordinarily personal piece of war reporting
umphs because
own
the writer
scrupulously honest about his
is
terror, fatigue, ignorance,
Happy
tri-
cowardice and anger.
Days, 1880-1892 (Alfred A. Knopf, 1940) and
Newspaper Days, 1899-1906 (Alfred A. Knopf, 1941) by H. L.
Mencken. Mencken does
ered after several false
Mencken's way, you
it
starts,
like
nobody
though,
if
else.
As
you
try to
produce only
will
a
I
discov-
do
it
very inferior
counterfeit.
The Years with Ross by James Thurber 1959).
Thurber wrote
that they're not quite as
Roughing Mississippi
Nobody
It (F. (J.
S.
G. Gilman
Osgood
&
also discovered that
defeated by insensate Life on
wanted
&
as
It
I
reminds
they think they
are.
Co., 1872) and Lije on the
Co., 1883)
Twain
What
by Mark Twain.
that a
memoir
a pleasure to
is
not
watch him
dull stretches of arid fact with inventions of the
improve I
good
understood better than
biography, but an art form.
mind.
and
better than almost anybody,
believe writers should always read their betters.
them
Brown,
(Little,
demands of
the Mississippi it
even the greatest writer can be
is
editors.
The
last half
of
heavy going because an editor
to be twice as long as
it
should have been.
Autobiography by Anthony Trollope (Williams
&
Nor-
gate Ltd., 1887). Looking for tips from the most relentless
writer ever,
however,
work
I
found only advice
to write relentlessly. It
on the
a fascinating look at a literary life built
ethic,
and
a valuable
book
for
all
is,
writers to
know
[154
Bibliography
"How
about.
When
reply,
"Read Trollope's autobiography; the
asked,
can
become
I
now
a writer?" I
secret
is
there."
Autobiography (various versions have appeared under erent
titles
from
c.
1791) by Benjamin Franklin.
to write about this in the as
book and wanted
hard to stay awake through
The answer
it
was
know
to
in
my
diff-
intended if it
was
childhood.
was: not quite. of Things Past (Bernard Grasset, vol.
Remembrance
Nouvelle Revue Frangaise,
I;
La
1914-1927; Holt
&
1932) by Marcel Proust. This
is
vols. II-VII,
Random House,
Co., 1922;
as
I
the ultimate memoir. Proust's ability to startle the reader
with some revelatory scene that suddenly in a
new
light
is
a gift I envy.
I
read through
long volumes again in search of the time, while learning that
Proust's effects it
was
if I
unlikely.
So
I
casts
secret. I
might
all
had
a
everything
seven very
wonderful
possibly achieve
just
wrote seven very long volumes, though I
wrote only one rather short volume.
ANNIE DILLARD These
are
some
first-person narratives
I
dearly love:
NINETEENTH-CENTURY UNITED STATES The Education of Henry Adams (Houghton Mifflin, 1918). I like its
vigorous thought and
count of one's intellectual
life is
its
assumption that an ac-
indeed an account of one's
life.
Henry David Thoreau, Walden (Ticknor
•55]
& Fields,
1854).
Bibliography
In it
its
formal shapeliness and metaphorical, hyperbolic prose
far
exceeds the scrapbook journals
Thoreau the
of
artist.
Richard Henry Dana,
&
monument
as the
Two
Mast (Harper
Years Before the
Brothers, 1840).
Mark Twain,
Life on the Mississippi
&
Osgood
(J. S.
Co.,
1883).
TWENTIETH-CENTURY UNITED STATES Alfred Kazin, 195
1).
A
Walker
This stirringly
in
the City
illustrates a
(Harcourt, Brace,
paradox on which,
the finest autobiographical literature depends, that the
life
of the
spirit,
which
book over and over
Russell Baker,
Most of the refrain
in
Growing Up (Congdon
self at
essayists
of
structural integrity I
have read
and genial one,
Memory (Dutton,
and
1982).
life
1983).
lived deeply.
literary intelligence.
A I
More
find these aesthetic satisfactions in nonfiction;
and other nonfiction writers are taking the care and
perhaps practicing the
artifices that
English prose writers
used to practice in the seventeenth century.
whose work Mary Heaton Vorse, Time and
writers
life
all.
recent and elegiac account of a calm
and more
I
& Weed,
best memoirs, like this vivid
from examining the
its
that
again.
James McConkey, Court
admire
is,
an adult often becomes the
of the mind, enters the child through the senses. this
think,
I
Many
fiction
sees print apparently are not. the
Town:
Chronicle (Dial Press, 1942). Like Marjorie
A
Provincetown
Kinnan Rawl-
[156
Bibliography
(Charles Scribner's Sons, 1942) in
ings's Cross Creek
broad-spirited
decades
among
re-creation
of
and
energetic
its
hospitable
friends.
The Autobiography of Malcolm
X
(Grove
Press, 1965).
A
magnificent narrative.
Norman MacLean, A
River Runs Through
It
(University
of Chicago Press, 1976). Published as fiction, this reads like the best of memoirs.
It is a
favorite of
Lewis Thomas, The Youngest Press, 1983).
medicine of
A
The
Science
many
(Oxford University
genial medical researcher
his father's
writers.
remembers the
day and the researches of
his
own.
matter-of-fact quality to his writing and a pure, clean
attention to the materials at
hand make Lewis Thomas's
writing modest, honest and serious.
Frank Conroy, Stop-Time (Viking
Press, 1967).
Conroy
masters a narrative, dramatic, novelistic handling of scenes.
Booker T. Washington, Up from Slavery (Doubleday, Page
&
Co., 1901). This classic holds up;
it is
a pleasure to
read.
Henry
&
Beston, The Outermost House (Doubleday,
Co., 1928). This
ple. Its
Cape Cod masterpiece
power derives from two images:
and the
fateful, killing
Maureen Howard,
Howard grew up
is
Doran
broad and sim-
the cold, pagan stars
waves.
Facts of Life (Little,
Brown,
in Bridgeport, Connecticut,
1978).
among a vari-
ety of colorful people she describes with insight.
Maxine
Hong
Kingston, The
Knopf, 1976). There
157
is
a
Woman
Warrior (Alfred A.
long story in here about a Chinese
Bibliography
aunt that
is
one of the funniest
Kingston
is
a sophisticated
Thomas Merton, The
stories I've seen in print.
and original writer.
Seven Storey Mountain (Harcourt,
Brace, 1948). Merton's account of the steps that led
from
a privileged childhood in France,
him
through Columbia
University and to a Trappist monastery in Kentucky.
James Thurber,
My
Brothers, 1933). This
is
vintage Thurber.
Ethel Waters, His Eye 1951).
The
on the Sparrow (Doubleday,
Is
singer Ethel Waters
music, hardship and
her moving story of
tells
faith.
Kate Simon, Bronx Primitive (Viking vivid,
&
and Hard Times (Harper
Life
rough-and-tumble childhood in
a
Press,
A
1982).
Bronx immigrant
neighborhood in the 1930s.
AND ABROAD John Cowper Powys, Autobiography (John Lane,
An
1934).
extreme of the genre, written with the usual Powys
restrictions. In this case
and omits
all
he belabors
mention of the
women
his so-called eroticism
in his
life.
many odd books. Edwin Muir, An Autobiography (Hogarth
The
oddest
of this great writer's
Press, 1954).
A
beautiful evocation of the timelessness of early childhood, in
the
Orkney
Islands,
Ved Mehta,
Vedi
by the poet and
translator of Kafka.
(Oxford University Press, 1982). In
beautiful, formal, vivid language, the writer describes his
blind, vigorous
boyhood
in India.
Kildare Dobbs, Running
to
Paradise (Oxford University
[158
Bibliography
The Canadian man
Press, 1962). els
and impressions following
of letters recounts his trav-
his
immigration from North-
ern Ireland.
Nikos Kazantzakis, Report 1965).
This strong,
to
storyteller's
&
Greco (Simon
Schuster,
autobiography escapes the
usual hazards of Kazantzakis.
Maxim Gorky, 1915);
My
House, 1952,
My
the trilogy:
My
Childhood (T.
W.
Laurie,
Apprenticeship (Foreign Languages Publishing
The Century
also as In the World,
Universities (Boni
hood was actually
&
Co., 1917);
Liveright, 1923). Gorky's child-
colorful; his father
vats in the yard stained everything.
was a dyer, and the dye
The
usual Russian ex-
tremes of living and of writing are right here.
Graham Greene, A
Sort of Life (Bodley
Head, 1971).
An
austere, intelligent autobiography.
Pablo Neruda, Memoirs (Farrar, Straus
The
&
Giroux, 1977).
poet writes a muscular prose; he describes the literary
camaraderie of his early
manhood
in Valparaiso.
C. S. Lewis, Surprised by Joy (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1955).
The
with
happy boyhood.
a
Christian's intellectual autobiography begins
Wilfrid Sheed, Frank and Maisie (Simon 1985).
His parents were low-church British
&
Schuster,
evangelists,
great and lively characters.
Vladimir Nabokov, Speak,
Memory
Nabokov's memoir of old Russia tional in
its
spareness.
is
(Putnam,
1966).
pure description, emo-
He describes a needlepoint chair seat.
Jean-Paul Sartre, The Words (Gallimard, 1964; George
159]
Bibliography
Braziller, 1964). Sartre's original
most
literary
memoir
is, I
think, his best,
work.
Antoine de Saint-Exupery, Wind, Sand and Stars mard, 1939; Reynal
&
(Galli-
Hitchcock, 1939). In the early days
of aviation the author flew the mails over
North
Africa.
A
dandy book.
ALFRED KAZIN Because of the Puritan passion for constantly keeping in
mind
the report of one's doings and misdemeanors to be
delivered to Almighty
and memoirs from the
rich in journals
especially
is
earliest period.
Waldo Emerson (Houghton
journals of Ralph
1909-1914);
God, American writing
Henry David Thoreau, one
The
Mifflin,
of the longest ever
kept (Houghton Mifflin, 1906); Walt Whitman's Specimen
Days (Donald McKay, 1882); John Quincy Adams's
diaries,
sometimes called "Memoirs" and supposed to be the longest journal ever kept by a public
1874-1877), are I
all
(J.
B. Lippincott
&
Co.,
conscious autobiographies in this sense.
have been preoccupied
ture,
man
probably because
I
knee pants, and because
much
of
have kept
my
my
with
this litera-
a journal since I
interest in
keeps returning to the "personal"
life
American
—by which
I
was
in
literature
mean
"the
self as history."
American
classics in this context:
Adams (Houghton ful
example of
Mifflin, 1918)
how
The Education of Henry
—to me the most wonder-
to see one's life as history.
[i6o
Bibliography
Earlier, of course,
The Autobiography of Benjamin Frank-
the prototypical story of the self-made American, but
lin,
distinctive also for
Theodore There
is
nothing
seizing for
wry humor.
its
Dreiser's
Dawn (Horace
else like
wonder and
it
Liveright,
1931).
for portraying the "provincial"
literary inspiration
upon
the "Big
City" (Chicago).
Hemingway's A Moveable 1964). Full of lies or shall
nonetheless because
went
make up
to
Moving about
it
Feast (Charles Scribner's Sons,
we
say delusions, but marvelous
shows the same
artifice of
at
random,
I
would
also include
X's Autobiography (Grove Press, 1965).
had
a lot of "help" in this, to
story
I
know
genius that
his classic short stories.
put
it
I
am aware
gently, but
of the black experience in
purely personal, sensory point of view.
it is
Wright remains
in
Though
my mind
that he
the best
America from
a
of course
have to add Richard Wright's Black Boy (Harper ers, 1945).
Malcolm
&
I
Broth-
the most gifted of
twentieth-century black American writers.
all
I
have forgotten such central items in American autobiog-
raphy
as
The Autobiography of Lincoln
Brace, 1931), a classic portrait of
scandals and Steffens's
own
subject of Soviet Russia,
which
Steffens
American
(Harcourt,
politics,
urban
Utopian self-delusions on the are
now as funny as they are
sad.
One
can hardly omit from any table of American au-
tobiography such succulent dishes Grass (Fowler
nor
&
i6i]
&
as
Whitman's Leaves
of
Wells, 1855), Thoreau's Walden (Tick-
Fields, 1854), Saul Bellow's
The Adventures of Augie
Bibliography
March (Viking 1964),
1953) and Herzog
Press,
and Robert Lowell's Life Studies
There
Cudahy,
1959).
this vein
—Sylvia
no need, perhaps,
is
James
Plath,
(Viking Press,
(Farrar, Straus
Merrill,
Anne
to
go on
Sexton,
& in
etc.,
etc.
The prime example novel
pher,
literature of the
autobiography, the autobiography as novel,
as
Proust's
modern European
in
Remembrance
George
is
of Things Past. Proust's great biogra-
Painter, said he
documented much of his biog-
raphy from the novel!
TONI MORRISON As Toni Morrison
points out in her talk, a large part of her
literary heritage consists of the
were written by centuries.
book-length narratives that
slaves in the eighteenth
Well over
and nineteenth
hundred were published, she
a
says,
and she names the ones that have been particularly important to her as a writer.
She
also
books by modern writers such
James Baldwin. Her
talk
is
mentions several as
influential
Simone de Beauvoir and
her bibliography.
LEWIS THOMAS For the bibliography,
Most
of
my
I
suggest the following:
reading time
Science, Cell, Cellular
is
spent on journals: Nature,
Immunology, Journal of Experimental
[162
Bibliography
PNAS
Medicine,
(Proceedings of the National
Academy
of
Science), several others for library browsing.
The books I keep
near
at
hand,
late
American Heritage Dictionary (the taining Calvert Watkins's section
European
nights and weekends: earliest editions
con-
on philology and Indo-
roots).
The Roots of Language, by Derek Bickerton (Karoma Publishers,
Ann
Arbor, 1981). Here
is
the evidence for the role
of children in Creole language formation.
by E. O. Wilson. Models
Insect Societies,
for
complex
social systems, beautifully illustrated.
Symbiosis in Cell Evolution, by crocosmos,
Lynn
Margulis, and Mi-
by Margulis and Dorion Sagan. The mechanism
of interliving
is
the most important problem for
biology, just beginning to
Wallace Stevens,
all
modern
open up.
editions.
Part of Nature, Part of Us, by Helen Vendler, the most interesting critic alive.
Montaigne, the Donald Frame translation. The Spectator Bird (and other assorted novels) by Wallace Stegner. E.
M.
Forster,
all of,
for picking
up anywhere.
WILLIAM ZINSSER Two
of
my
favorite
in this
series:
Kazin's
A
163]
memoirs
are
by writers who gave
Russell Baker's Growing
Walker
in the City.
Here
are a
talks
Up and Alfred dozen others that
Bibliography
I
enjoyed with unusual intensity
them and that
I still
Arlen, Michael
A
stylish
and
J.
what
it
Exiles (Farrar, Straus
Brown,
&
like to
S.
1972).
N.
encountered
Giroux, 1970).
sensitive recollection of a father
was
Behrman,
I first
remember vividly as models of the form.
who were known on two of
when
and mother
continents for their glamour and
be their son.
A Memoir
People in a Diary:
(Little,
An extraordinary gallery of famous friends
most memorably, the young Siegfried Sassoon and the dying George Gershwin
—
recalled with
by Behrman from the diary he kept
charm and warmth
for fifty years.
Doctorow, E. L. World's Fair (Random House, Posing a
as a novel, this
Bronx boyhood
1985).
minutely observed reconstruction of
in the thirties, culminating in the great
New York World's Fair of
1939, has too
much
truth not to
be true. Hart, Moss. Act
One (Random House,
America's most successful playwrights had a
boyhood of such grinding poverty told here with a prise, still
that the
One
1959).
New
memory
of
York
of
it,
as
born dramatist's sense of timing and sur-
haunts and troubles me.
Houseman, John. Run-Through: A Memoir (Simon Schuster, 1972).
The
vative productions as the Virgil
Thomson-Gertrude
opera Four Saints in Three Acts, the Project and
&
author's role as midwife to such inno-
WPA's Negro
Orson Welles's Mercury Theatre and
Kane
is
huge
risks gladly taken.
recalled with gusto
and
a
Stein
Theatre Citizen
remembered enjoyment of
[164
Bibliography
Day
Lee, Laurie. The Edge oj
England (William Morrow, prose, this evocation of
—A
1960).
growing up
richness and imagery of poetry. affected by the seemingly
Mencken, H.
L.
I
West of
in the
Thinly disguised
as
Cotswolds has the
in the
effortless
Happy
Boyhood
remember being
still
beauty of
language.
its
1880-1892 (Alfred A.
Days,
Knopf, 1940); Newspaper Days, 1899-1906 (Knopf, 1941);
and Heathen Days, 1890-1936 (Knopf, pery memoirs, which during World
War
North Africa and ing,
among
II,
Italy
the
in
with their exuberant
other things,
perman when
These pep-
1943).
Armed Forces Editions brightened many long nights in found
I first
my
war was
style, reinforc-
dream of becoming
over. In 1980,
from the three volumes were published
a
newspa-
twenty chapters
book
in a
Choice oj Days (Knopf), selected and introduced
called
A
by Edward
L. Galligan.
Mortimer, John. Clinging
(Ticknor
&
specialized in divorce cases
—
lific
Wreckage:
The son
Fields, 1982).
aloud to him, Mortimer
to the
whose
Part oj a Lije
of a blind barrister
lurid details
a barrister himself
author and playwright
A
—has written
a
who
had to be read
and
also a pro-
memoir
that
is
both tender and hilarious.
Nabokov, Vladimir. Speak, Memory (Putnam,
1966). Al-
though English was Nabokov's fourth language, no English or American author has written a this
more elegant memoir than
meticulous recollection of a golden childhood
of private tutors and
burg.
165]
summer houses
—
—
a
world
in czarist St. Peters-
Bibliography
Origo,
Images
Iris.
& Shadows:
Brace Jovanovich, 1971).
an American
The
who grew up
wise and graceful memoir of
had many
and Europe,
partly in Ireland
married an Italian, and created a that
Part of a Life (Harcourt
life
on
fulfillments, not the least
a
farm in Tuscany
being the chance to
hide Italian partisans and Allied soldiers during the Nazi
occupation of
World War S. A
Pritchett, V.
Pritchett recalls a
—
hardship
Cab
II.
at the
boyhood
Door (Random House, 1968).
that
was almost Dickensian
his apprenticeship to the
belongs to the nineteenth century
even with a certain
London
its
leather trade
—without
merriment and gratitude.
in
self-pity
A
and
wonderful
memoir. Woolf, Leonard. Growing: 1904-1911 (Harcourt, Brace of an eventual
six
young
&
Autobiography of
World,
1962).
is
my
—Woolf
British civil servant in a village in tells
The second
favorite because
one man's exotic experience
extension
the Years
memoirs by the man Virginia Woolf
would marry. This volume presses
An
the story of
all
s
com-
years as a
Ceylon
the earnest colonials
found themselves trying to administer
it
—and by
who have
justice in strange
and
bewildering lands.
[i66
Contributors
RUSSELL BAKER was born in rural Virginia in 1925, spent II,
two years
training as a
Navy
flier in
World War
graduated from Johns Hopkins University in 1947 and
began
his
newspaper career with the Baltimore Sun. In 1954
he joined the
New
York Times and covered the White
House, the Senate, the State Department and several dential
campaigns before starting in 1962
presi-
his thrice-weekly
column, "Observer," for which he subsequently
won
the
He has published eleven books, most recently Book of Light Verse, which he edited. He is now
Pulitzer Prize.
The Norton
working on
a
second autobiographical memoir,
this
one
about the glory of being a young newspaperman in the golden-age America of the 1950s.
He
lives
Miriam, in northern Virginia near the village born.
with
his wife,
where he was
Contributors
ANNIE DILLARD'S
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
won
the
Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction in 1974 and has since been translated into
many
book of poetry,
a
(Teaching a Stone
Her
languages.
other books include a
book of literary theory and to
a
book of essays
Talk) that originally appeared in leading
magazines and that have also been widely reprinted in anthologies. Writers.
tional
Her most
recent book
She has been awarded fellowships from the Na-
Endowment
for the Arts
genheim Foundation. She Press Club nor's
Award
is
a
and the John Simon Gug-
New
winner of the
for Excellence
and
a
York
Washington Gover-
Award. In 1982 she delivered the Phi Beta Kappa
commencement exercises of Harvard UniverShe lives in New England with her husband, Gary
Oration sity.
Encounters with Chinese
is
at the
Clevidence, and their daughter, Rosie.
ALFRED KAZIN
was born
in Brooklyn, graduated
from the City College of
New
York, and began his career
The
New
Republic in 1942.
as literary editor of
Distinguished Professor of English of
New
York
He
oirs
A
New
has also
versities here
at the
York Graduate Center from 1973
been
and abroad.
Walker
University
at the State
Stony Brook from 1963 to 1973 and
in
City University of to 1985.
He was
many unithree mem-
a visiting professor at
Among
his
in the City, Starting
books are
Out
in the Thirties
and
—
New York Jew and such major works of literary criticism as On Native Grounds and An American Procession. He has [170
Contributors
also edited anthologies
and
critical studies
of such writers as
Emerson, Melville, Hawthorne, Henry James and Fitzgerald.
He
is
Institute of Arts
a
member
and
Howard
gree from Cornell.
F. Scott
American Academy and
Letters.
TONI MORRISON ted from
of the
was born
in Lorain, Ohio, gradua-
University and received her master's de-
As an
editor at
Random House for many
years she brought to publication such writers as
Toni Cade
Bambara, Angela Davis and Gayl Jones. She has taught
at
many
universities, including Yale, Rutgers and Stanford,
and
is
now
ties
and Fine Arts
Schweitzer Professor in the College of Humaniat the State
University of
New
York
in
Albany. Her novels include The Bluest Eye, Sula, Song of Solomon,
Award
which won the National Book
in 1978,
Critics
and Tar Baby. Her new novel.
be published this year. She
is
Circle
Beloved, will
also the author of a play,
Dreaming Emmett. She holds eleven honorary degrees and is
a
member of the American Academy and
Institute of Arts
New York
Public Library.
and Letters and She
lives in
a trustee of the
Rockland County, N.Y.
LEWIS THOMAS,
president emeritus of Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, was born in Flushing,
N.Y., graduated from Princeton University and got his
M.D. degree from Harvard.
171]
He
has been on the faculty of
Contributors
five
schools of medicine and dean of
two
N.Y.U.-
of them:
Bellevue Medical Center and the Yale School of Medicine.
He
has published
more than 200
scientific
papers on virol-
ogy, immunology, experimental pathology and infectious disease, has received
more than twenty honorary
degrees,
and has served on many government advisory committees.
He received the National Book Award for Lives oja the
American Book Award
for The
His two most recent books are Youngest Science,
and
Thoughts on Listening
the-Month Club, spent the
critic.
New
and
of his career. The
Mahler's Ninth Symphony.
WILLIAM ZINSSER, with the
memoir
Cell
the Snail.
collection of essays, Late Night
a to
a
Medusa and
general editor of the Book-offirst
thirteen years of his career
York Herald Tribune
He left the paper in
as a writer, editor
1959 to become
and
a freelance writer
and has since written regularly for leading magazines. From 1968 to 1972 he wrote a column for
he was ing and
He
is
at Yale University,
Life.
During the 1970s
where he taught nonfiction writ-
humor writing and was master
of Branford College.
the author of eleven books, including the classic
On
Writing Well and Willie and Divike, a portrait of the jazz
musicians Willie Ruff and
Dwike
Mitchell.
He
Extraordinary Lives, the book derived from the talks
and
also edited
first series
sponsored by the Book-of-the-Month Club, on the craft of biography.
town, with
He
lives in
New
York, his
of
art
home
his wife, Caroline Zinsser.
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