Archive for March, 2008

The Magnificent Ambersons: The Unheralded Pleasures of Smugness

Posted in Booth Tarkington, The Magnificent Ambersons on March 31, 2008 by Diablevert

As I mentioned in my comment on the last post, I think maybe I give Tarkington more credit that Penny does. Indeed, reading The Magnificent Ambersons actually got me thinking about some of the advantages of the old-fashioned third-person omniscient style that Tarkington uses.
The vast majority of current novels of any genre are written in either first person or a very close third person. First person puts the reader behind the eyes of the main character; close third person leaves you sitting on his shoulder, near enough to get some sense of his thoughts but retaining a view of his world which is a bit broader and more capacious. The closeness is dead useful in evoking the reader’s sympathy, in giving them something big and bright and immediate, a whole personality, to be interested in as soon as they turn the first page. Writing in the old way, the 19th-century, distant, omniscient third, forces you to swoop down on the characters from above, as it were, and get to know them from the outside in. For instance, in an omniscient novel a character is generally introduced with a physical description — here’s Dickens, Chapter Four of A Tale of Two Cities:

“[A] gentleman of sixty, formally dressed in a brown suit of clothes, pretty well worn, but very well kept, with large square cuffs and large flaps to the pockets….Very orderly and methodical he looked, with a hand on each knee, and a loud watch ticking a sonorous sermon under his flapped waist-coat…”

Whereas in first or close third, you get their voice, their mind, first thing, and may well never learn what they’re wearing. Here’s Holden Caufield in The Catcher in the Rye, satirizing the old way even as he embodies the new:

“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.”

All the David Copperfield kind of crap is exactly the crap Tarkington starts off with. Page one: “Major Ambseron had made a fortune in 1873….” and then for the rest of the chapter we get 13 closely-printed pages on the family, their town, their house, its decor, and the accordance of all of the above with the fashions of their times. We have to go four pages or so into the next chapter before George, our main character, is even born.

But that distant third does have one big advantage — it intersperses a full-fledged Narrator between reader and character. The Narrator may be as smart as he likes, may comment on politics or human nature or the foibles of his characters just as he wishes. (Dickens again: “Old Marley was dead as a doornail. Mind! I don’t mean to say that I know, of my own knowledge, what there is particularly dead about a door-nail. I might have been inclined, myself, to regard a coffin-nail as the deadliest piece of ironmongery in the trade.” — A Christmas Carol.) In a close third you can’t do that — the narrator hews so closely to her character there that to have her observe something utterly unknowable to the character or declare something in opposition to the character’s beliefs and views would shock the reader right out of their suspension of disbelief — precisely because it means that the narrator has a personality quite distinct from that of the character, and thus creates distance between them.

So when you’re using first or close third you run into a technical problem: If, as a writer, you want a) to write in first person or close third and b) to use all your little writerly tricks, your grandest metaphors, your subtlest sarcasm, your freshest imagery, then c) your character must be just about as smart as you. You can’t create a character with an eight-grade education in close third and then write, say “the pause stretched into an Beckettian awkwardness.” Of course, that example is merely pompous; it’s entirely possible to restrict yourself to, say a child protagonist and still come up with fresh imagery and even subtle sarcasm. But it is a helluva lot more difficult — with every line you risk slipping into diction which will strike the reader as too high or too low. And so many writers don’t attempt it — instead they “write what they know,” and create characters much like themselves, who can plausibly be made to say all the things they would like to say. And this is why so many literary novels have writers and editors and college professors as protagonists, and in part why they are, frequently, so damn boring.

With that bit of distance that omniscience gives you, you can let the Narrator do all the fancy footwork while the characters stay wholly themselves; you’re free to be as grand or allusive as you want in order to bring across your meaning even if the character wouldn’t have used those exact words themselves.

Tarkington’s narrator, for instance, is just a little bit smarter than his characters — and Tarkington uses that to involve the reader in a little conspiracy with the narrator. For instance, George is, as bears frequent mentioning, a self-absorbed twat so wrapped up in his own little love affair he doesn’t notice the deep attraction between his mother and Eugene Morgan, his girlfriend’s father. But it’s pretty damn obvious to the reader. And so as this plot thread nears its climax the reader shares in the narrator’s godlike perspective on it all, sees that Morgan’s winding up to ask George’s mother to marry him, that George’s Aunt Fanny being slowly consumed by jealousy and frustration, that George’s loathing for Morgan growing more fixed — and thus perceives the coming crisis before the characters do. It’s quite fun, that feeling; it makes the reader feel wise and sorrowful, to watch a fate hurtle down upon the doomed.

That distance also allows you to have a truly unsympathetic main character, and still bear reading the book. Well, I’m saying that all declaratively as if it we a maxim of literature, when probably it’s a lot closer to a personal quirk. Most of the novels I’ve truly hated —hated enough to fling the book down in the middle of reading it, never to pick it up again — have been books where I couldn’t stand the main character. There’s plenty of books I love with flawed main characters, but this is an entirely different feeling than thinking the main character is a schmuck who probably deserves more than what’s likely to come to him. Yet while I certainly thought George was a schmuck, I never wanted to hurl Ambersons across the room, and that’s because I was neither in George’s head nor his vest pocket; I was watching him from afar, hanging out with a narrator who saw that he was a schmuck just as clearly as I did.

The Magnificent Ambersons: Here We Go, With the Hamlet.

Posted in Booth Tarkington, The Magnificent Ambersons with tags , on March 29, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

I think we’ve both firmly established how much of a dick George Amberson Minafer is, probably one of the most annoying petty tyrants in American literature. So is he a character or a caricature? If any character in this book should be a fully realized person, I should hope it would be the central figure, but I can’t quite figure out if Tarkington is being satirical in his descriptions of George or attempting to paint a very real picture of the ultimate spoiled brat.

The best evidence I have to support the theory that Tarkington is being completely satirical in his descriptions of George is the Hamlet bit. Oh dear Lord, the Hamlet bit. After G. Amb starts to crush his mother’s hopes and dreams of finally reuniting with her long-lost love, we’re treated to this description of his reaction to himself:

… A little while after she had gone, George rose and began solemnly to dress for dinner. At one stage of these conscientious proceedings he put on, temporarily, his long black velvet dressing-gown, and, happening to catch sight in his pier glass of the picturesque and mediaeval figure thus presented he paused to regard it; and something profoundly theatrical in his nature came to the surface.

His lips moved; he whispered, half-aloud, some famous fragments:

“ ‘Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother,
Nor customary suits of solemn black….”

For, in truth, the mirrored princely image, with hair disheveled on the white brow, and the long tragic fall of black velvet from the shoulders, had brought about (in his thoughts, at least) some comparisons of his own times, so out of joint, with those of that other gentle prince and heir whose widowed mother was minded to marry again.

“But I have that within which passeth show;
These but the trappings and the suits of Woe.”

Not less like Hamlet did he feel and look as he sat gauntly at the dinner table with Fanny to partake of a meal throughout which neither spoke….

And I’ll spare you the rest. Now we’ve got a clue in here that Tarkington can’t possibly be serious with all this tripe—the parenthetical “in his thoughts, at least”—but other than that these seems like a straightforward allusion for the reader’s benefit. But I can’t imagine a reader’s response to this that takes it seriously; my personal experience of reading this passage may have involved actual eye-rolling.

This dovetails with diablevert’s questions about tragedy vs. pathos: can you have a tragic novel in which the main character is completely ridiculous, a caricature of a human being? I don’t think The Magnificent Ambersons is a comic novel. Tarkington’s descriptions of the landscape going to pot are too heartfelt and his many deathbed scenes are straightforward and serious. We have to conclude that Tarkington had one of two objectives in his mind: either to create a satire of the American upper class and the self-fulfilling prophecy of its hubris and decline or to make a tragic portrait of the fall of the glittering society in America under populist coarseness and industrialization. What he actually produced is a bizarre hybrid of the two.

The Magnificant Ambersons: George, you dumb bastard.

Posted in Booth Tarkington, The Magnificent Ambersons on March 25, 2008 by Diablevert

The Magnificent Ambersons, oddly, has got me thinking about the difference between tragedy and pathos. Wait, where are you all going? Come back!

Okay, so maybe it’s a pompous question. Let me rephrase: I’m pretty sure I’m supposed to feel bad for George. What I’m not sure about is whether I’m supposed to like him.

Ambersons was, as Penny mentioned, included on the Modern Library’s list of great novels of the century (squeaking in at the bottom, No. 100). And it concerns grand themes, as she said — the decline of a single wealthy family and an entire way of life. Normally that’d be the recipe for tragedy — the suffering and decline of the great and grand.

But George doesn’t seem very great at all. He seems like a jerk. When we’re first introduced to him, he’s a nine-year-old brat in ringlets, disrespectful, rude, and convinced the world revolves around him. The town hates him; so do we. The town longs for his come-uppance; so do we. By the end of the book, when he does get his, I did feel a bit sorry for the poor old bastard because Tarkington has him take in on the chin so stoically. (Which, in retrospect, I’m not quite sure is believable.) But we never really like him.

The thing is, I think Tarkington likes him the whole time. George hates the “riff raff” and modernity, and revels in his family’s stately manner and nouveau-feudal relationship to the rest of the town. At the same time, Tarkington’s own nostalgia for horses and quietude and small town life is amply on display throughout the book, along with its counterpoint, a distaste for the dirty, destructive, grasping city (filled to brimming with dirty, destructive, grasping immigrants). You see it in his objective, third person descriptions of the scenery —  Take this paragraph as a sample, from Chapter 28:

“These were bad times for Amberson Addition. This quarter, already old, lay within a mile of the centre of the town, but business moved in other directions; and the Addition’s share of Prosperity was only the smoke and dirt, with the bank credit left out. The owners of the original big houses sold them, or rented them to boarding-house keepers, and the tenants of the multitude of small houses moved “farther out” (where the smoke was thinner) or into apartment houses, which were built by dozens now. Cheaper tenants took their places, and the rents were lower and lower, and the houses shabbier and shabbier—for all these shabby houses, burning soft coal, did their best to help in the destruction of their own value. They helped to make the quarter so dingy and the air so foul to breathe that no one would live there who had money enough to get “farther out” where there were glimpses of ungrayed sky and breaths of cleaner winds. And with the coming of the new speed, “farther out” was now as close to business as the addition had been in the days of its prosperity. Distances had ceased to matter.”

That’s all dry, third person omniscience, which is to say it’s all Tarkington, not George. Yet by planting these same repugnance toward the new in the arrogant and privileged personage of G. “Magnificant” Amberson. as snot-nosed a little punk as ever lived, Tarkington gets to have his cake and eat it too, indulging a bit revanchist nostalgia while at the same time acknowledging and tut-tutting the blinkered, hidebound attitude that led to the extinction of Georgie and his ilk. He wants to turn the tables on the reader, and I think largely succeeds — we, like the townsfolk, despise George for the douche his is, but by the time George gets what’s coming to him he has become irrelevant to the town, and the irrelevance makes him pathetic to the reader. You can’t have a tragic catharsis without tragedy, and George is so small-time that he can’t be tragic — that is, deliberately, his flaw, his inability to recognize the degradation of his circumstances, his insistence on behaving as if he were a prince and this his kingdom, when really he’s clinging by the skin of his teeth to a position in the respectable middle class.

And that, I have decided, is the difference for me between pathos and tragedy. The tragic figure and his flaw stands in for all humanity, for all our weakness and pride and foolishness; he embodies us, and so when we see him destroyed we feel compassion, literally; we feel with him. But the pathetic figure stands only for himself; his flaw is his own and we do not share it, we are repulsed by it. And so when see him destroyed we feel bad for him, we pity him, but we don’t feel like what happened to him could happen to us. Even though in both cases, strictly speaking, the misfortune that befalls the character is their own fault.

The thing about this is, for a writer pathos is a weird thing to opt for. As Arthur Miller strove to prove, you don’t have to write about the epic to evoke the tragic; your characters don’t have to be high and mighty to bring forth profound emotion. But sometimes I got the feeling reading this book that Tarkington wasn’t really going for profound emotion. The vast majority of authors — especially when you’re writing the Great American Novel, the Big Picture, the Sprawling Canvas, the Titanic Yarn — are going for that. Hell, even if you’re writing a small, drawing-room novel, few days, a few characters, 60,000 words, most writers are hoping to leave the reader profoundly moved. (Flaubert, in Madame Bovary, is the supreme example of the opposite sublimation: he writes about the pathetic so well, with such clarity and precision, that it becomes tragic.)

But George never works like that: we don’t long to see him destroyed the way you want to see a great villan take it on the chin — dragged off stage in chains, howling. Rather, you want to see him pranked, humiliated, embarrassed, made to grow up, like some friend’s pest of a little brother. It is a petulant pleasure that we want to take, not a grim one. And so when he finally does take it on the chin — is forced to realize that he unjustly deprived his mother of happiness and love in the last years of her life, contributing to her early death, in order merely to serve his own pride —- you don’t feel particularly gratified. It’s learning that the neighbor kid, the one who egged your car every Halloween and seemed to throw a kegger every time his parents left the house for two hours together, got drunk and wrapped his dad’s car around a tree. You can’t say you’re surprised but you can’t say that that’s what you wanted, either; it’s a fate too grim to gloat over.

What do you think, Penny? Is George pathetic or tragic? Is the book? And which are they each meant to be?

Summary: The Magnificent Ambersons

Posted in Booth Tarkington, The Magnificent Ambersons with tags , , on March 21, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

George Amberson Minafer is the “little tin god on wheels” who presides over The Magnificent Ambersons, the living embodiment of pride that goeth before the fall. Reversing the thrust of the rags-to-riches Horatio Alger narrative, we take part in the decline of the Amberson fortunes into poverty and obscurity. Booth Tarkington’s authorial claim to fame here should be creating the biggest twit in world literature, a Mona Lisa of a portrait in asshat-itude.

The plot of the story is relatively simple: we follow the fortunate son of a mighty Midwestern family (their location always described as a “Midland town”) from his pampered youth through his callow college days. At a lavish ball thrown in his honor, he meets Lucy Morgan, the daughter of his mother’s old flame, Eugene Morgan, an inventor and innovator of the automobile. Tarkington gets a lot of mileage (ha!) out of this character, as George takes many opportunities to drive around in various horse-drawn carriage and deride the automobile as it, y’know, speeds past him. As he and Lucy court to the brink of marriage, the Amberson family is slowly being dragged into the muck: relatives preemptively withdrawing their share of the estate and running off to Italy, the death of George’s ineffectual father, the sale of Amberson land, and the growing shabbiness of the physical estate.

Throughout the general decline, George remains steadfastly oblivious until his spinster aunt Fanny alerts him to the rekindled romance between his mother, Isabel, and Eugene. He flies into a rage disproportionate to his former condescension toward his father, forbids the chance of marriage between his mother and Eugene or Lucy and himself, and takes his mother off to Europe, where she weakens from a mysterious and hereditary “complaint.” They return home just in time for a deathbed scene at Amberson Manor and then the death of Major Amberson, George’s grandfather. There’s nothing left to the family fortune after that—all is sold off and George and Fanny are stuck with each other, essentially penniless. George takes a job as an explosives expert to support their frail household, considering that the more dangerous the job, the higher the pay. Both of his legs are broken in a freak automobile accident, which sends Lucy back to his bedside, her love undiminished through their separation.

A happy ending? Did he get the comeuppance so longed-for throughout the book? A cautionary tale? A nostalgic portrait of a kinder, gentler time, when everyone knew their neighbors and there was only one set of rich holier-than-thou bastards to revile and we all did that together? Let’s discuss!

His Family: One Last Post

Posted in Ernest Poole, His Family on March 18, 2008 by Diablevert

Before we let Poole go, I did want to note that there were flashes, in the book, of excellent writing, mostly in the dialogue. Poole has a horrible tendency towards speechifying, but when his characters were arguing over more trivial matters, or passing incidental remarks, you felt a breath of life in them; I’d say his tenure as a journalist served him well there. I remember in particular one small anecdote he has John, the tenement-born clerk, tell about a particularly specialized criminal — here, I’ll quote the whole so you get the flavor of it:

“Good-morning, Mr. Gale,” he said, as Roger came into the office one day.

Hello, Johnny. How are you?” Roger replied.

“Fine, thank you.” And John went on with his work of opening the morning’s mail. But a few minutes later he gave a cackling little laugh.

“What’s so funny?” Roger asked.

“Fellers,” was the answer. “Fellers. Human nature. Here’s a letter from Shifty Sam.”

“Who the devil is he? A friend of yours?”

“No,” said John, “he’s a ‘con man.’ He works about as mean a graft as any you ever heard of. He reads the ‘ads’ in the papers—see?—of servant girls who’re looking for work. He makes a specialty of cooks. Then he goes to where they live and talks of some nice family that wants a servant right away. He claims to be the butler, and he’s dressed to look the part. ‘There ain’t a minute to lose,’ he says. ‘If you want a chawnce, my girl, come quick.’ He says ‘chawnce’ like a butler—see? ‘Pack your things,’ he tells her, ‘and come right along with me.’ So she packs and hustles off with him—Sam carrying her suit case. He puts her on a trolley and says, ‘I guess I’ll stay on the platform. I’ve got a bit of a headache and the air will do me good.’ So he stays out there with her suit case—and as soon as the car gets into a crowd, Sam jumps and beats it with her clothes.”

“I see,” said Roger dryly. “But what’s he writing you about?”

“Oh, it ain’t me he’s writing to—it’s you,” was John’s serene reply. Roger started.

“What?” he asked.

“Well,” said the boy in a cautious tone, vigilantly eyeing his chief, “you see, a lot of these fellers like Sam have been in the papers lately. They’re being called a crime wave.”

“Well?”

“Sam is up for trial this week—and half the Irish cooks in town are waiting ’round to testify. And Shifty seems to enjoy himself. His picture’s in the papers—see? And he wants all the clippings. So he encloses a five dollar bill.”

“He does, eh—well, you write to Sam and send his money back to him!” There was a little silence.

“But look here,” said John with keen regret. “We’ve had quite a lot of these letters this week.”

Roger wheeled and looked at him.

“John,” he demanded severely, “what game have you been up to here?”

“No game at all,” was the prompt retort. “Just getting a little business.”

“How?”

“Well, there’s a club downtown,” said John, “where a lot of these petty crooks hang out. I used to deliver papers there. And I went around one night this month—”

To drum up business?

“Yes, sir.” Roger looked at him aghast.

“John,” he asked, in deep reproach, “do you expect this office to feed the vanity of thieves?”

“Where’s the vanity,” John rejoined, “in being called a crime wave?” And seeing the sudden tremor of mirth which had appeared on Roger’s face, “Look here, Mr. Gale,” he went eagerly on. “When every paper in the town is telling these fellers where they belong—calling ‘em crooks, degenerates, and preaching regular sermons right into their faces—why shouldn’t we help ‘em to read the stuff? How do we know it won’t do ‘em good? It’s church to ‘em, that’s what it is—and business for this office. Nine of these guys have sent in their money just in the last week or so—”

“Look out, my boy,” said Roger, with slow and solemn emphasis. “If you aren’t extremely careful you’ll find yourself a millionaire.”

“But wait a minute, Mr. Gale—”

Not in this office,” Roger said. “Send ‘em back, every one of ‘em! Understand?”

“Yes, sir,” was the meek reply. And with a little sigh of regret John turned his wits to other kinds and conditions of New Yorkers who might care to see themselves in print.

I’d bet dollars to doughnuts that was based on an actual thief Poole had heard of. That small exchange brought the city to life better than all his epic paragraphs on the teeming multitudes — the cockeyed genius of dressing up as a butler, the desperate kind of living you’d scrape together stealing from servants, the vastness of a city where a niche so specialized could thrive, and the drive for fame and glory that would make such a thief pay to have his clippings done, the tumult of it all…and right there in the middle of it, the stilted stuffiness of poor old Roger, who talks like a sermon, and who we have to spend about 90% of the book with…Sigh.

His Family: School Days

Posted in Ernest Poole, His Family with tags , , , on March 18, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

With the mad city growing so fast, and the people of the tenements breeding, breeding, breeding, and packing the schools to bursting, what could any teacher be but a mere cog in a machine, ponderous, impersonal, blind, grinding out future New Yorkers?

The only facet of Poole’s book that I found genuinely moving and modern was his take on the city schools of his day. The little I know of Poole makes me think he was a champion of reformers and his attitudes about urban education exemplify this: discomfort with teeming masses of uneducated immigrants dovetailed with a devout faith in public schooling as a tool of assimilation and unequivocal improvement. Deborah is the only character in the book whose single-minded preoccupation is described by the narrator with any kind of consistent sympathy; even as Poole is made uncomfortable by this “new woman,” he seems to support the driving force behind her obsessive devotion to her work.

It’s shocking to me how hard the quote above struck me, how alive this notion still is in many aspects of the NYC education system–this idea that there are so many more of “them” than “us” (in this model, the student is nearly always the “the other”) and “they” must be controlled and corralled. I suppose this is inherent in most places where there is one teacher faced with 25-30 students–by nature, you’re out-numbered–but the sense of teeming growth and being a cog an in impersonal bureaucracy is still present in NYC schools today.

My school is a lively, chaotic, and vital place. Students and teachers alike veer from troubled to defeated to triumphant from day to day. It is a far more complex place than the school Poole describes. But I cannot get over how much we’re still struggling with the same issues–immigration, language acquisition, poverty, fractured homes, etc., et al., ad infinitum. Mr. Poole, your book is simplistic, corny, and just plain bad in many places… but at least you managed to attack one issue with a measure of timelessness.

The Scorecard: 1918-1929

Posted in The Scorecard on March 17, 2008 by Diablevert

I’ve been going through the list of books we are to tackle for this project, putting together a page so people can see what’s upcoming, and I was a bit surprised by how few of these books and authors I actually knew — it’s not until about the mid-60s that I’d say I knew the majority of awardees. I may be making here a confession of my appalling ignorance, and perhaps all true book lovers are sniggering behind their hands and rolling their eyes at the thought that I could ever have considered myself well-read. Well, hell, if you are don’t tell me about it, I feel bad enough as it is.

At least I do feel guilty about not knowing some of the authors of the 80s, 90s, and 00, which have all won in my lifetime. Before that I begin to wonder if some of these lads and ladies are not merely obscure to me but to the world. But it also made me think, it might be fun for anyone stumbling on this blog to keep score at home — after all, if we’re going to have the temerity to critique these fine authors, you ought to be acquainted with our level of expertise going into the thing, n’est pas? So I’ve twisted Penny’s arm and got her to give up the goods. (It’s easier for her, I know she’s far more knowledgeable than I.) Consider what follows below a rough scorecard with commentary — there shall be a permanent page with the complete collection, but in the interest of brevity, we’ll only cover the teens and twenties in this post.

Standards :

Heard of: Books: Have we heard of this book before?

Authors: Could we answer the question, “Who is X?”

Read: If we’ve heard of them, have we in fact read any of the books in question?

Love: Of the one’s we’ve read, did we love any?

Loath: Did we loathe any?

Movie: And lastly, although this in no way counts toward the Books Read tally, did we see the movie version?

Books and Authors DV: Book DV: Author DP: Book DP: Author
1918 His Family by Ernest Poole No No No No
1919 The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington Yes Yes Yes Yes
1921 The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton Yes Yes Yes Yes
1922 Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington No Yes Yes Yes
1923 One of Ours by Willa Cather No Yes No Yes
1924 The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson No No No No
1925 So Big by Edna Ferber No No No Yes
1926 Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis No Yes Yes Yes
1927 Early Autumn by Louis Bromfield No No No No
1928 The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder Yes Yes Yes Yes
1929 Scarlet Sister Mary by Julia Peterkin No No No No

Diablevert :

Heard of: : 3 Books, 5 Authors

Read: 0

Movie: I slept through The Magnificent Ambersons in an undergraduate film survey, despite all my Professor told us about the genius of Welles’ long take tracking shots.

Dreadful Penny :

Heard of: 5 Books, 6 Authors

Read: 1, The Magnificent Ambersons

Comment: In attempting to read Modern Library’s list of the “100 Greatest Novels of the 20th Century” starting at the bottom, I read The Magnificent Ambersons, #100 with a bullet, in college. My attempt stalled out immediately after.

Movie: 1-ish. I’ve probably seen The Magnificent Ambersons too after reading the book, because that’s the kind of anal thing I would do, but I have no distinct memory of it.

On Poole’s Style

Posted in Ernest Poole, His Family on March 14, 2008 by Diablevert

I have to say I was less bothered by the open racism and prudishness of some passages of the book as you seem to have been, D.P., I think because I was willing to let it roll off my back as merely typical of its time. But in way, that sense of it being of its time was one of the oddest things about the book – it felt half-n-half, half 19th century, half 20th.

You get page upon page of stolid, third-person exposition which feels very 19th century, and they yet within this hackneyed frame, details — kids getting braces, condos going up, neon signs, chorus girls, fast cars— that seem terribly 20th century. In a way it gives me a sense of why modernism had to be, how insufficient the old forms were to capture the new century. For instance, reading Poole reminds me strongly of Dorothy Parker, especially certain early sketches she did which appear in her Collected Stories. They were written in the late teens and early twenties, almost exactly the same time as this book, and yet they seem so much more lively, so much more modern. They’re humor pieces, of course, and therefore meant to be light instead of leaden. Moreover, they’re not her best work; Parker’s characteristic witty, conversational style isn’t quite formed yet. But you can feel her groping toward that style, and in the process giving us glimpses of sarcasm and slang and snatches of dialogue which makes her brief character sketches so much more engaging than Poole’s novel — if His Family were a play, the entire cast would fire off about nine lines of soliloquy direct to the audience for every two lines of dialogue exchanged. Ernest Poole is a teller. He tells and it shows.

For instance, let us examine the first paragraph of His Family. (For I picked up the book in my first great burst of enthusiasm for this project, and after reading this paragraph, thought, you know, maybe this ain’t such a hot idea):

“He was thinking of the town he had known. Not of old New York—he had heard of that from old, old men when he himself had still been young and had smiled at their garrulity. He was thinking of a young New York, the mighty throbbing city to which he had come long ago as a lad from the New Hampshire mountains. A place of turbulent thoroughfares, of shouting drivers, hurrying crowds, the crack of whips and the clatter of wheels; an uproarious, thrilling town of enterprise, adventure, youth; a city of pulsing energies, the center of a boundless land; a port of commerce with all the world, of stately ships with snowy sails; a fascinating pleasure town, with throngs of eager travellers hurrying from the ferry boats and rolling off in hansom cabs to the huge hotels on Madison Square. A city where American faces were still to be seen upon all its streets, a cleaner and a kindlier town, with more courtesy in its life, less of the vulgar scramble. A city of houses, separate homes, of quiet streets with rustling trees, with people on the doorsteps upon warm summer evenings and groups of youngsters singing as they came trooping by in the dark. A place of music and romance. At the old opera house downtown, on those dazzling evenings when as a boy he had ushered there for the sake of hearing the music, how the rich joy of being alive, of being young, of being loved, had shone out of women’s eyes. Shimmering satins, dainty gloves and little jewelled slippers, shapely arms and shoulders, vivacious movements, nods and smiles, swift glances, ripples, bursts [2]of laughter, an exciting hum of voices. Then silence, sudden darkness—and music, and the curtain. The great wide curtain slowly rising….”

298 words, 11 sentences. Not good. Not that one should demand the clipped precision of a Hammett or a Hemmingway from everyone, of course. It’s a big world, and it ought to have room for the occasional Henry James. It was just that our man Ernie reminded me a bit of another famous opening paragraph:

“It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents–except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness.”

–Edward George Bulwer-Lytton, Paul Clifford (1830)

There’s something about that, everlasting, string, of commas, and semicolons, which makes you feel like, you’re climbing a staircase; only to trip, and land, with a muffled thump, at the top of the landing.

His Family: Characters, Tone, and Other Notes

Posted in Ernest Poole, His Family with tags , on March 13, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

All I have to say about these characters is this: poor slight things, to bear the weight of all those creaky ideas and angst.

There’s a controversial word that has gone in and out of the Pulitzer fiction mandate, but was firmly in place in the early years: “wholesome.” His Family is probably the perfect novel to illustrate the “wholesome” American outlook of its time: preoccupied with hearth and home, conflicted about women’s role in society, and highly suspicious of immigrants. Looking forward, this greatly foreshadows the Rabbit Angstrom books that win later Pulitzers by generally stating that everything after the main character’s sun-dappled youth has gone to hell in a handbasket. Roger Gale, That Old Coot, rapidly moves between upholding and denouncing his daughters’ various points of view, sometimes shifting alliances in the same paragraph. This probably mirrors the ambivalence of his age, but is extremely tiring as a narrative device.

As for Poole’s voice, the tone of the novel is pleasantly lyric at times, but mostly verges on histrionic. I kept waiting for the sentence describing the city as “that sad old, gay old, gloomy old, merry old town” or something of that sort. I can’t imagine a modern reader who would have patience for the politics of this book; the hysterical fear of immigrants is particularly distasteful,  and Poole’s late-Victorian fussiness about the details of sex and reproduction. The passages in which Roger hovers outside the door of his birthing daughters are particularly uncomfortable for both the character and the reader.

All in all, the little that I’ve read about Poole so far suggests that His Family isn’t even his best work! Apparently an earlier book called  The Harbor is better-known for its union sympathies. So I’m a little pissed that I’ve read a book by this author-that-time-forgot that won the first major award for American fiction and it isn’t even HIS best work.

So after book one, I’m starting to feel great anxiety about the number of multi-generational family sagas that reveal the tenor of their time awaiting us. D.V., are we fully prepared for this challenge? I don’t know if I’ve ever read so many “wholesome” books in one stretch.

His Family: Take One

Posted in Ernest Poole, His Family on March 12, 2008 by Diablevert

Some other time I’ll have a post about Poole’s style, but writing the summary helped me pinpoint one thing I felt was a problem, reading this book — I felt that there was nothing at stake for the characters.

Let’s start at the beginning, a very good place to start: Poole never gives us a reason why Roger should start paying attention to his kids when he does, after fifteen or twenty years of not giving a fig. I found this irksome, especially when an event of the early chapters — Laura’s engagement — would have made such a handy motive. Roger muddling along with his head in the clouds until Laura announces an engagement to a man he barely knows, without doing much to seek his permission, might have shook him out of his torpor and compelled him to take an interest in his kids. But instead Poole just has him deciding abruptly to take such an interest, and has Laura’s engagement take place about five chapters in. It made Roger’s supposed motive seem so wholly and clearly his author’s artifice that for me I think it undermined the whole book.

His dead wife’s injunction that they will live on in their children’s lives seemed a rather thin reed to hang the plot on anyway, and so it proves — at various times in the novel, Roger contemplates each of his kids and thinks to himself, “Yep, they are a bit like me.” And that’s about it. That’s about all you can do with that. None of his kids are so messed up that Roger is forced to recognize that something horrible and awful about himself will live on in his kids. Unless you consider Laura’s horniness, selfishness, and impetuousness to be mortal sins, which neither I nor, as the book makes clear, Roger do. Of course, Laura’s various love affairs and her attitude toward them would have been a great deal more scandalous in Poole’s day — but even so, neither Roger nor Poole condemn her, really.

So the banner announcing the Grand Theme of the Changing Generations sort of gets tacked up on the wall in chapter one, and then just hangs there limply in the background through the rest of the book, I think in part because Poole’s got so much more allegorical heavy lifting to do — each daughter is clearly meant to embody some aspect of Modern Women — Mother, Worker, Lover — and as a result they seem die-cast instead of molded; one never feels that any of the forces at work in the book are capable of shaping them, of altering them. Instead each one is supposed to be posed in certain tableaux of modern life that Poole craves to show us — the tenements, the uptown smart set, the suburban housewife. I never really cared for them as characters, although I was amused by the intricacies of the clockwork sets they moved upon.

What do you think, D.P.? Were you bothered by the static nature of the characters as I was? Or do you think I’m full of it?

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