{"id":54,"date":"2002-07-25T15:06:32","date_gmt":"2002-07-25T19:06:32","guid":{"rendered":"\/?p=54"},"modified":"2006-06-22T10:12:23","modified_gmt":"2006-06-22T14:12:23","slug":"enough-salinger-already","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/?p=54","title":{"rendered":"Enough Salinger Already"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>My girlfriend and I saw <span class=\"booktitle\">Tadpole<\/span> the other night. It&#8217;s not terrible, but the main character, a 15-year-old Manhattan boarding-school student who pines after his stepmother and reads <span class=\"booktitle\">Candide<\/span> in translation despite his alleged fluency in French, brought back Holden Caulfield to me like a bad oyster. (Note to <span class=\"booktitle\">Tadpole<\/span> director Gary Winick: <b>nobody<\/b> prepares grilled cheese sandwiches in advance.)<\/p>\n<p>Holden was 17 in 1951, which means that, like a lot of his fans, not to mention his creator, he&#8217;s collecting Social Security. Salinger too is retired; he had the good sense to stop writing when he had nothing left to say. So can we retire Salingeriana and Salinger retreads too? Would that be OK? <\/p>\n<p>What everyone remembers about Holden is his passion, his positive mania, for sniffing out everything &#8220;phony.&#8221; This keeps him very busy, which is good because he has nothing else to do. Ernie the piano player is a phony because he puts in too many arpeggios. His roommate is a phony because he&#8217;s vain and stupid and succeeds with girls by sounding sincere. The guy across the hall is a phony because he describes a great basketball player as having &#8220;the perfect build for basketball.&#8221; A girl he dates is a phony because she likes the Lunts and says &#8220;grand&#8221; too often. (Here Holden may have a point.) A teacher he used to like is a phony because he turns out to be an alcoholic homosexual who married for money.<\/p>\n<p>Now all of these people are ghastly in their own way. But showing off is one thing, and vanity is another, and envy is a third, and affectation is something else. It gets us nowhere to lump these traits together and call them &#8220;phony.&#8221; This can&#8217;t be chalked up to Holden&#8217;s adolescent argot either. &#8220;Phoniness&#8221; recurs constantly in Salinger, no matter which book, no matter who&#8217;s narrating. <\/p>\n<p>In Salinger&#8217;s universe only children are never phony. It helps to be dead too. The only truly sympathetic characters in <span class=\"booktitle\">Catcher in the Rye<\/span> outside of Holden himself are his sister Phoebe and his late brother Allie, a sort of proto-Seymour Glass who died of leukemia and wrote poems on his baseball glove in green ink.<\/p>\n<p>This harping on &#8220;phoniness&#8221; is indispensable to Salinger&#8217;s continuing appeal. For all Holden&#8217;s modesty, his ejaculations of &#8220;I&#8217;m an idiot, I&#8217;m a madman,&#8221; at bottom he feels superior to the phonies and provokes the same feeling in the reader. And Salinger&#8217;s settings, fancy boarding schools and prestigious colleges, intensify the feeling by elevating the baseline. It&#8217;s always pleasant to feel superior, and especially pleasant to feel superior to the Ivy League. And the beauty part, for the reader, is that no actual achievement, no <em>objective<\/em> superiority, is required: it&#8217;s all a matter of having your heart in the right place. (Many readers also appreciate that you can kill the complete works in a couple afternoons.)<\/p>\n<p>But whatever else you can say about <span class=\"booktitle\">Catcher in the Rye<\/span>, at least no member of the Glass family appears. Here&#8217;s a typical example of middle-period Salinger. Salinger is writing in the person of Buddy Glass, in <span class=\"booktitle\">Seymour: An Introduction<\/span>: <\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>It seems to me indisputably true that a good many people, the wide world over, of varying ages, cultures, natural endowments, respond with a special impetus, a zing, even, in some cases, to artists and poets who as well as having a reputation for producing great or fine art have something garishly Wrong with them as persons: a spectacular flaw in character or citizenship, a construably romantic affliction or addiction &#8212; extreme self-centeredness, marital infidelity, stone-deafness, stone-blindness, a terrible thirst, a mortally bad cough, a soft spot for prostitutes, a partiality for grand-scale adultery or incest, a certified or uncertified weakness for opium or sodomy, and so on, God have mercy on the lonely bastards. If suicide isn&#8217;t at the top of the list of compelling infirmities for creative men, the suicide poet or artist, one can&#8217;t help noticing, has always been given a very considerable amount of avid attention, not seldom on sentimental grounds almost exclusively, as if he were (to put it much more horribly than I really want to) the floppy-earned runt of the litter. It&#8217;s a thought, anyway, <em>finally said<\/em>, that I&#8217;ve lost sleep over many times, and possibly will again.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>This passage is not the best in the Glass works but it is by no means the worst. The comment on his own fervent and rather ghoulish admirers is amusing &#8212; Salinger, like the sainted eldest Glass, Seymour, is a sort of suicide poet himself &#8212; but let&#8217;s look at the style for a second. <\/p>\n<p>Salinger&#8217;s books, like many thin volumes, have earned him an undeserved reputation for brevity. In fact, as this passage shows, he is a gasbag. Sentence for sentence, he&#8217;s right in there with Thomas Wolfe; he just doesn&#8217;t write as many sentences. The snobbish qualification &#8220;to put it much more horribly than I really want to&#8221; is characteristic. He can&#8217;t think of anything better than &#8220;floppy-eared runt&#8221; yet he wants to let his reader know, <em>sotto voce<\/em>, that he isn&#8217;t really happy with it either. One might object that this is the voice of Buddy Glass, not Salinger himself; but in <span class=\"booktitle\">Franny and Zooey<\/span>, where he&#8217;s narrating on his own account, he writes exactly the same way.<\/p>\n<p>Then there&#8217;s the jumbo list of authorial flaws in the middle of the paragraph. Salinger likes lists. <span class=\"booktitle\">Franny and Zooey<\/span> has one, of the contents of the Glass family medicine cabinet, that&#8217;s nearly three times this long and apropos of nothing.<\/p>\n<p>Not having read Salinger in fifteen years I didn&#8217;t remember how awful, how self-conscious, how <em>snobbish<\/em> the style is; how full it is of parenthetical throat-clearing, pedantic qualifications, go-nowhere asides, shuck and jive. <\/p>\n<p>Only the Glasses, among the adults in Salinger, get a phoniness pass. As Zooey says to Franny, &#8220;Whatever we are, we&#8217;re not fishy [phony], buddy.&#8221; This is partly because of their surpassing brilliance, which, like most surpassing brilliance in literature, we have to take mostly on faith; and partly because they&#8217;re more like overgrown child prodigies than actual adults. (All the Glasses appeared as children on a quiz show called &#8220;It&#8217;s a Wise Child.&#8221; Wisdom&#8230;children&#8230;get it?) But the Glasses, like Holden, are all potential, no achievement; all faith and no good works. What do they amount to as adults? Buddy, a literature professor at a cow college. Franny, a student and aspiring actress prone to fainting spells when near vulgarity. Zooey, a television actor. Boo Boo, a Tuckahoe housewife. Walt, dead in the war; Waker, a Jesuit priest. And finally Seymour himself, a suicide at 31. (He leaves 184 double haikus, and they are brilliant, masterly, Buddy tells us so. He can&#8217;t actually print any of them, though, legal matter you understand. The trouble with having a literary genius as a character is that you can&#8217;t show much of his <em>ouevre<\/em>, beyond the occasional letter or piece of juvenilia, without being a literary genius yourself.)<\/p>\n<p>And what sort of wisdom do these Wise Children impart to us? I yield the floor to Zooey, who finally snaps his sister Franny out of her religious mania with this:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;ll tell you a terrible secret &#8212; Are you listening to me? <em>There isn&#8217;t anyone out there who isn&#8217;t Seymour&#8217;s Fat Lady.<\/em> That includes your Professor Tupper, buddy. And all his goddam cousins by the dozens. There isn&#8217;t anyone <em>any<\/em>where that isn&#8217;t Seymour&#8217;s Fat Lady. Don&#8217;t you know that? Don&#8217;t you know that goddam secret yet? And don&#8217;t you know &#8212; <em>listen<\/em> to me, now &#8212; <em>don&#8217;t you know who that Fat Lady really is?<\/em> &#8230;Ah, buddy. Ah, buddy. It&#8217;s Christ Himself. Christ Himself, buddy.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>All of a sudden we&#8217;re not supposed to feel superior any more. We&#8217;re supposed to feel humble, because Christ is in us and of us. Gosh, I never heard that before. There&#8217;s something cheap about this sort of fake wisdom, something tawdry, meretricious, something&#8230;what&#8217;s the word I&#8217;m looking for? Phony. That&#8217;s it. <\/p>\n<p>(<b>Update:<\/b> I posted this, in <a href=\"http:\/\/blogcritics.org\/archives\/2002\/09\/25\/093723.php#20020925093723\">a slightly different form<\/a>, on BlogCritics, which inspired <a href=\"http:\/\/rodneywelch.blogspot.com\/2002_09_22_rodneywelch_archive.html#82100602\">Rodney Welch<\/a> to comment.)<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>My girlfriend and I saw Tadpole the other night. It&#8217;s not terrible, but the main character, a 15-year-old Manhattan boarding-school student who pines after his stepmother and reads Candide in translation despite his alleged fluency in French, brought back Holden Caulfield to me like a bad oyster. (Note to Tadpole director Gary Winick: nobody prepares <a href='https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/?p=54' class='excerpt-more'>[&#8230;]<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-54","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","category-1-id","post-seq-1","post-parity-odd","meta-position-corners","fix"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/54","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=54"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/54\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=54"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=54"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.godofthemachine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=54"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}