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SECOND THOUGHTS
– THE HINDU
Reluctant writers
BY
NAVTEJ SARNA
A
look at writers who have disappointed literary audiences after their
first promise, either out of choice or otherwise.
Legend,
however, has it that he has continued to write in a disciplined
fashion, a few hours every morning, in his rural retreat in New
Hampshire.
Famous
recluse: J.D.Salinger has not been interviewed since 1980.
THE allure of a literary recluse is
difficult to resist, particularly in a world where authors are falling
over each other to be in the centre of the ever so transient spotlight
and get themselves interviewed, photographed, awarded. The writer who
ca n produce a masterpiece and then, instead of starting off on a
multi-city book tour, just walk away from it all, sets himself apart
from the pack and inevitably becomes a mysterious figure, the stuff of
legends.
Quitting while ahead is easier said
than done. And in recent times at least, nobody seems to have done it
better than J. D. Salinger, the highly acclaimed and famously private
author of the adolescent classic The Catcher in the Rye (1951).
While the teenaged narrator of the The Catcher…, Holden
Caulfield, became one of the most successful characters of modern
literature, the book met with controversy, critical acclaim and then
ultimately commercial success, finding its way on recommended reading
lists of high schools and have-to-read lists of angst ridden
teenagers. By some count it still sells a quarter million copies every
year; troubled adolescence is a forever theme.
Obsessed
with privacy
There were other quick books from
Salinger — essentially anthologies of his stories first published in
The New Yorker — Franny and Zoeey, Nine Stories, Raise
High the Roofbeam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction.
But he made a voluntary decision not to publish anything else after a
story in The New Yorker in 1965. Legend, however, has it that
he has continued to write in a disciplined fashion, a few hours eve ry
morning, in his rural retreat in New Hampshire. The manuscripts
reportedly pile up, with neatly labelled editing instructions, in
floor to ceiling safes.
Nobody is to know the truth. Salinger
has not been interviewed since 1980 and he has rarely been
photographed or even seen. Moreover, he has proactively resisted, at
times through legal means, all attempts of biographers and publishers
to bring out anything which would throw light on his personal life.
So intense has been his obsession to
keep away from the public eye that when The Catcher in the Rye
was coming out in the U.S., he was hiding away in London. Nevertheless
he could not stop Joan Maynard’s kiss-and-tell autobiog raphy At
Home in the World in which she talks about her love affair with
the famous writer when he was 53 and she barely 18. This has been
followed up by Dream Catcher: A Memoir by Margaret Salinger,
the writer’ ;s daughter from his second wife. Margaret explores
several Salinger myths including his interest in macrobiotics,
homeopathy, acupuncture, meditation, Christian Science and so on.
Actually, it’s the song — Here’s to Life — that best sums it
up:
Hey there Salinger, what did you
do?/Just when the world was looking at you/To write anything, that
meant anything/You told us you were through….
Other writers too have disappointed
literary audiences after their first promise, either out of choice or
otherwise. Ralph Ellison made a pioneering effort to explore black
identity in 1952 with Invisible Man but could not complete his
follow up book. Harper Lee, author of the classic To Kill a
Mockingbird, never brought out another book though she did mention
the possibility in two brief interviews in the early 1960s. The
intensely private Thomas Pynchon, who ha s never been interviewed,
went silent for 17 years after his early novels before becoming
prolific again in the nineties. In fact Pynchon’s fans began to
think that he did not exist, that he was actually Salinger, that he
was only a computer programme!
But the reclusive shadow that I am
chasing is Henry Green (actually Henry Yorke). Yorke was an aristocrat
and an industrialist producing beer bottling machines. At night, in
long hand, he wrote nine books that were to be ranked among the best
of his times, rich with the legacy of D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf.
Fearing that he would be killed in the Second World War, he even wrote
an early memoir Pack My Bag at age 35. Though he survived the
war, he could not handle the writer 217;s block that set in
thereafter and quit writing when he was 47, well ahead in the game. He
told an interviewer: “I find it so exhausting now I simply can’t
do it anymore.” The man whom V.S. Pritchett has described as “the
most gifted prose writer of his generation” took increasingly to
drink. He lost the directorship in his company to his young son,
retired to his house, changed into his carpet slippers and just stayed
in. He read novels borrowed from a department store, drank gin, let
his teeth rot and watched sports programmes on television. He did not
do any writing and allowed people to photograph him only from the
rear.
Making
a mark
But his slim body of work had made
its mark. The novels — Loving, Living, Blindness, Caught,
Concluding, Party Going — each title as clear as a pistol shot
on a winter night, slip in and out of print. Critics and publish ers
may change their views about Green but fellow writers do not. If
Somerset Maugham and the other Greene (Graham) are often called
writer’s writers, then Henry Green is “a writer’s writer’s
writer.” No wonder he has been acclaimed as a genius by the likes of
John Updike, Evelyn Waugh, W.H. Auden and so on. I am halfway through Loving
and it’s easy to understand why. Clearly he demands more of the
reader’s attention than say, Greene.
Theme is a distant shadow,
description is nominal and there is little by way of plot or overt
action, though a lot still seems to go on. Gradually one discovers
that the author has made himself invisible, letting the characters
create themselves or fail in the process, refusing to sit on judgment
upon them or setting up moral standards for them to reach.
Here one need not look for the story
but for the rhythm of the prose, the quiet humour, unfailingly
convincing dialogue, sensuous and fresh imagery.
His writing stands up easily to his
own definition, a definition so true that I would like to pin it above
my desk:
“Prose is not to be read aloud
but to oneself at night, and it is not quick as poetry, but rather a
gathering web of insinuation…Prose should be a long intimacy between
strangers…It should slowly appeal to feelings unexpre ssed, it
should in the end draw tears out of stone.”
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