Monday, December 28, 2015

Movie break (Quick Vu): Geek heaven: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), Part 1 of 2

I should know better than to promise a review of a film that I haven’t even seen yet, when my usual process for reviewing films (or books) to do blog entries can be such a seemingly-chancy, sometimes too-involved process. Even my multi-part review of Chris Welles Feder’s memoir of her father Orson Welles, the first two parts of which are on my other blog, was a sort of labor of love, and it was on a book that was the first I read cover to cover in pretty quick fashion in years; and yet, my delivering the entries seemed something I couldn’t fully promise until I was virtually ready to do so.

And you, if you’ve followed my other blog, are probably fed up with my Orson Welles entries, and believe me, I have entries on plenty of other topics to deliver. But it’s a sort of sign of health of my blog-writing process that (subjectively seen) I seem to have a tough time getting my ducks in a row, when actually (more objectively) the process is probably about as diligent and timely as it can be under the circumstances.


Some historical moorings

When it comes to Star Wars, I am not a diehard fan, but also (as of recently) I knew for years what the whole thing was pretty much about, so actually, without having seen it, I’ve already “seen this film partway.” Unlike the director of the current installment, J. J. Abrams, I didn’t see the first installment in 1977, though I did see the second, The Empire Strikes Back, in 1980. I did not fall head over heels in love with the whole shebang when it initially came out (1977-83), but as with so much in pop culture, I got a sort of “literacy” in it, or “conversant ability” about it, without following it terribly closely, so I could sort of appreciate it as a cultural phenomenon without being a fan. (I also saw all three “prequels” [1999, 2002, 2005] in a several-year period in which I happened to be seeing a lot of films in the theater, which meant I saw a lot of relative “also-rans.”)

Star Wars—maybe Star Trek is the same way—is sort of like sports for me; in a most fundamental sense, I don’t really care that much about mainstream sports—and I think, especially, that football is pretty barbaric. But in the U.S., sports has a way of being presented in the media like predigested corn flakes, so as a result you can have some “abiding understanding” of it while not caring much about it, or even disliking it to some extent. (For instance, sports reporting on the TV news I find, generally, a bore, but somehow my brain picks up enough of the basic bits of info spewed out that, in various contexts, I recognize players’ names without really following their careers too closely. [End note])

What I remember about the first Star Wars film—which the 2015 installment is said to fairly closely mimic—when it came out is that it was a big hit, but—to my 15-year-old mind at the time—it seemed to take a left turn as far as movies about outer space were concerned. I do recall seeing 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) on TV when it was shown there in spring 1977 (and I remember a certain set of kids at high school discussing it in a sort of interpreting-the-occult way that wasn’t the kind of geek fandom that would eventually follow Star Wars; for 2001, it was more a kind of literary-critical attitude [think of the “New Criticism”] that overlapped with a sort of weird mysticism). And in the ’70s there were enough films with outer-space settings—like Silent Running (1973?)—that tried to depict space phenomena as real-life as possible, while also injecting questioning or dystopian themes, that to take a bluntly fantasy or “space opera” approach to a story then seemed dopey and long superseded.

When Star Wars came out, I didn’t go to see it—I and my family generally didn’t go to see films in theaters much that year, or until 1979—but I remember that some music from it was played in some kind of rotation on WABC, the big Top 40 radio station in the NYC metro area. This reflected that the film was a big, big hit.

When Empire came out, I and some friends like Joe Coles were enough apt to go to movies fairly regularly by that year that several of us trooped off to see it. Not that we were big Star Wars geeks; we may have been geeks, but not for that film franchise.


Some basic premises

One key thing about the Star Wars series that some people could be slow to get—I remember some close associates who didn’t see any of the series until maybe within the past 15 years, and then they were surprised by the banality of the dialogue, which missed one big point of the series—is that it both (1) imitated/patched-together tropes and script approaches of old-time (1930s) Saturday adventure-movie kitsch and other pulpish, outer-space stuff; and (2) added to it with its own new brew of storylines, premises, and such. So to balk at the script banality—it would have been like reacting to a Marx Brothers or, better, a Three Stooges routine and complaining, “There’s some slapstick here, isn’t there!”

In the 1970s, the group of writer/directors who felt they could remake cinema—like Francis Ford Coppola and, in his way, George Lucas—found themselves bumping into the problem of, no matter how much innovation you tried to bring to moviemaking, you still were faced with having to embrace old-time genres that the films had used for decades. (This sort of issue is discussed in the book by Peter Biskind, Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs, & Rock ’n’ Roll Generation Saved Hollywood [New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998], though I haven’t been able to refer to that book for a couple years or so.)

For his own part, George Lucas decided—heading away from associating closely and creatively with Francis when, galvanized by the success and cultural cachet of his Godfather films, the latter started working on Apocalypse Now—to fully go in the direction of making a very genre-embracing, young-viewer-aimed film that recycled a lot of old tropes, in a way that, perhaps, dismayed or embarrassed his colleagues who were more about doing adult-aimed, edgy films. Thus Star Wars was born. And Lucas seemed to hit on something; the film was a big enough hit that Empire and The Return of the Jedi (1983) became not only commercially bankable but almost expected by the film market (not least because Lucas had promised a plan by which there would be several installments, anyway).

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That is my own thumbnail sketch based on what I knew of the films when I was a budding film critic in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Star Wars fans could explain, justify, elaborate on, etc., the whole phenomenon—especially as it grew post-1983—better than I can.

In Part 2, after I have seen the film (whenever that is), I hope to just give an open-minded review of something I’ve seen just once in the theater, which means, from me, not the most incisive review you’ve ever seen.

Before I go, maybe I don’t need much correction on this: from all the stuff that’s been said about this film in the media, it seems the marketing points the makers had to check off, for this film, are:

(1) in place of a ’70s-hunk Luke Skywalker, a new trope for today: the young female “power waif” (played by Daisy Ridley) in a fantasy story, a muted-sexuality role model of sorts, which was somewhat heralded by Kristen Stewart as Bella in the Twilight films, and brought to full fruition by Jennifer Lawrence in the Hunger Games films and imitated by Shailene Woodley in those (whatever) fantasy-series films she started working in;

(2) as an ex-stormtrooper (played by John Boyega) somewhat on a par with (I think) Han Solo; he is also a Black character who, as befits the desire to appeal to a wide audience (not least in the non-Black foreign market), comes from a disciplined background and is a nice-to-us hearty soul; and

(3) the cute robot (BB-8 in this film), in place of R2-D2, to appeal to the three-year-olds in the audience (and end up in some form under the Christmas tree).

As I write this, I feel like I’m being forced to care for something that I might have opted to skip….

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End note. I saw on the New York Times Web site today that Meadowlark Lemon, the longtime Harlem Globetrotter, had died. I had forgotten about him, but yes, I remember he was the star player of the Globetrotters, especially when there was, I think, a cartoon version about them on TV for kinds in the 1970s.

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Everyday People: First up: What’s to see in the holiday season

This is the first is an occasional series, which could appear on both my Blogger blogs as suits the tenor of each blog. This series will try to tack away from my doing entries that (because, often, they are on complex movies) are maybe more fancy, refined, stylized, or whatever, than you want. With this series, in hopefully short entries, I will focus on everyday stuff, somewhat as I did with my “Getting the Knack” entries I did starting almost a year ago.

The “Everyday People” heading, for no pointed reason, alludes to the song by Sly and the Family Stone, but the commonality between that song and this blog would usually be pretty thin. You don’t have to like Sly and the Family Stone, nor even share such Baby Boomer values as giving a fig what the Mamas and the Papas did when they had their life-changing experience of taking LSD in about 1966 or whenever. (Can it be some in the generation born in 1945-64 thought that sort of thing, as experienced by themselves or their favorite pop group, was a “historical moment”?)


A dinner party

I was at a dinner party of sorts last weekend, never mind among whom. One of the attendees was a new neighbor on our street, whom I was meeting for the first time. Among much other conversational ground covered, I found it a bit refreshing that she referred to the “JAP” (Jewish American Princess) concept—and that in no less a way than referring to herself, liberally, as one (or as having been one, way back when).

I so infrequently encounter people in my walkabout “travels” who know about that concept. As I made pains to point out in previous blog entries, this concept, as I knew it in the 1980s, wasn’t anti-Semitic, as the relevant Wikipedia article (see here, and scroll down a bit) tends to suggest now. It was a term used (in the late 1970s and early 1980s, at least) mostly by American Jews, about other American Jews. And it referred to what was putatively defined as objectionably shallow, status-conscious Jews—usually females, but it could also apply to males (as in “Jewish American Prince”). It meant a sort of inauthentic Jew. I understood the concept without feeling it was anti-Semitic to use the term, as was liberally done at George Washington University when I attended (1980-85). And the concept was such that fellow students could even refer, as they deemed appropriate, to “Christian JAPs”—against, shallow, status-conscious types.

How, exactly, the dinner-party guest last weekend meant this term in relation to how I’d understood it, I’m not fully sure. The point didn’t last long in the conversation.

Another interesting bit in that dinner party was a passing, high-handed comment made by someone else, which in the days afterward didn’t occur to me as worth discussing, as I did with someone who had also attended, until just the other day (Tuesday?). The high-handed comment was in response to my saying to the woman just mentioned that when I went to college, as hard as I’d worked in high school, I needed to learn a new way to study when in college. The high-handed comment was something like, “You go from 35 hours a week to 25 hours a week,” or something that glib and numbers-related.

Whatever the specific wording, what I think was meant was that the amount of schoolwork from high school to college dropped. And in particular, it seemed to refer to the amount of time in class (because the “25 hours,” which I do recall as being part of the remark, could only apply to that).

However the whole comment was specifically meant, I thought it was ridiculous on a number of counts. I had always been a good student, but had to work hard in both high school and college, in part because I had trouble with concentrating (even today, I can have trouble reading, depending on various conditions). Further, the big difference between high school and college isn’t the amount of time in classrooms, though that is one difference; but with the drop-off in classroom time in college comes much more time spent doing “homework.” And if you take majors that require a lot of reading, you can easily spend a lot more time studying in college than in HS, overall.

I had two majors, and started with English as one major (I dropped it in part because the reading requirements were beyond unreasonable—such as, within a specific course, several big novels like Moby-Dick, Henry James novels, etc., crammed into a semester with other, shorter stuff, not all of which could sensibly and appreciably be read in that time); my majors ended up being psychology and philosophy. With psychology, for me the reading was not intensely hard in quality, but quite voluminous. With philosophy, it was the opposite: lower volume but harder content.

Add to that that I had a paid job (up to two during summers off) almost the entire time in college (it was about 20 hours a week, I think), and I was constantly working. Not much time for social crap. I think plenty of students would say college meant more work than high school, if they were in the same basic boat as I was.


Christmas charm…and disillusionment

As you might expect, Christmas brings me a mixed bag of moods. Sometimes I can be more depressed/anxious during the time, alternating with more fun/appreciative moods. (Also, I have associations of Christmas being a “treacherous” time in that it’s been the period where the most tasteless changes in certain work gigs have happened—such as losing a job, or some other almost-violent development. And this has happened to others with whom I’ve worked, not just to me.)

Without going into detail, one big change for the better for me in the late 1970s was no longer being a “maniac” about getting gifts, which I rather was as a kid (I admit that this puts it in subjective terms: “how much a maniac?” one could ask). I think this is a kind of “losing baby teeth” all American and Christian young have to go through: to go from (1) valuing Christmas in “getting” to (2) appreciating the holiday away from that. I had an especially wrenching version of that change in late 1977 and late 1978—never mind exactly how.

Add to this complexity the fact that, from about 2000 to about 2006, I did a lot to get my nephews the gifts they asked for in Christmases when they were a lot younger, which seemed to go against my “developed Puritanism” regarding Christmas gifts. I thought this strategy was appropriate, when the boys were young, and when “Christmas being a magical time for kids” seemed a worthy enough value when I had the uncle role to fill. They were big on Lego sets, etc. Fortunately, they’ve outgrown that; they’re at ages where one has graduated from college and has his first post-college job, the other is in his second year of college.

My mother, though, is (even at 83) a big one for still putting out all sorts of Christmas decorations at home. And she does it to an extent I have a healthy skepticism for: including tacky (I think) Christmas plates, Christmas-themed hand towels (including a bright red one in the bathroom that I think looks ridiculous, never mind what risk its dye might pose in the laundry), and other such items. (She no longer puts up a small artificial Christmas tree, which is fine by me.) In my own Christmas “skepticism”/mini-depression-related modes, I passingly look at this Christmas decor and think something like, “That’s pretty goyishe.” And I say that as a confirmed Gentile.

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To add to the “earthy” observations, the weirdest Christmas period I ever experienced as an adult was when I worked for Wells Fargo Guard Services in 1989-90, and I was working in what was the Raia quarry in Hamburg, N.J. (it has since gotten another owner). This was a stopgap job I had between a very-short, abortive, farcical time with The Vernon News in summer 1989 and finally starting work (with regular but part-time hours, at first) at a nationally distributing publisher in August 1990. In the Wells Fargo job, from September 1989 to sometime in early spring 1990, my main location (we guards worked several locations in that job, which for me ran from September 1989 to December 1990) was the quarry, and the shifts, about four days a week, were from 5 p.m. to 7 a.m. the next morning (yes, 14 hours in a row, and with no overtime). That was a beastly schedule, one of the last (maybe the last) regular nighttime work scheduled I ever had. (Generally, most of my jobs from 1978 to 1990 were at night, and from 1990, most have been at day.)

So in December 1989, I was sitting in a dusty, small quarry-management building, with crude windows that looked out on the quarry, during the graveyard shift, with winter coming on. The area was as desolate as a desert (a big, momentary deviation was seeing, one time, what might have been a coyote running through). And the radio was on—we had the radio on to help us stay away, as the 14-hour shift was a real test of our ability not to doze off—and it was tuned to a station that played nonstop Christmas music—carols, Bing Crosby-type numbers, etc. If anything could get you permanently sick of Christmas carols, it was hearing that endlessly spooling stuff at 2 in the morning with a brain half-melting from trying to stay awake in a quarry with nothing going on there. It was almost like being in an Army guard house, listening to tacky ethnic music as the only thing that reminded you of something like civilization.


Among my future blog work, what’s to come

I know better now than to make too many promises in this regard, but I had said as far back as early (late winter/spring) 2013 that I would write on the radium-soil protests and related stuff that happened in Vernon Township, N.J., in 1986. This situation, next spring, will be 30 years ago, so maybe next year is a good time to tackle this story.

Monday, December 7, 2015

Movie break: A prelude to action films that flowered in the 1970s: Bullitt (1968)

A 1960s action flick seems both dated and still with educational aspects


I’m going to be really sketchy with this review, in part because of logistics. I got this DVD—actually, a nice new edition with two disks, including a few intriguing extras on the second disk—from a New York State library system that, per its ways, had to get the DVD from out of the local library I frequent (but within the relevant network). When this happens, there can be a severe limit on time borrowing the DVD. In this case, it was four days (it seemed not even); practical realities (including how my computer couldn’t play these disks) meant I had very limited time in which to view this in another location.

As it happens, the cable channel Turner Classic Movies showed this film a week or so ago, and I viewed part of it, and made a mental note to see it on DVD.

When TCM, with Robert Osborne and “Essentials” cohost Sally Field, remarks that this film is notable (almost exclusively) for its star, Steve McQueen, and its car chase (part of a package of appreciating the film’s editing, which won an Academy Award), you know you’re dealing with something that has its limits in terms of edifying qualities. That is, McQueen is fine in this film, in his laconic, hungry-eyes way as Lieutenant Frank Bullitt; the film is known as being where McQueen first became a big star. Today, he seems the most modern-seeming person in the film; with his somewhat rumpled look and intense eyes, he probably struck people as a rather febrile existential hero in the 1960s, and today seems more like an amenable-enough average Joe putting up with the usual shit.

The other feature of this film is its car chase, with Bullitt racing in his sporty Ford Mustang after a couple men who had been essentially tailing Bullitt, perchance to rub him out—they from a shadowy group known as “the organization” which leaves us wondering, “Is this group Mafia? Some East Bloc Soviet-aligned cabal? Some U.S. corporate nastiness?” The car chase is well executed, even by today’s standards; much of it is done in the hilly terrain of San Francisco, which is a star location in the film (one or more buildings may be familiar to those who know the city through Hitchcock’s Vertigo [1958]).


The film seems like a rehearsal for a later hit

The film, actually—however a big a hit it was at the time—seems (in several respects) like a dry run for The French Connection (1971). As is known in film lore surrounding the latter film, director William Friedkin was given the task to make a car chase for FC more exciting than in Bullitt. I think both car chases are on a par; in Bullitt’s case, some camera shots from within a speeding car going down an SF hill made me a little car-sick/dizzy, and I haven’t routinely gotten car-sick in many years.

The producer for both films is the same: Philip D’Antoni. The director for Bullitt is Peter Yates, whose work I don’t think I know; he does a competent, stylish job here, except it struck me that the actors by and large (except, notably, for McQueen) seemed on the colorless side (even Robert Vaughn, who was a big enough star in those days, such as on the TV show The Man from U.N.C.L.E., seems a bit “1960s-smooth, not terribly striking today”). Jacqueline Bisset, enough of a star in her day, seems almost boring in her limited role as the love interest of the work-married Bullitt (she also, in her own right, works in an office that seems like an ad agency, though her cutie outfits show she wasn’t meant to be a liberated woman of the Ms. era).

The film score is provided by Lalo Schifrin, who does light jazz here not terribly unlike Kenny G or some dental-office waiting-room Muzak, but smarter than that (and hopefully less evocative of the dentist’s invasive tools to come). The title sequence is very stylish and clever, evocative of the “hip films” of its day.

(McQueen’s look when he wears a turtleneck reminds us that only in the 1960s could an action hero dress like that.)

I mean, the whole thing seems like stylish action stuff of a period (late ’60s-1970s) that I can more-or-less remember films (or promotional ads) from when I was a kid (I was too young to see this in the theater, and am actually surprised I never saw this film before this year). Kids today (Millennials, let’s say) may think this film seems old-fashioned, or “their father’s cool time,” while to me the film seems stylistically to bridge between (1) the sleek stuff of Hitchcock (think North by Northwest [1959]) and the growing train of James Bond films, and (2) the more ragged, curse-laden action fests that started in the 1970s.


My sketch of the plot, and a look at parading actors

The plot (based on a 1963 novel, Mute Witness) concerns Lt. Bullitt being required to guard a man, Johnnie Ross, who is a supposed star witness in a case against “the organization,” while Robert Vaughn (as Walter Chalmers) seems some government heavy who is the main one wanting the star witness’s role preserved in a government case against the org. Bullitt is the local (San Fran) operative who is street-smart and incidentally can, say, run great distances at an airport without doing more than sweating afterward.

Tensions grow between Vaughn’s Chalmers and Bullitt when it seems there is some double-cross going on: the (criminal) organization tries to kill Ross; and when he suspects Chalmers is behind the machinations whereby Ross is targeted, Bullitt engages in some streetwise protection of interests (including hiding the body of Ross when he has been killed by an organization assassin).

(If my summary seems deficient, the Wikipedia article on the film provides what info I couldn’t catch. E.g., if you search for the film on Google, in the search-results page’s little “sidebar”/blurb-of-sorts, you can find the claim that Chalmers is a senator—I didn’t catch that, thanks to my hasty, tired Sunday viewing.)

The plot seemed intriguingly complex, if also a little opaque—you can compare (1) Bullitt as the streetwise guy really on the trail of who is criminal, rather turned-on by the higher-ups (Chalmers), with the result that a dangerous car chase to get an attempted assassin livens up the experience and sets up the final victorious denouement for Bullitt, with (2) Popeye Doyle of The French Connection, who is intuitively on the trail of a major heroin ring, and doesn’t have his back protected enough by the feds, with the result that he restores life to the case when he chases after (and gets) a dope-ring assassin, again with dangerous driving.

Another shared feature between Bullitt and The French Connection is the presence of Bill Hickman, who in his career was mainly a stunt driver, and for FC did both stunt driving and played Popeye Doyle’s semi-nemesis, the federal agent Mulderig. In Bullitt, Hickman is functioning as the unnamed driver of the car Bullitt chases in the street. Apparently, as did Hickman, McQueen did his own stunt driving (at least part of the time).

Among the 1960s-era actors making featured appearances in Bullitt is Simon Oakland (you might know him as the psychiatrist who turns up with explanations at the end of Psycho [1960]) as Bullitt’s fatherly boss (with short hair almost like a crew cut, again a 1960s idea of a “good guy” the audience would be expected to identify with), and Norman Fell (!) as another police-department boss (I think) whose loyalties in the case seem dubious. (Fell was the suspicious-of-Benjamin rooming-house owner in The Graduate [1967] and later made a hit as a regular character on TV’s Three Company.)

Interestingly, Robert Duvall is in a bit role as a cab driver, who is a little more significant in the story than that sounds.

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This film really seems like the movie industry (Warner Brothers-Seven Arts made this film before the studio regained its creative footing in the 1970s) gearing up for the splashy, sloppy trendsetters of the 1970s (not just The French Connection but the likes of Dirty Harry and other police-procedural stuff that ended up becoming more prolific on TV in later decades). It’s a good period piece, and important for Steven McQueen fans. If you’re a fan of The French Connection, it’s a good warmup.

The car-chase sequence is jolting enough, and the noisy mufflers of the cars remind me that I should do a blog entry on that returned phenomenon of the 1970s, in what I’m sure are many places in the U.S.: noisy, hotrod-evocative mufflers.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Footnote on points in “Passing of a seminal p-doc—an obit…”

This entry footnotes this previous entry.


I. Discoverers of (and researchers on efficacy of) chlorpromazine:

Pierre Deniker and Jean Delay, as discoverers of the therapeutic use of chlorpromazine, are mentioned in a number of eminent sources. What I show below ranges from publications out from 1981 through 2001, covering about a 20-year period, and reflecting history going back about 30 years before 1981. Among sources:

Breggin. Peter R. Breggin’s Psychiatric Drugs: Hazards to the Brain (Springer, 1983) makes mention on pp. 12-13. (Breggin, as it happens and related to various topics throughout this book, uses Ross J. Baldessarini, M.D., as a reference at times; these two doctors are Harvard-educated [Breggin] or affiliated [Baldessarini].)


Baldessarini/Goodman & Gilman’s. Most respectably, in the 2001 (10th) edition of Goodman & Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics (New York: McGraw-Hill Medical Publishing Division, 2001), in the article “Drugs and the Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders[:] Psychosis and Mania,” by Ross J. Baldessarini and Frank I. Tarazi, there is this:

“Phenothiazine compounds were synthesized in Europe in the late nineteenth century as part of the development of aniline dyes such as methylene blue. In the late 1930s, a phenothiazine derivative, promethazine, was found to have antihistaminic and sedative effects. Attempts to treat agitation in psychiatric patients with promethazine and other antihistamines followed in the 1940s, but with little success.

“[Research on the ability of promethazine to prolong barbiturate sleeping time, and subsequent work in its use in clinical anesthesia,…] prompted a search for other phenothiazine derivatives with anesthesia-potentiating actions, and in 1940-1950 [Paul] Charpentier synthesized chlorpromazine. Soon thereafter, [Henri] Laborit and his colleagues described the ability of this compound to potentiate anesthetics and produce ‘artificial hibernation.’ [See below on Neil Carlson regarding Laborit and Charpentier.] Chlorpromazine by itself did not cause a loss of consciousness but diminished arousal and motility, with some tendency to promote sleep. These central actions became known as ataractic or neuroleptic soon thereafter.

“The first attempts to treat mental illness with chlorpromazine were made in Paris in 1951 and early 1952 by Paraire and Sigwald…. In 1952, Delay and Deniker became convinced that chlorpromazine achieved more than symptom relief of agitation or anxiety and that it had an ameliorative effect upon psychotic processes in diverse disorders. In 1954, Lehmann and Hanrahan in Montreal [these two researchers are mentioned in Breggin’s book, pp. 13-14], followed by Winkelman in Philadelphia, reported the initial use of chlorpromazine in North America for the treatment of psychomotor excitement and manic states as well as schizophrenia…. Clinical studies [no particular researchers are noted] soon revealed that chlorpromazine was effective in the treatment of psychotic disorders of various types.” [end of subsection on the history of the drugs in this book]  (p. 486)


Carlson’s 1981 textbook. Neil R. Carlson, a professor at the University of Massachusetts in about 1981, in his textbook Physiology of Behavior, second edition (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, Inc., 1981), lists two Deniker and Delay studies presented at the same congress in 1952:

“Le traitement des psychoses par une methode neurolytique derivee d’hibernotheraphie […; my rough translation: “The treatment of the psychoses by a neurolytic method derived from hibernation-type–therapy”—see three paragraphs above for a reference to “artificial hibernation”].” This was in Comptes Rendus Congres des Medecins Alienistes et Neurologistes de France et des Pays de Langue Francaise. [rough translation: “Reproduced accounts [reports] of the Congress of Psychiatrists and Neurologists of France and Francophone Countries.”] 1952, volume 50, pp. 497-502. [accents omitted from French words; some adaptation of the original reference’s mechanical styling is done; this title and source are also listed in Breggin’s book noted above, but the spelling of some of the French words is different there, maybe in error]

A second paper is noted in Carlson by the same authors: “38 cas de psychoses traitees par la cure prolongee et continuee de 4560 RP.” In Comptes… [same congress publication as above], pp. 503-513. [Breggin does not mention this paper.]

Carlson also, in his history of the development of antipsychotic medication, mentions (as does Baldessarini in Goodman & Gilman’s) Henri Laborit and Paul Charpentier (p. 668); and Deniker and Delay (p. 669). In terms of double-blind studies used for antipsychotic drugs, Carlson (p. 669) mentions Baldessarini’s first edition of Chemotherapy in Psychiatry (Harvard University Press, 1977) as reflecting the repeated achievement of this, without citing other researcher names.


II. How other antipsychotics were discovered, to ~1980

Carlson writes, in relation to a 1979 paper by Baldessarini on the side effect (based on long-term use) of tardive dyskinesia: “This is a good place to mention a possible problem that is inherent in the current [to ~1980] screening process used by pharmaceutical companies to identify new drugs that may have antischizophrenic effects…. The usual procedure is to make compounds whose molecular structure resembles that of known antischizophrenic drugs. The compounds are given to rats or mice, and those that produce motor disturbances (Parkinson-like symptoms) are investigated further. In general, motor disturbances and antischizophrenic effects go hand-in-hand, but if some compound had an antischizophrenic effect without motor side effects (which would be very desirable), it would not be discovered by this procedure.” (p. 682)

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Passing of a seminal p-doc—an obit with various misleading info

The New York Times this past Wednesday, on p. B9, had an obituary for Joel Elkes, a respected psychiatrist who, the article seems to note (among other distinctions), established the efficacy of chlorpromazine, an old-type antipsychotic later marketed under the brand name Thorazine. Along with the fact that I had never heard of this doctor before (which doesn’t necessarily mean much—there’s always something to learn about the history of psychiatry and psychology), there are a number of deficiencies with this obit. It’s almost in the realm of, “There are so many problems with this, where do I begin?”  [Edits 11/23/15.]

Incidentally, I don’t write a letter to the Times about this because I had written a letter to the paper about an obituary it ran for an editor who died a few months ago that had a misleading bit of information about one publisher she had worked for. I got a personalized response from an editor in the Times obituary department (incidentally, for many years, I used to write letters to the Times as a reader, and occasionally got responses, and even a few of my letters published; but the last of this was in 2004), and the response I was given some weeks ago, in my view, wasn’t adequate (it didn’t concede anything). I may address this if/when I return to my Prentice Hall mini-series.

Hence I am more apt to post my objection to another Times obit here. (By the way, independent of all this, I have considered doing a blog series of sorts headed “Wrong Again: Errors in The New York Times,” or some such title; I don’t lack for material [past or future], but I hold off on doing this. But, coincidentally, it rather echoes how members of the Editorial Freelancers Association used to enjoy a sport in catching mechanical errors in the Times back in the 1990s.)

##

True discoverers not mentioned. Most fundamentally wrong about the Elkes obit is that, in any incisive history on antipsychotic medications, Pierre Deniker and Jean Delay are noted as the discoverers of chlorpromazine, in a paper presented at a conference in France in 1952. This is about two years before the 1954 study by Dr. Elkes that the Times notes. The Deniker and Delay paper and 1952 date can be seen in the text and reference list of Peter R. Breggin’s Psychiatric Drugs: Hazards to the Brain (Springer, 1983), among other places. (I believe the Harvard researcher Ross Baldessarini, M.D., in an edition of his Chemotherapy in Psychiatry, also mentions these discoverers.) [Added 11/23/15: See this footnote for substantiating information, especially some reputable info from Dr. Baldessarini.] This is not a picky technical issue; it is a key part of the history of these meds, cited over decades.

(While Dr. Elkes may have authored the first paper on a controlled/blinded study of the drug, which technical features of the study the obit notes, the obit should have mentioned Deniker and Delay as important prior discoverers of the drug.)

Drug class misstated. The obit also notes that chlorpromazine is an “antihistamine,” which is (as broadly stated) not correct. An antihistamine is a chemical that primarily affects the histamine receptors in the human body. The chemical class of chlorpromazine is phenothiazine. This class of medications, as do other types of antipsychotics, have as their main action a “dopamine-antagonistic” effect. While antipsychotic drugs may have histamine-affecting action that results in certain side effects, i.e., among their larger range of (often unpleasant) side effects, these drugs’ main classification is not as an antihistamine, especially in a therapeutic sense.

The obit, written by Benedict Carey, who usually writes competently enough about psychological topics for the Times, is rather childish at various points in how it phrases things. (One phrasing, “…in the management of psychosis, the signature symptom of schizophrenia,” is a little like the old joke, “It’s a funny thing about people with a brain: they can be pretty smart sometimes.”) It could be more helpfully said that—if you were to focus on what gets classed under the term psychosis—chlorpromazine mitigates paranoid and/or other types of thinking that ranges toward the psychotic. In general, categories of the symptoms of schizophrenia include abnormal ideation; trouble in perceptions (perceptual illusions [of a fundamentally functioning type], as well as [in a more complex social sense] misperceiving visually-based social cues, etc.); “negative” symptoms such as absent “affect,” or sense of emotion; stereotypy in movement; etc. The term “psychosis” as if it’s a specific symptom is decidedly vague.

Development of medications mishandled. One paragraph is a bit misleading about the history and types of antipsychotic drugs: “The dozen or so drugs developed since then for psychosis are all based, at some level, on the molecular properties of chlorpromazine.”

In actual fact, the early phenothiazines were all similar, but as a subgroup of the class of antipsychotic medications: by brand name, these notably include Thorazine (the drug at issue), Compazine (which later became used largely as an antiemetic), and Stelazine. Haldol, whose clinical use started by the late 1960s, is a definitely different class of chemical (and I don’t know how this drug was discovered).

By 1981, a textbook I used in a neuropsychiatry class explained that antipsychotic drugs were discovered (in more clinically operating [and later] ways than Deniker and Delay encountered) by how certain new configurations of chemicals produced the side effects called extrapyramidal effects (or “…symptoms”; abbreviation, EPS), which for decades have been regarded as a bane of such medications. Once such side effects were seen in the discovering studies, then the drug was tested for its clinical value (in treating symptoms of schizophrenia). [Added 11/23/15: See this footnote, part 2, for substantiating information.]

Atypical antipsychotics ignored. Further, given the fact that EPS (and the longer-term problem of tardive dyskinesia [TD]) were a set of side effects important to try to get rid of, a new class of antipsychotics—commonly called the “atypical antipsychotics”—started being discovered, tested, and marketed, of which clozapine (Clozaril) and risperidone (Risperdal) were among the first, hailed as producing less EPS (though the potential for developing TD from such new meds remained). To say that later, “atypical antipsychotics” are similar chemically to the likes of chlorpromazine is oversimplifying to the point of being grossly misleading.

##

The rest of the Elkes obituary on the doctor’s history and distinctions—apart from anything tied especially closely to chlorpromazine—seems credible enough and worth noting for scholars of this field, in this day and age where it seems there is increasing stupidity in public discussion about psychological and psychiatric topics, not only tied to alarming stories about mass shootings and the like.


But it would have been helped if some key things about chlorpromazine, and others of the antipsychotics, were discussed correctly in the obit.  

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Making a tough lot bearable

I have a few ideas of what to do about “Pedals,” the bear spotted in New Jersey (in 2014 and, apparently, this year) walking on his hind legs (see here or Google “pedals the bear nj”). To fit in here, it’s not hard: give him a shirt and pants, and teach him to be able to buy beer, cigarettes, and lottery tickets. Teach him to say apologetically, “I haven’t shaved today,” to deflect puzzlement in some at his hairy face. Teach him to order a hamburger now and then at a McD’s…and maybe teach him to vote Republican. Overall, he then might not make much of an impression in New Jersey. (And he might be nicer to get along with than some usual-bipeds.)

(Call me callous? I’ve seen injured bears before, and been sorry for them. Once, not far from my home, a big bear lumbered across the street steadily holding up one front leg, as if it couldn’t step on it; it ambled along on three of its legs. Another time, several years ago, in Rockaway, N.J. [on Green Pond Road], I saw a big bear hit by a big SUV and shoved to the side of the road. The bear ended up on its rump and let out a moan of sorts—I can’t fully recall the sound [my window was closed], but I remember thinking it didn’t sound the way you’d think a bear would sound. It wasn’t like the crazy-Hollywood version of something roaring like you might see on TV. Anyway, I found later that bear was not dead on the side of the road, so presumably it got itself together and moved on.)

[Added 11/13/15: My point, of course, was that Nature finds a way to take care of her own, even if sometimes it may seem a bit cruel. My question for Pedals, though: considering that all bears put on the pounds as they go along in life, will this one be able to support a bigger body on just his hind legs? Will he be able to walk around equally well as time goes on?] 

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Further notes on the Mahoney memoir A Likely Story (1998)

Footnote to my Touch of Evil, Interlude Part 1, entry, just previous on this blog

[Edits 11/13/15. Edit 11/20/15.]

Here are a few things to supplement your understanding of the Rosemary Mahoney memoir, which I discussed in the previous entry in relation to a certain quality of Chris Welles Feder’s memoir of her relationship with her father, Orson Welles.

As I had said, I had drafted much of a review of the Mahoney memoir in 2013, then set it aside. I considered finishing it in 2014, and didn’t. When (or if) I will finish it, isn’t clear. But I must emphasize that the review has more subtleties and heartfelt comments (some in line with Mahoney’s aims, and some not quite) than my recent remarks here might suggest to some.

I figured that if some of my readers might be swayed about what I had to say about this memoir, then I would add some helpful things to add perspective.

First, Mahoney’s involvement with me in the 1986 Johns Hopkins University summer writer’s conference did not ruin my time there. In fact, it was quite atypical of the experience. The conference—with the larger mass of attendees broken into writing-type groups—included little seminars (mine focused on fiction) with writers’ critiquing each other’s work that they had been given to read the night before. In this format, the vast majority of people liked, and had helpful little criticisms to make of, the material I presented, which was mainly from my novel that later became titled A Transient. In fact, I seem to recall I changed a few things in the material people commented on, i.e., particular stuff that was included in the final novel, in accordance with what they said. All in all, attendees—fellow up-and-coming writers who critiqued each other’s work, or “teachers”—Mary Robison was the one leading the seminars I attended—understood that the point there was to be helpful, even when making a criticism that rather strongly questioned something.

There were a number of writers (or M.F.A. students/graduates) there who acted as teachers/mentors, and Mahoney was among them. At the time, I don’t think I knew where she stood with her education (she apparently did not yet have her M.F.A.), and I’m pretty sure I was aware she hadn’t published any book (though I don’t recall what the deal was with whether she had published stories; by the way, the vast majority of us were all writing in a literary [if not serious nonfiction] mode—many aimed to get stories in The New Yorker—not in the genre mode that is popular today).

We attendees who had seminars with certain assigned people like Robison (Richard Bausch was also there, on Robison’s esteemed level [with multiple published books, or such]; I remember him pretty well), also went to individual conferences with (as assigned, not specifically arranged by us attendees) some of the other teacher/mentors. And I had a conference with Mahoney, with the material of mine that had gone to her being less refined than my other material from A Transient.

Her reactions to my work, for the first half or so of our meeting, was off-putting, to say the least. Two statements she made are the type of thing that sticks in your mind virtually forever, given the untoward nature of it on an ethical-situation level: “Is the whole novel like this?” and “What does this mean?,” she said, pointing out a specific sentence. (I mean, if I was accepted to the conference as I was, never mind how fellow writers were responding to my work, were these suitable things to say? Could she be any more condescending?) She also had previously written a lengthy set of typewritten comments that I still have, which I won’t quote from here. (Keep in mind that A Transient, which in the main wasn’t much changed from how I wrote it in 1986, got appreciative comments from editors—including Teresa Scala at Doubleday, Gordon Lish at Knopf, and Ann Kjellberg at Farrar, Straus & Giroux—starting in fall 1986, and  intermittently for about a decade after that, with my repeated tries to get a publisher interested in it.) [Added 11/20/15: I do recall RM acceded to my explanation of the novel's premises, but this was as if (a little) she was giving me the benefit of the doubt, and as if I had to explain them before she would have expected them. She wasn't downright grudging with this.]

I remember having to explain to Mahoney a number of the premises (esthetic; narrative-style…) of the novel, which no one among the seminar fellow-readers had the type of problem with that Mahoney seemed to have (regarding a level of understanding you as an attendee should have expected). She seemed to be quite ignorant of certain psychological things (which is all the more remarkable in what I found of her family background from a 1998 New York Times article I saw over a decade later—see below). I recall her as being rather obdurately opinionated and having a bit of a snarky or coolly critical/bemused expression about her eyes.

After our “huddle” was over, I was offended. (I recall seeing her walking across a campus quad at one point, with a sort of hunched posture that cohered with what is described of her posture in the 1998 Times interview piece; relatedly, she had a certain “lack of charisma,” as I would put it, about how she carried herself.) I didn’t say anything to anyone else among the people I was familiar with, about Mahoney—until, in a seminar, Mary Robison asked if anyone had had problems with Rosemary Mahoney.

I volunteered some account of my own experience. It turned out, from what Robison said, that numerous other conference attendees had had problems with Mahoney. The problem generally seemed to be her inability to be good readers of other young writers. Robison seemed to imply that Mahoney might not be back as a conference mentor the next year.

When in early 1987 I got promotional material from the JHU writers’ conference people about the June 1987 program, I saw that just about all the other mentors from 1986 would be there again, and not Mahoney. (I did not go in 1987 because of money, and other priorities.)

Mahoney’s 1998 memoir suggests she finished working on her master’s degree to get it by 1987, or such, so it’s quite possible her plans did not include (in 1986-87) trying to be a mentor at the JHU conference again.

##

When I found from a newspaper book review section that Mahoney’s first book was published in 1990—I think it was Whoredom in Kimmage—I was surprised. I thought, of all the young people I met at the conference in 1986, I didn’t think she would be the first to hit the likes of The New York Times Book Review with a reviewed book. Other attendees of the 1986 conference were Ann Darby (with whom I corresponded until about early 1992), whose first novel (The Orphan Game) was published in 1999, and Lolly Winston, whose first novel (Good Grief) was published in 2004.

All this goes to show that you never know how your career will unfold when you work in high-stakes publishing.

Anyway, some outside indications of reaction to Mahoney’s 1998 memoir:

#

New York Times feedback. From an interview article in probably the Sunday Arts section, ___ 1998 (sorry I don’t have the date; I misplaced the first page of the interview), pp. E1 and E5. Head on p. E5: “Reverberations From a Devastated Dream: Remembering Lillian Hellman.” On p. E5: “As the youngest of Nona and John Mahoney’s seven children, she [Rosemary] was raised in Milton, Mass. Her mother, a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and a former women’s editor of The Boston Post [romans in original], contracted polio after having her first two children and never walked without crutches again. Her husband, a doctor, suffered from depression, and following hospitalizations that included shock therapy, committed suicide when Rosemary was 8.”  [Surprisingly, this parallels my own immediate-family situation in some key respects, except most notably for the number of children.]

[…]

“[Mahoney says,] ‘Though most of the response to the book [A Likely Story] has been good, there are some people who think I’m too hard on poor Lillian Hellman. They don’t get what the story is really about, which is my relationship with my mother. Lillian Hellman is the catalyst for the story, the hook it’s hung on. But it’s about being a teen-ager and trying to grow up.’ Part of being a teen-ager, of course, is cruelty, especially about physical shortcomings[,] and Ms. Mahoney stints on none that she observed. …”

[…]

“Couldn’t Ms. Mahoney have woven a bit of hindsight through the harsher threads of the book, not only to give a more balanced picture of the woman she worked for, but to save her 17-year-old self from looking like the solipsistic brat most 17-year-olds are?

“She [Mahoney] shakes her head impatiently. ‘Yes, the book is dark in places,’ she says. ‘It’s not all nice. But I’m not doing this to be polite. This is reality. Life isn’t all pretty, it has an ugly side. I actually embrace that. Our flaws and failings make us interesting, I think. And it wasn’t just about her. I made it clear what a big ego I had. [By the way, this general set of writing-project precepts I understand fully, and have used myself. It has its pros and cons.] I wasn’t all interested in working. I was a bad housekeeper, hasty with everything.[’]

“ ‘But your job as a writer is to have the emotional truth come out. I know some people say I’m nasty and a brat [in the book], but this is much more than a revenge book. My feeling in general is “Let’s stop pretending.” We’re just desperate for idols, desperate.’”

##

In a biography of Hellman. In Deborah Martinson, Lillian Hellman: A Life with Foxes and Scoundrels (New York: Counterpoint, 2005):

“[Hellman] hired a series of college girls to assist her in [Martha’s] Vineyard, the horrors of which Rosemary Mahoney recorded in A Likely Story. Why Hellman insisted on college girls as helpers, particularly from the excellent Wells College [in New York], to assist her in cooking, cleaning, and driving is inexplicable. She would quiz them about their education and then offer to help them sue the college for their poor showing. Her remarks were joking but nevertheless insulting. She liked to hire English majors, though she made it quite clear in hiring them that she would not read anything they had written, nor were they to write about her. She had housekeepers as well and might have been better off with an older, more experienced person with little intellectual interest in her. These young women had to be strong to endure. As one of them recalled, ‘Hellman pushed everyone to the limits of their endurance.’ Not all of these young women were as cowed or as insensitive as Mahoney, but they recognized the experience for what it was.

“…Linda Lightner was a young student just graduated from Wells College … when she went to work for Hellman in the spring of 1981. She extended the summer hiring period and stayed until just before Christmas. Lightner remembers the atmosphere as inevitably tense. Hellman never kept a relaxed house. ‘She really had her hands into everything from how many cases of beer she had on hand to the grocer’s wrong delivery[,]” [she said].  (pp. 330-331)

##

Summing. As I suggested, my fuller review of Mahoney’s book isn’t simply a big take-down. We all might look “a bit noodgier than we’d like” in our mid-twenties incarnations than when we are older adults. But in Mahoney’s case, the way she rose to being, today, still referred as an award-winning writer, etc., as if it was inevitable she'd ascend to the golden empyrean of hobnobbers with those like George Plimpton, has certain ironies than I don’t think I’m alone in appreciating.

Friday, November 6, 2015

Book look (bits): Related to Welles’ Touch of Evil (1958): Interlude, Part 1 of 2

Supplementing a foreseen review of Welles’ first daughter’s fascinating 2009 memoir (see my other blog for entries related to Touch of Evil)

[blog category this is in] Book look (see here for an example from 2012 of my past blog-type book reviews, of which there weren’t many)

[main concern the entry below serves] Chris Welles Feder’s Purified Memories—Too Abstract? Or Just Right?

[specific theme here] A Detour to Help Explain My Agreement with Feder’s Way of Concretizing a Memoir—Parts of My Drafted Review of Rosemary Mahoney’s A Likely Story  (here, precise details provide wallpaper for a story of a bitter encounter)

[integrally related entry to come, on my other blog] Back to Feder—Her “Idealized” Memories Reflect a Semi-Deprived Girl’s Encounters with Her Almost Crazy-Fictional Father


Now what kind of cumbersome stuff is this? Well, I had originally thought it would be good to include some variety of the below within a review of Chris Welles Feder’s In My Father’s Shadow: A Daughter Remembers Orson Welles (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2009), but then I thought it was too big a load to include as a subsection in that potential blog entry. And since I had planned (in spring 2013, on this blog) to review the 1998 book that I do, partially below, here it is a bit of it.

“But this stuff is a bore!,” you might say. “This is slag you generated two-plus years ago” (I say: Right about the time, but off-base about the content). “Who can boogie to this?”

In the following, you will see where I’m coming from about Feder’s book. And I didn’t, and don’t, mean to simply be negative about Mahoney’s book, either.

Feder’s book proceeds with a ton of conversations with family members, going back to when she was a young girl, and the conversations are with her father Orson Welles, with her mother, and with many others. The conversations often define important attitudes or tactics such as would take a rather mature person to understand the intent of. Can Feder as a girl have remembered what was said enough to reproduce such conversations when writing 50 or more years later?

As she points out herself, the conversations may not be precisely as they were articulated, but reflect what she remembered (with, one presumes, the emotional rooting of the family issues involved guaranteeing something of a good memory). Aside from the question of whether, to remember these conversations, she has been as smart as Orson Welles (this, I think, isn’t necessary to assume to accept how she “remembered” the conversations), I think she could well have understood family situations, attitudes, etc., well enough to write many years later and give life to the old events that happened with the conversations kept “abstract” or “ideal” enough in what they aim to say, without being so “realistic” that they reflect every bit of (so to speak) body odor, dirt, stumble, etc., that might have gone on at the time. In fact, I think Feder’s approach here is very good, as I have used a similar approach, albeit in a fiction based on real events that had just happened, with my feeling in recounting conversations that I recorded the general-but-precise-enough sense of the talk, if not the way they might have really been if written in Joycean style.

As a contrast, we can look at Rosemary Mahoney’s memoir, which—somewhat like Feder’s memoir—recounts experiences with (like Welles) another trying but talented cultural figure, Lillian Hellman (though Hellman was not a relative of Mahoney’s, as of course Welles was of Feder’s). Here, Mahoney represents so many precise details, especially ones not central to the exchanges going on, that we—not just myself, but other critics—could ask how true to life her memoir is/was. I think Mahoney can be excused in what she does, but for different reasons—related to the aims of her memoir (about the pungent multiple-month experience of a difficult personage)—than Feder with her own (as different from Mahoney’s) strategically suited memoir.

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A Detour to Help Explain My Agreement with Feder’s Way of Concretizing a Memoir—Parts of My Drafted Review of Rosemary Mahoney’s A Likely Story  (here, precise details provide wallpaper for a story of a bitter encounter)


[book reviewed] A Likely Story: One Summer With Lillian Hellman, by Rosemary Mahoney (Doubleday, 1998).

[Written November 2015: In starting this review in spring 2013, I was thinking of telling a range of things about Mahoney, as related to themes on this blog. Here, I am giving select parts. I had met Mahoney in 1986 at the Johns Hopkins University summer writers’ conference. In a tiny nutshell, I had found her—she was a sort of junior teacher/mentor there—a provocative, if not provoking, personality; I felt, not as I would have precisely said this then, that she was a bit of a punk and a brat; and there was talk at the conference, as others found as I did that she was not a good reader of others’ writing work, as if she would not be brought back as a teacher. Her 1998 memoir suggests the reason she wasn’t back, which would have been on the indifferent side (not to her discredit) had to do with her getting her master’s degree and moving on. Anyway, when I heard about her memoir of Hellman in 1998, I was inclined to be skeptical about it and Mahoney, based on my 1986-situated memories (as unfair as this might have been). After reading it, a relative of mine and her husband talked at the time with enthusiasm about the memoir, which made a splash then (including a New York Times leisure-section feature piece) because, I think as cultural mavens seemed to relish (and I don’t know how much this was my relative’s and her husband’s views), it seemed to shed a healthy light on the dubiousness, on a level, of Hellman. Related to my opinion of Mahoney, I refused to read the book for years.

[Finally, in about 2012-13 I did, and found it interesting, enough to work up a substantial review of it. But one of the things I discovered from it was how similar in family-psychological background, particularly as starting writers, Mahoney and I were—we were not far apart in age—which made how she had dealt with me in 1986 even more a good focus of trenchant and otherwise human-interest discussion (such as on how hypocritical she could be said to have been, and/or how much of a social-climbing brat—again, remember that several people at the conference had complaints about her). Suffice it to say that the full range of my responses to her memoir, shown in the fuller review, are, overall, more sympathetic than may seem here.

[Below I’ve edited the excerpts as if I am preserving the right of the original draft to stay basically as it was, though I could well adapt my changes here to the final review, if I ever finish it.]

[…]

2. RM as a fastidious technician to square with, in her memoir

Not only has Rosemary Mahoney (“RM,” hereafter) in her career been a “belletrist,” as I would have said before I read A Likely Story—i.e., someone whose memoirs or essay-type works (as I believe Whoredom in Kimmage is) have a sort of high-minded, style-conscious aspect to them—but she seems to have taken a general tack of writing close to her personal identity and personal experience. This isn’t to say she has been essentially narcissistic in her themes as a writer, but instead she can be said to take a certain narrow (or esthetically defined or based) approach to what she will write probing books about. Actually, I do this to a large extent myself, but while my own approach has relied a lot on homely experiences—droll and consensually identifiable career situations, and community-related issues—which aren’t necessarily grist for intellectual games or stylistic exercises, RM is bucking for recognition of a different sort. My own writing has tended at times, when creative, to encompass wider political reality [than what RM does].

At least, this is what I would say in having read a lot of A Likely Story, where the creative-writing teacher’s admonitions to “show, not tell” and to “concretize” perceivable things seem to call out loudly: there is a lot of focus on details, and on ways of precisely rendering those details, with beautiful use of metaphors and so on. […] But to me a memoir of a months-long interpersonal encounter—which was largely about who these two talented women [Mahoney and Hellman] saw themselves as, and the obvious unfairness of an older woman humiliating a younger one for no other apparent reason than sheer spite or arrogance of some kind—seems to lose some focus as to what the account is about, when it dwells on details of the summer almost as if it wants to be a novel pursuing its story via a review of the many glittering details of a sensuous experience at a sun-accented beach house.

In fact, this esthetic strategy turns out to make us ask, Did RM really remember her whole experience of Hellman as integrally tied to a memory of all these details? Or did an editor want her, technique-wise, to flesh out this book with vivid details, so that it wasn’t simply a “film of a memoir shot in the middle distance,” but went to a length to have a novel’s way of plodding through “concretized” experiences, so that we feel “we are there”?

If the answer to the latter question was yes, then we have to say that when a novel uses all such details, there should also be a certain suspense to the story, which the details may (in their gliding past) help support, as would more generally justify the unspooling and feel and glitter of all the details. But when we realize we are reading the memory of a young woman’s being humiliated at an old woman’s shore house, we are brought to ask after a while, Was RM’s memory of that experience so essentially tied to a writerly way of, for example, comparing Hellman’s skin color to a certain kind of vegetable?


3. Her sensualized approach keeps from politics or psychological cant, but serves a personal-view agenda

So we have a sort of mix of genres: memoir and a sort of highly “sensualized” novel. In either case, you’re talking about the sort of work of a Fancy Creative-Writer Program, not genre slag, and not even the more standard kind of memoir (which may embrace an unassuming narrator’s economy with details and narrative strategy) that many people have written. You’re also talking, here, of a talented writer who wants to fashion lasting work.

But then I’m reminded that some of us aspiring writers, even when we wanted to do fiction, didn’t all want to conform with the teachers’ advice to “show the details, concretize the action.” [My adult life, starting with scalding interpersonal experiences in college, potentiated that my most creative writing would to a large extent move around two “poles”:] (1) psychological reality, which is more a matter of “talk and interpretation” than of telling how a sunshine-reflecting fork looks, and of (2) interpersonal politics, which involves not only broader politics as more normally understood but the mess of conflicted and unnecessarily complicated interpersonal relations you can get at work, or in a local community, or within the localized history of a certain profession.

[…] The question arises with this memoir, What is RM’s main agenda, for the basic skeleton of the book? And how well is it served by the flesh on that skeleton?

[…]

7. The perceptual/realist esthetic approach, exercising a phenomenology of middle-class life

[Going back to cover the same issue:] One aspect of Mahoney’s book that I think has impressed readers and critics the most, along with its more morally and “historically” oriented aspects (growth of a young writer, or revelation of a figure like Hellman in old age), is its clear-eyed, detail-oriented style, using metaphors in often clever ways to describe some of the most minute details in a vivid way. Different things can be said about this; I certainly will say different things. I think, for one thing, that it helps give grounds to criticize the book negatively (some critics in 1998 seemed to feel that RM showed, if along with a certain brilliance, a level of heartlessness in her descriptions, such as describing Hellman’s face like a beaky sea turtle’s [e.g., see Sharon O’Brien’s review in The New York Times Book Review, [date]]). But this method also has its saving graces in some ways.

My own theory is that, apart from whether you could call RM brilliant in her account, generally she seems to hew to a sort of esthetic strategy that (at times) can seem to be more about artifice than about the nature of life as more globally considered, as she is ostensibly recounting a story that samples a particular stretch of “gritty” life she has become privy to. […]

[A general, psychologically oriented criticism of her own approach is that] people don’t ordinarily remember an experience of living with a stranger, 15 or 20 years before writing about it, with the level of details she shows. This is both human nature and a matter of how even our most esteemed writing artists have tended to function. I mean, when she refers, for one example that is typical of something seen often here, to the color of Hellman’s face as of that of an artichoke heart (p. 71), is this how any of us remember the full flower of a story of 15 years before, even if we’re passionate about it (because of how the experience initially shook us) and remember many little facets important to the telling? Of course not.

[…]

8. The detailed portrait is solid grounds for broader judgments

Whether RM would disagree that she took a set of memories—even if possibly with her journal entries from 1978, if she had them, rooting some of the details—and “tarted them up” with a sharp verisimilitude-seeking style as a writing artifice (embraced with “artistic license”), and yet generally she really remembered the bulk of the esthetic details, this all is a little beside the point. The book offers a lot of perceptual details, and in some ways this is a major virtue, and in other ways it tends to make the book (as “a read”) a bit tedious, if not also raising a bit of a question about credibility. But the credibility issue, when it comes to the concrete descriptions, can be dispensed with, I think.

Sharon O’Brien, more severe among reviewers of this book, makes a point about RM’s concretizing style, even seeming to accuse RM of hypocrisy, in that while RM seems to take a severe eye to Hellman, who was famously accused late in life of faking some of her supposed nonfiction, RM uses apparently made-up details in her account, talking about how sunlight strikes things, how a view through binoculars looks, etc.—all stuff one couldn’t have specifically remembered over about 15-17 years as part and parcel of RM’s ostensible memoir.

But to me, whatever “fakery,” or glossing things up a bit, that goes on here is rather beside the point. I think the main outlines of the memoir—what Hellman said when, how a series of actions happened, etc., all sounds credible. Whether her skin looked this tone or that—this is a sort of fictional convention, adapted to a memoir.

We can let it pass. It lets us feel the vibrations of the experience RM is recounting, even if the main point of her memoir has to do with rather “macroscopic” moral issues and the relevant vibrations these sent through her—matters of clashing personalities, in a way.


Sidebar: An example of my remembering an old character of a professor. Say I was to describe a professor whom I had a major clash with at graduate school, Steven S. Schwarzschild. He was a smart, very European-flavored man, but he was an odd duck in a host of ways. In dress and hair style, he looked like a European version of a U.S. “hepcat” (an old term), with Semitic facial hair. That is, while by no means would he have been a fan of rockabilly star Carl Perkins’ music, the professor looked somewhat in conformity with that Perkins-music style of clothing and hair. As the professor stood splay-footed in a lobby (as I saw one time), he had his shirt collar, without tie, spread out on top of his jacket lapels. His hair was rather full, and his dark beard was the sort that sprouted all along the edge of his lower lip. He wore eyeglasses of a European sort—they reminded me of something Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev wore in a photo I saw. He spoke English with a British accent. He smoked, too, including in the seminar rooms, and if you made an issue of this, his response was to say you could move to the other side of the room.

Now this doesn’t seem like a grand, fine-grained Flaubertian effort to portray this person. If, now, I added to this details such as how the sun glinted off his glasses, or how shadows played on his clothing, or how his eyes (I think they were blue) looked a certain hue in a given shaft of sunlight, would this make my portrait especially suspect? I don’t think so. Maybe too adorned, but not clearly faked. (But it wouldn’t necessarily be my preferred style for writing about him.)


I think we can live with the assumption that RM’s details by and large follow the reality she had lived in closely, or are reasonably compatible with what happened (e.g., whether Hellman’s skin was green or brownish on one day, this coheres with a more readily accepted conversational account of Hellman’s being nasty at the same time).

[…]


[When we return to looking at Feder’s book, she stays in a sort of “middle distance” describing life situations, recounting conversations, and so on almost in a semi-amateurish memoir-writing way. Yet the conversations are gripping for revealing the often-poignant, if not provocative, family situations going on. It’s quite possible the family realities were such, including in their bitter aspects, that they assured that Feder would remember the conversations, at least in their essence. To this extent, I favor Feder’s way of doing a memoir more than Mahoney’s, though both have their virtues.]

Friday, October 9, 2015

Why did two bears cross the road? To cause some concern for some moments, maybe

As I was hiking, warnings were given by three motorists about bears crossing the road, but there was a way to roll with the blows here


What I like to try to do, assuming I have the proper juices flowing to write a blog entry worth your time, is mix up the quality of entries—to follow a strategy of  a “White Album” esthetic. As you may know, if you are a Beatles fan, and whether you consider their album The Beatles (1968; a.k.a. “The White Album”) to be their best or close to it, there is definitely a strategy (inadvertently) followed there that some may say conduced to the tastiness of the overall content, and that others may say undermined the album’s overall quality.

That is, some songs took a lot of work (e.g., “Back in the USSR” [lots of dubbing of little parts], “Happiness is a Warm Gun” [three days to record], “Everybody’s Got Something to Hide…” [McCartney had a punishing time ringing a fire bell for a long period of multiple takes]), and others were crapped out in short order (e.g., “The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill,” done in about three takes, or “Wild Honey Pie,” McCartney virtually goofing around in off-moments).

Some of my blog entries can follow this strategy: I can work hard (maybe too hard, in the view of some) on some entries (like my Jersey Boys installments), and others I toss off. Hopefully, the content involved with each justifies this. Sometimes you, the reader, may feel like reading E-Z toss-offs, other times you want art (or what passes for it in this venue).

Here’s a “Bungalow Bill”–type entry.

##

Two days ago I was taking a hike, actually just a walk along roads (in less-than-wonderful shoes), from my home to the Highland Lakes post office, which I do pretty regularly, largely for exercise. It’s about two-plus miles one way, and I stop at a convenience store near the P.O. for a late-morning repast in the process (some of the food relatively unhealthy, quick calories for burning up in mindless physical activity). Sometimes I mail letters. By the time I’m almost home, I’m physically tired, with achy feet.

The route starts from about the center of Barry Lakes (which is a bedroom community, approximately hourglass-shaped, with hundreds of homes on dozens of local roads, wedged within what is now Wawayanda State Park [the park was added to by acquired land over the years; now, as wasn’t the case 20-30 years ago, the park basically surrounds the entire community]). Because this state park is one of the prime areas of the often-rural  Sussex County (N.J.) that bears roam in—the park is partially in West Milford, in Passaic County, where bear sightings and other bear incidents have made the news at times (and bears often have appeared in nearby parts of the Sussex County bedroom communities of Highland Lakes and Lake Wanda, which both abut the park, also)—it is not unusual to see bears cross Wawayanda Road in the wooded area it runs through; this road runs between (1) a three-way intersection in Lake Wanda and (2) Barry Lakes to the north (the intersection is of three roads: Canistear Road [named after the nineteenth-century town, now long gone, associated with an old-time bloomery—a sort of iron-ore furnace]; Wawayanda Road; and Breakneck Road).

Between “the last of human civilization” in Lake Wanda and “the first bits of human civilization” in Barry Lakes, the road twists through a wooded area, sometimes swamp-abutting, which might give visiting city dwellers the creeps and in which, yes, you can spot bears (but not too often). If I hadn’t been familiar with this stretch of road going all the way back to the late 1960s—and after in the late 1970s I had walked this route (there were no bears in the area then) when dropped off  by the late school bus in Lake Wanda following after-school activities—I might never walk this route. This indeed is where I encountered the turtle that I wrote a blog entry on in July 2013. And I have seen bears on this road, but usually when I was in a car. (But once I did see one in a swamp off the roadside, when I was doing this same kind of hiking—this was in spring 2013.)

##

Well, to cut to the chase, I was heading out on this past Wednesday, and was walking along a part of Wawayanda Road (traveling south) that starts to go down a little hill to come alongside the beach in Barry Lakes, and a man in a construction-related truck pulled over beside me, traveling north, in an awkward spot in the road (no shoulder), and I thought he wanted directions. But he warned me about a “big bear” back from the way he’d come, which had been on the side of the road; did I want a ride? I said no, thanks…and with a few more equable words, we parted.

I walked on a bit more, and there I could see—down the road about 700 feet, in an area maybe 200 feet past the community clubhouse on the left and the beach on the right, where the “no man’s land” between Barry Lakes and Lake Wanda started—two bears. There was first one, ambling into view, then a second bear, ambling in the same direction; both were about 300 pounds (they weren’t small enough to be “yearlings”), and they crossed the road in their dark-profiled distinctiveness. A car was parked on the right side of the road maybe 75 feet south of them (on the other side of them from where I was), its four-way flashers on. I surmised the person had pulled over because of the bear presence. Maybe she was there to warn drivers coming along.

I walked a little further south, in the direction of where the bears had been. I wasn’t quite sure how I would handle this situation, as I was set on doing my full hike, and usually I deal with whatever eventualities come up. The bears had gone out of sight into bushes on the right of the road, and I was still about 500 feet north of where they’d been.

Another vehicle, headed north, pulled over, this time with me on the right side of the road. This was an elderly man from, as his vehicle’s decals showed, the county Meals on Wheels program (a service for senior citizens). I didn’t know him. He warned me about the two bears…this time (and I still wasn’t sure I’d continue my hike), I talked a bit more forthcomingly with him than with the earlier man. Trying to show the humorously optimistic attitude I had, I volunteered that I had pepper spray with me (and I showed it to him). He shook his head a little dissuasively. I said thanks for the warning, etc. He moved on.

I knew I would play this situation my own way (he was an old man, who maybe lived in the area the county seat numerous miles to the south, where bear sightings weren’t so common; he wasn’t familiar with what we mountaintop people in the county were acclimatized to).

##

I walked tentatively on, to about where the parking lot for the beach was, about 200 feet or so north of where the bears last were visible. The car that had been on the side of the road with its flashers flashing turned around in the road and came north, stopping near me, a woman inside. She warned me about the bears. I said I’d seen them….

I walked back north a bit (75-100 feet) to the beach house, which has bathrooms, a lifeguard office, etc. No one was using the beach now. I decided to wait out a bit at the beach house, giving the bears time to—as I suspected they were doing—keep going to the west in their trek through the woods. (All indications were they hadn’t seen me; they had not been at an angle to.)

Killing time can be educational. There was a bulletin board in front of the beach house that gave handy information on different kinds of snakes—poisonous versus nonpoisonous, etc. After maybe 15 minutes of killing time, I decided to continue my hike, continuing south. I passed through where the bears had been, unusually alert. I checked the bushes to the right, where they’d gone, and the brushy woods to the left (I was on the left side of the road). Sometimes forging on with just the dogged “bravery” of continuing your business, one foot in front of the other, is the best policy. (Kind of like Donald Trump, but without the conceited remarks.)

I had a ton of sun block on, some “foo-foo”-scented stuff…I wondered if the bears, if they were nearby (not necessarily the case), could smell that and think it smelled like food. You had to hope not….

I thought that it may be “easy” to pass through this area now, on my leg out, but what when I was heading back, and would inevitably be more tired? (It was not being overly pessimistic to remember that this area where the bears had crossed was always, independent of the issue of any wild animals’ being around, where I was most weary and under strain coming back—it was a bit uphill, in a rather drearily “nowhere”-type area before you were among what seemed the relative safety of the beach area and the first few houses of the community.)

Well, about 30 minutes or more later, when I came back, I exercised heightened alertness again, but felt that the likely thing was the bears were even further out of the area, a good bear’s trek to the west.

I forged on, got into an area among houses, and finally got home. No bears to be seen anywhere (as usual).

##

Over the years, once or twice I’ve talked with my mother about the way bears get covered in the media, and recently she made a mocking remark about the statistics of “bear sightings.” She remarked how she’d seen bears in the immediate area many times, and hadn’t reported them to the state. I said, yeah, if I reported every time I’d seen a bear (over several years), the state would have to add about 35 or so sightings to its numbers.

See, we mountain types have different ways of regarding bears. Those in the ritzy suburbs, if they have a bear get stuck in a tree, raise issues, with however much equanimity, such that they make the news. You see intriguing video of a dark bruin stuck discomfitedly in a tree, and police on hand to mitigate the situation. Here, we see one pass through the yard or on our immediate street now and then. No big deal.

And having two cross the road I was about to walk down on my habitual hike almost made me abort my hike. But not quite.

(In the more developed areas of the state, you might not bat an eyelash over news that some shady operators had been running a multi-million-dollar scam out of a warehouse, but it would be more stirring news for us if such a thing happened in the immediate area. What would faze us more about bears here is if one turned up in the yard, standing on its hind legs, wearing a dark shirt and white tie with jacket, and said in a growly voice, “’Ey you. Ya talk to Fish an’ Game, ya get two in the head. Just load up my paws with edible food and no one gets hurt.”)