02.18.11

THUNDERTOME: ROUND 34

SURVIVOR: rabbit at rest (john updike)*
CHALLENGER: lit (mary karr)

i'm new to the one-two-three punch of mary karr's trio of memoirs (the liars' club, cherry, and lit), but i knew from the beginning that i'd prefer her to elizabeth eat, pray, love gilbert;** i knew karr's story would eventually involve david foster wallace, for one thing, and for another i was completely unable to imagine what her gelato-eating face looks like. karr also did a fairly decent job of convincing me that her motivation was at least as kapow- as it is cha-ching-based (liz gilbert, i'm looking at you again):
"I threw this book away twice," Karr says. "I walked around in my bathrobe for three days and made obscene gestures at the rafters. And there are a couple people I call at such times, sort of the way the president would push the red button. I'd call these people. So I called Don DeLillo, and DeLillo sends me a postcard that says 'write or die.' " Karr's reply speaks volumes about her thick-skinned perspective and dark humor. "I think I sent him one back that said 'write and die.' "
setting aside the fact that no one should write to don delillo, karr sold me on the idea that she decided she needed to tell us about becoming a drunk, a wife, a mother, a writer, a teetotaler, and a catholic, not necessarily in that order.

here's where that gets problematic, and i apologize in advance (this once) for a major excerpt. in an introduction to a published version of his screenplay for an education, nick hornby had some terribly interesting things to say about adapting lynn barber's memoir:
[B]y its very nature, memoir presents a challenge, consisting as it does of an adult mustering all the wisdom he or she can manage to look back at an earlier time in life. Almost all of us become wiser as we get older, so we can see pattern and meaning that we would not have been able to see at the time. Memoirists know it all, but the people they are writing about know next to nothing.

We become other things, too, as well as wise: more articulate, more cynical, less naive, more or less forgiving, depending on how things have turned out for us. The Lynn Barber who wrote the memoir - a celebrated journalist, known for her perspicacious, funny, occasionally devastating profiles of celebrities - shouldn't be audible in the voice of the central character in our film, not least because, as Lynn says in her essay, it was the very experiences that she was describing that formed the woman we know. In other words, there was no 'Lynn Barber' until she had received the eponymous education. Oh, this sounds obvious to the point of banality: a sixteen-year-old girl should sound different from her sixty-year-old self. What is less obvious, perhaps, is the way the sixty-year-old self seeps into every brush-stroke of the self-portrait in a memoir. Sometimes even the dialogue that Lynn provided for her younger version - perfectly plausible on the page - sounded too hard-bitten, when I thought about a living, breathing young actress saying the words.
somehow, karr hops back and forth between Wastrel Mary and Memoirist Mary in a way that makes both of those selves less knowable and less interesting. the first chapter, in which she has the shit scared out of her (and the her scared out of california) while hitchhiking along the beach at 17, gave me a sense of how good her other memoirs must be; too many of the other chapters are cutesy peek-a-boo games ("[m]y thesis advisor, louise [glück], baked ornate pastries at home, then sold them in local shops or restaurants") about writing programs and famous friends (if you're hanging out with, say, tobias wolff, just say you're hanging out with tobias wolff***). calling her ex-husband (the poet michael milburn, who agreed to a pseudonym in lieu of vetting karr's manuscript) "warren whitbread" auto-caricatures him (so much for a nuanced portrait of that marriage), mentioning that she, robert lowell, and anne sexton had been institutionalized at the same hospital trivializes...everyone, i think, and karr more or less loses my sympathy long before her moment of clarity and conversion to catholicism. which sucks, because sprinkled in with her didi-and-gogo, "don't question me! don't speak with me! stay with me!" show and tell are some really marvelous descriptions. her account of flying home to texas for her father's funeral, the horrible, hollow-stomached relief you feel when a long-suffering loved one finally dies, is wonderful. her much-anticipated (by me, anyway) run-ins with a puppyish david foster wallace, moreover, are just the details i want:
[on divvying up stolen cupcake frosting after an alcoholics anonymous meeting for which part of their carpool fell off the wagon]

David? I say, leaning forward.

Yes, ma'am. He turns down the radio.

Any chance you cadged that frosting?

Gross, Gerry says. You're not gonna eat that.

David unzips his backpack, flips off the frosting lid, and hands it back, saying, I feel like I should wipe the edge on my T-shirt. You know, sanitize it.

Taking the can, I dig in and run my finger around the edge, then stick it in my mouth just as Gerry's hand reaches back, hovering for the handoff.
karr's charming when asking her readers to make small emotional investments, but when she gets to lit's big sell - her sobriety and submission to a higher power after a number of signs - her salesmanship dries up. good - nay, miraculous - things (jobs, grants, interested agents) happen to her after she prays for them, but we never quite believe she's the slacker she says she is: though she's "unhindered by a high school diploma" and admits that she's "published one slim volume of verses and some essays, but so has every other semiliterate writer in cambridge," her fortune's pretty clearly not falling from the sky. then again, does it matter that i'm not buying her story? as i avoided this review by reading up on karr around the web, i found the slate interview in which she says she "didn't [write lit] to help anybody. I did it for the money. I did it because I’m greedy and I like living in New York." oh, that thick-skinned perspective and dark humor! i'm having a hard time feeling something after all.


VICTOR: updike; he's like three mary karrs tall, or was, and would flatten her with a description of septuagenarian golfers while she fumbled for a salty texas epithet.

as lit was the last book i finished in december, that means...rabbit at rest was the best book i read last year, and updike is the first inhabitant of THUNDERTOME valhalla. clear the arena for 2011! (two months late, but shh.)


imaginary reading group discussion questions

01 how would you respond to a WRITE OR DIE postcard from don delillo?

02 if you've read karr, do you buy her modesty?

03 would you share frosting with a casual carpool?

04 if you could get away with referring to a literary light by a nickname in mixed company, to whom would you refer, and what would you call them? dibs on peaches hemingway.

05 if you were spending a week in iceland at the end of march, how many hours would you be willing to spend on an off-season bus to see necropants (defined below****)?

06 would you wear necropants?


*previous battle here.

**full disclosure: i haven't read all of eat, pray, love, though i have read committed. it was okay.

***unless you're a stanford undergrad, in which case you should know that talking about "tobi" makes you look like alex trebek when he pronounces something in spanish.

****"Of all the strange displays at the Museum of Icelandic Sorcery & Witchcraft, perhaps the most bizarre is a plastic replica of the legendary 'necropants' - trousers made from the skin of a dead man's legs and groin. It was commonly believed that the necropants would spontaneously produce money when worn, so long as the donor made an honest verbal agreement that his corpse could be skinned upon his death. Once dead and buried, the donor corpse had to be unearthed at the dead of night, then a magic rune and a coin from a poor widow...were placed in the dead man's scrotum.

The necropants brought incredible wealth to [their] wearer - anytime money was needed, one could reach down into the scrotal area and...voila! There was a catch, however; if you were to die wearing the necropants, your soul would be condemned to roam the earth until the end of time." (lonely planet iceland, 7th ed.)

16 comments:

wabes said...

you must find out the icelandic for necropants, post-haste.  it must have the makings of a good exclamation, as with "[necropants!] i lost my mobile," etc. etc.  la gadda is in thailand, or she'd back me up...

kidchamp said...

nábrók! i contacted paul immediately upon learning of necropants, as one does, and he immediately hunted about and translated a bunch of icelandic on it, as he does.

Amanda said...

01 SEZ YOU
02 ---
03 People who have worked in restaurants will share anything (food-wise).
04 Seymour
05 Zero
06 Certainly not, though they assuredly qualify as used leather, should you care to.

holli. said...

1. "ride or die" along with 1990s music video montage of OG rappers grunting the same sentiment

2. i have not.

3. i second amanda's emotion

4. ruddy kiplings

5. none.

6. go big or go home..??

esb said...

i'm completely scarred by the necropants. i can go no further.

esb said...

i will say this: the beginning of your review made me want to read the memoir, and by the end i felt certain i could skip it. so... job well done?

Milkmaid's dumb friend said...

01: *loved* End Zone – write anything after that? 04: Euri-PD, Sophty and Aeschylicious. 06: It’s exasperating but I’m forced to. Sadly, money from my scrotum does not appear forthcoming in these Wranglers.  (And in the event I’m hit by a car while walking in the street, I’m not looking forward to insisting adamantly to any pedestrian witnesses nearby that they please quickly take my pants off of me, then muttering something about the end of time and they’re welcome to any currency they find down in my crotch.)

Amanda said...

DO NOT TALK ABOUT WRANGLERS.

jacob said...

also, if mr. wolff sits down next to you at an english dept. meet-and-greet, and introduces himself as "tobi," and you don't immediately recognize him, and you ask him what he teaches, and he pauses and says, "the short story," and you still don't recognize him, "tobi" gets a bit annoyed.

01 i'd send him a postcard of the most photographed barn in america.

05 considering my queasy visit to the mutter museum - seriously, why can't they get it on loan from iceland, that's totally up their alley and iceland needs the money - i'd say not too many.

kidchamp said...

A and H, this is good news! i have many things floating around at the bottom of my purse which i shall now invite you to eat with me when next we meet. (it's mostly clean in there.) when i was volunteering at the manhattan cocktail classic a few years ago, i ended up sharing lunch with the catering staff back in the astor center kitchen. the way they dismantled and fed each other (and me) pizza was a marvelous thing: it was like a water ballet performed by pirahnas.

MDF, i smell a rap collective. while it's no "either these drapes go or i do," "i don't know who you are, but i need to be out of these pants" is a pretty good last line.

jacob, it's somehow appropriate that the best other case of "don't you know who i am?" i know involves a men's room at a random manhattan club and leonardo dicaprio

maggie said...

Elena S. used to talk about "Tobi."  But I was never sure if she meant Tobias Wolff or this furry pillow she owned that had the same name.  

Anyway . . . helpful review of the Karr memoir.  I think I am sufficiently annoyed right now by the name-dropping of another memoirist and will have to simmer down before trying Karr.

kidchamp said...

i should note that i will happily talk about wolff to people who pronounce "tobi" with alex trebek's spanish accent. i should probably go easy on people who have been instructed to be familiar with him - TW or trebek, really - but i would also note that there are lots of things i would call, say, steve which i would not call him in mixed company.

oddly, my opinion of karr suffered as the daylight between me and her book grew; i really do enjoy some of what she says, but being coy about her eventual privileges somehow detracts from how frank she is about her initial disadvantages.

Amid Privilege said...

Really I just feel that Mary Karr cheats. I want her to write a book about something boring, no Texans, no alcohol. Then see how she does.

kidchamp said...

that's an interesting way of putting it; this third memoir, given what i know of the previous two, felt in some ways like coasting. lord knows i feel that people who've been through terrible things have earned the right to defray their therapy, but...who knows? here's karr on a county fair; does she compel? 

Rachel (heart of light) said...

I had so many things to say, but the necropants erased everything else. Such is their power.

I think I was going to mention something about how interesting it is to think about the memoirist vs. the person living the moment. Do you know, I took an entire class on memoir in college and I don't think we ever discussed that issue? Although usually, it's very clearly the memoirist throughout,

I don't know. NECROPANTS!

Amid Privilege said...

Yes. I might prefer her poetry, which is odd, since I generally don't like poetry much and it feels like cheating to me. Cut out words, increase feeling. Which brings up the point that all of this may be my own issue with the cheating of others.