Archive for the Alice Adams Category

Alice Adams: Booth Tarkington, Small-Town Snob

Posted in Alice Adams, Booth Tarkington, The Magnificent Ambersons on May 9, 2008 by Diablevert

I’ve been moping around for days, trying to think of something one could say about Alice Adams. And I haven’t figured it out yet, mostly, I think, because I disliked it. (Also I probably read it too fast—did you every do that? Get stuck somewhere—an airport, a train station—and read a book in a gulp? You can’t do it with everything, the book has to be a bit glib for it to work. They never stick, later, you’re left with just a foggy impression of the contents, but if you re-read you still remember enough for the plot to be unsurprising. Rather like bolting down some Micky D’s in similar circs. — it’s enough to ruin your appetite for dinner, yet you still feel unsatisfied.)

In fact, the most confounding and intriguing thing to me about Alice Adams, is what it says about Booth Tarkington, now we’ve read two of his books. (What it says about the Pulitzer peeps, that they gave the prize twice to Tarkington, I leave for Dread. P. to explicate.)

Tarkington was born in Indiana, and lived most of his life in Indianapolis, the son of apparently mildly prosperous middle-class parents. He got into Princeton — but never graduated, apparently because his parent couldn’t afford for him to go back for his last year. He was voted most popular in his class, editor of the literary review — and then found himself shipped back to Indianapolis, where he spent the next seven years living in his parent’s house and papering his bedroom walls with rejection slips, until hitting it big with a book called The Gentleman from Indiana.

Having finally achieved success, he got married, ran for state rep, served one term and then moved to Europe. He spent the next ten years writing some and drinking a lot, before getting a divorce, heading back home to Indianapolis, getting married again, and putting his nose to the grindstone. He soon came out with some of his most successful stuff, including Ambersons and Alice Adams and especially, apparently, a series of novels on the harmless boyish adventures of a character called Penrod, which were huge at the time but don’t seem to be read any more. He spent the next twenty years or so wintering in Indy, summering in Kennebunkport, ME and regularly jaunting off to Europe to collect art.

The more I read of the above bio, the more it appears to explain to me about Tarkington’s attitude toward his characters. Reading Ambersons, I thought his wry authorial distance helped make bearable the insufferable George; reading Alice Adams, what I initially took for sympathy turned out to be snobbery incredibly well-disguised. Having read both, I’m now inclined to think that what they share is condescension. Tarkington’s the too-cool-for-school kid, capable of sneering at both the squares and the greasers, who gets stuck in his hometown running his pop’s insurance office just the same. Like James Joyce if he’d never been able to leave Ireland. (Well, a Joyce with about 1/5 of Joyce’s talent.)

Then again, not Joyce, perhaps; with Joyce you often feel an underlying anger, a sense that he wants to reach through the page and shake his characters. In Dubliners he takes as his theme the crippling paralysis of Irish society: again and again are characters trapped into lifelong unhappiness because they are unwilling to break themselves free, to risk censure, to take a chance; their fear disapproval and damnation is too great. (See, for example, “A Little Cloud,” “Eveline,” “The Boarding House,” “A Painful Case.”) And that pisses Joyce off. He is describing something he wishes were otherwise. (He himself, of course, bolted the first chance he got.)

Tarkington, on the other hand, is content to sit back and judge his characters from on high. He has an intense nostalgia for the past, the terms and conditions of his own late 19th-century youth, and even as he catalogues the depredations the 20th century is wreaking on his idyll—coal blackening the streets, immigrants flooding the city, mansions turned to boarding houses, the streets overrun with the cars that run down George Amberson Minifer and the back alleys with the bars that Walter Adams shoots dice in—he seems to blandly regard them as inevitable, and the pitiable fates of people so grasping and commerce-driven no more than to be expected. He holds himself above the people he writes about, even as he so minutely describes the circumscribed world he and they share. Flaubert said of his own pretentious, ambitious, over-reaching bourgeois heroine, “I am Madame Bovary.” But Tarkington ain’t Alice, noway nohow.

Which leave the rather interesting question of who he might be — and if pressed I’d say he’s Russell, Alice’s bland beau. Russell, after all, is fond of Alice, enchanted by her, likes her even more for lying to him because she’s so good at it, so much so that all that she says and does retains a slight air of mystery and thus of flirtation. But when he sees the real Alice, comes to comprehend the actual social status and position of Alice and her family—well, then it’s curtains. The book itself does something similar—presents Alice in the beginning as sympathetic, charming, if a bit bubble-headed—and then as it draws to a climax, allows her to become ridiculous, foolish, her pretensions merely that, her fate sealed. After reading about him, it’s easy for me to imagine Tarkington, too, as a besotted youth, enchanted by an unsuitable girl and then ditching her with a fair amount of smooth self-congratulation when it became clear she’d be a hindrence to his ambitions…

Alice Adams: Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them

Posted in Alice Adams, Booth Tarkington on May 5, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

Alice Adams is a love song to the little lie, the fib, and the misrepresentation. While there are larger lies in the book—Virgil Adams’ betrayal of his employer, Walter’s double life—Tarkington describes frequently, almost lovingly, Alice’s dissembling. She is a consummate liar, passing her continuous embellishments and playacting off as a survival mechanism. In just one of her flirtatious conversations with Russell, we get these descriptions of her lying:

Veracity is usually simple, and its opposite, to be successful, should be as simple, but practitioners of the opposite are most often impulsive like Alice and, like her, they become enmeshed in elaborations.

The sketching was spontaneous and dramatic. Mathematics had no part in it…

Thus Alice built her walls of flimsy, working always gaily, or with at least the air of gaiety; and even as she rattled on, there was somewhere in her mind a constant little wonder Everything she said seemed to be necessary to support something else she had said. How had it happened?

I don’t think I’ve ever read a book before that so closely examined the process of the liar, the gestures and small comments made to misdirect and influence the behavior of others, the conversational posturing and backpedaling. The dinner party that is Alice’s downfall is the great confluence of her lies and her reality. Sullen servants are hired, the threadbare house is rearranged so the shabbiness is barely concealed, the fancy menu planned which ends up being completely unsuitable for the weather. Unfortunately Alice’s verbal alacrity can’t mask her drab reality, but it takes that visceral a collision to completely undo her delicate net of lies. Oddly, I never get the sense that Tarkington is punishing Alice for her dishonesty in particular. He seems more uncomfortable with her class ambition, almost as if he expects this kind of lying from a young woman on the prowl for a suitable husband.

Alice Adams Is a Debbie Downer

Posted in Alice Adams, Booth Tarkington with tags , on April 30, 2008 by Dreadful Penny

Let me start with Alice Adams’s main good point: it’s an extremely effective book. If its aim is to make the reader cringe, that is. Alice’s self-conscious striving and her mother’s prideful obliviousness make for a heady brew of uncomfortable situations. Observe this passage, wherein Alice must kill time while looking invulnerable during the dance that forms the first major set-piece in the book:

She had now to practice an art that affords but a limited variety of methods, even to the expert: the art of seeming to have an escort or partner when there is none. The practitioner must imply, merely by expression and attitude, that the supposed companion has left her for only a few moments, that she herself has sent him upon an errand; and, if possible, the minds of observers must be directed toward a conclusion that this errand of her devising is an amusing one; at all events, she is alone temporarily and of choice, not deserted. She awaits a devoted man who may return at any instant.

Other people desired to sit in Alice’s nook, but discovered her in occupancy. She had moved the vacant chair closer to her own, and she sat with her arm extended so that her hand, holding her lace kerchief, rested upon the back of this second chair, claiming it. Such a preëmption, like that of a traveller’s bag in the rack, was unquestionable; and, for additional evidence, sitting with her knees crossed, she kept one foot continuously moving a little, in cadence with the other, which tapped the floor. Moreover, she added a fine detail: her half-smile, with the under lip caught, seemed to struggle against repression, as if she found the service engaging her absent companion even more amusing than she would let him see when he returned: there was jovial intrigue of some sort afoot, evidently. Her eyes, beaming with secret fun, were averted from intruders, but sometimes, when couples approached, seeking possession of the nook, her thoughts about the absentee appeared to threaten her with outright laughter; and though one or two girls looked at her skeptically, as they turned away, their escorts felt no such doubts, and merely wondered what importantly funny affair Alice Adams was engaged in. She had learned to do it perfectly.

…The device of the absentee partner has the defect that it cannot be employed for longer than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, and it may not be repeated more than twice in one evening: a single repetition, indeed, is weak, and may prove a betrayal. Alice knew that her present performance could be effective during only this interval between dances; and though her eyes were guarded, she anxiously counted over the partnerless young men who lounged together in the doorways within her view.

Thank you, Mr. Tarkington, for recalling to me some of the more awkward moments in my past. (Not that I’ve ever been a turn-of-the-century cotillion wallflower, but let’s just figure that most book bloggers have suffered through at least one school dance holding up the wall. Perhaps, for example, an 8th-grade dance in which one’s quasi-date only danced with one for half of “Lady in Red” and one spent most of the evening drinking fifty-cent cups of orange soda and subsequently running to the bathroom. But one digresses.)

You have to imagine that Tarkington was a pretty damn fine observer of human foibles to be so spot-on here, but I wish he’d deployed it with greater sympathy towards his characters. I don’t get the sense that he finds Alice’s situation tragic, but rather appropriate comeuppance for a girl trying so blatantly to enter the upper class. It seems uncharitable to present the reader with so clearly painted an object of derision as poor Alice. So, alas, Tarkington’s ability to portray this kind of discomfort in attempted upward mobility also makes his book an extremely doleful read.

Alice Adams: Summary

Posted in Alice Adams, Booth Tarkington on April 25, 2008 by Diablevert

DP’s been sick and then on hols, so it’s been a bit lonesome round these parts. I believe she has a bit more to say on the erstwhile Age o’ Inn, which will doubtless be stimulating, but I can’t stand the tumbleweeds no more. And so it is my dreary duty to summarize for you Booth Tarkington’s Alice Adams.

Ah, Alice Adams. Let me just pause here a minute and fully savor my memories of it. Uck. Now I feel like I ought to spit.

The book concerns the career of one Alice Adams, natch, as she reaches a crucial turning point of her life. It’s the early 1900s, she’s in her early 20s, and in Middle American City (pssst…it’s Indianapolis, Tarkington’s home town) that means she’s got to find a guy to marry fairly quick, or she’s going to become an old maid. It doesn’t help that although she went to school and hung out with an upper-class crowd growing up, the city’s been growing and many of her friend’s families have been getting richer, while Alice’s dad is still stuck in the same high-level clerk job at the local factory that he’s had for years. Her old pals can afford cars, clothes and European vacations; Alice has to scrounge in the public parks for violets to make a bouquet to take with her to the dance she’s invited to in the opening scene of the book.

Luckily she still has her looks, however, which is enough to turn the head of a visiting stranger at that same dance, and when Alice runs into him in town the next day, she hooks in and starts doing her level best to charms the pants off him (not literally, it’s the Aughts). Arthur Russell, the smitten stranger, is due to become a partner at a big factory in town, and Alice knows he’s about her best ticket out of her folk’s house. So she does her best to conceal her family’s down-on-their heels status and keep Russell all to herself, warning him not to believe any talk he hears about her around town.

Meanwhile, her worrywart mother is leaning on her Dad to leave his comfortable position at his company and found a factory of his own, using an industrial formula he worked out on his employer’s behalf but which his boss has never developed. Mrs. Adams realizes that without a shit-ton more money coming in Alice is never going to marry a toff and their son Walter is never going to get to go to college (which doesn’t seem to bother him much; sneered at by the upper classes, Walter sneers right back, and spends his time hanging with a tough crowd from the other side of the tracks).

All this comes together in the book’s climax, when things between Alice and her beau have gotten serious enough that she has to invite him over to dinner to meet the folks. (Previously he’s never made it past the front porch.) Alice and her mom’s attempts at sparkle are rubbed off right quick to reveal the shabbiness underneath, giving Russell serious doubts about her suitability as bride. His former employer brings the hammer down on her Dad’s new business, smothering the thing in its cradle and wrecking the family finances. And brother Walter goes on the lam, as it’s revealed that he’s been nicking from the till at work to cover gambling debts.

And so the book ends with everything gone pear-shaped, and Alice staring at the stairs of the shop front business college, preparing for life as a secretary, while her broken family are preparing to take in borders to make the rent.