Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Keith Gessen: All the Sad Young Literary Men

Gawker has a longstanding hate-hate (kinda love?) relationship with Keith Gessen, a founding editor of n+1 and young journalist/novelist/blogger/cultural paver/borderline elitist. Gawker’s relentless reports on Gessen’s blog, dating habits, and various random tidbits were really my only exposure to this guy, so when his novel All The Sad Young Literary Men came out in 2008, I foolishly shunned it because I’m a Gawker addict.

Then last year, my co-blogger Dan invited me to an event at Housing Works Bookstore CafĂ© where all lit journals could be snatched up at $2 a pop. Score! I happened to pick up a copy of an n+1 Research Branch Pamphlet called WHAT WE SHOULD HAVE KNOWN: TWO DISCUSSIONS. Gessen acted as moderator of two panels that met and shot the shit about the books they wished they had read in college, or books they wished they hadn’t read ever, or books that changed their lives. My respect for Gessen grew quietly (he did lament his late exposure to the Velvet Underground) and my awareness of him morphed from “one to be avoided” to “one to be kind of on top of,” in an intellectual capacity, of course. But it should be noted that he was voted one of NY’s 50 Hottest Bachelors by Page Six in February, 2009. You be the judge:

(Image from here.)

So by the time I moved into my friend Rebecca’s gloriously book-shelved apartment, I found myself unable to stop from picking up Gessen’s first novel and trying on the first page for size. I read: 

“They saved on orange juice, sliced bread, they saved on coffee. On movies, magazines, museum admission (Friday nights). Train fare, subway fare, their apartment out in Queens. It was a principle, of sorts, and they stuck to it. Mark and Sasha lived that year on the 7 train and when they got out, out in Queens, Mark would follow Sasha like a little boy as she checked the prices at the two Korean grocers, cross-checked them, so they could save on fruits and vegetables and little Korean treats. They saved on clothes… To be poor in New York was humiliating, a little, but to be young—to be young was divine.”

Fresh out of a "Save-and-not-spend, Queens-7-Train" situation, this opening passage resonated with me like nothing else that I’d read in awhile. So I read 50 more pages that night and finished the book about a day later. A quick read, even by subway rider standards.

Gessen structures his narrative around three guys: Mark, Sam, and Keith (haha autobiographical!) While all three characters differ, all three are pretty much the same. Mark gets married right out of college to his Russian girlfriend, and he passionately studies and reads and obsesses over Russian history/politics for the next decade. Sam works at a shit Excel temp job and passionately studies and reads and obsesses over the current Israeli-Palestinian unrest. Keith falls in love with Al Gore’s daughter while studying at Harvard, but loses her like Gore loses the 2000 election, and then he spends the rest of the novel passionately studying, reading, and obsessing over US politics. Of course this slapdash generalization drastically oversimplifies, but the aim of Gessen’s story lies in describing the awful (yet pretty elitist; come on, you have to be loaded or lucky to go to Harvard) plight of the young, serious thinker who wants to do something intellectually satisfying that, in this Capitalist country, can at least make life livable, salary-wise.

Equally elitist and media-addled Jonathan Franzen, awesome author of The Corrections, and notably awkward public speaker (from experience, people) loved Gessen’s book, praising, “Cruelty and affection and erudition and innocence are so perfectly balanced in these stories, they almost make me wish I were young again.”

But these “Sad Young Literary Men” don’t just want to “make it” on the merits of their intellects. They also want impeccably complicated, intellectually engaged, vaguely mysterious yet comfortingly familiar, well-dressed and gorgeous young women. And the novel weaves a web of pretty realistic inner negotiations that these guys go through when it comes to fucking or not fucking based on these aforementioned qualifications. Of course with a laundry list like that, most of the women fail and fail hard.

The only girl to show up in each of the three sections is Arielle, who Gessen describes as:

“Arielle wanted more and wanted less: she wanted a life of excitement, witticisms, put-downs, quasi-psychoanalytic late-night discussions, then make-up sex—and no children.”

Sounds pretty ideal, right? Did I mention that when we first meet Arielle, she’s, like, 22 and staying in a sanatorium?

Emily Gould (ex-Gawker editor and rumoured Gessen-ex) wrote a smart piece on the book, comparing it, and I think justifiably so, to a Judd Apatow production. Her qualms mirror mine: the book makes much ado about men’s problems and doesn’t really extend the "Problem Umbrella" to the women that populate the book as background characters. Arielle goes to an insane asylum due to her break-up with Sam. Israeli Talia gives Sam some major agita about whether or not he's Jewish enough. Al Gore’s daughter Lauren can’t allow herself to fall for noble, good-hearted Keith but fucks the Harvard asshole who drinks every night in his pink J. Crew shorts and loafers. Celeste calls Mark’s phone and leaves many hysterical messages. Leslie passive-aggressively forces Mark to come back to her place while he's bombed out of his mind. Sounds a little like the roles played by Leslie Mann and Katherine Heigl in Knocked Up, right?

The only three women in the novel who come close to getting fair treatment are Sasha (Mark’s ex-wife) because she is fundamentally morally good, Katie (the sex writer involved with Sam) because she is smart and good in bed (at least I think that is part of the reason) and Gwyn (Keith’s girlfriend) because by the book’s end she is something like 10 years his junior and constantly avows her love and fascination for men who still live and die by the rules of serious intellectual thinking.

Do I think the book is sexist? Yes, and that should be acknowledged and discussed.

Do I think the book has to be read under that lens? No, absolutely not.

Every problem each man faces in the book, I have faced or am facing. The relate-ability quotient is very high, I think, for anyone who finds themselves lucky/unlucky enough to be 22-23-24-25. Both guys and girls who graduated from liberal arts schools (Ivy or not) find themselves floundering after graduation. We want to use our degrees and passion for whatever it is that drives us to write, read, or think to further ourselves, even if just a little bit, in the world. But in this society it’s not easy to get to a place where you can support yourself doing anything that comes close to what you love, or even, what you can stand behind. 

And then add in all the other problems. We all have to face our heritage, whether it be Jewish or Russian or Agnostic or Martian or Beyond. We all have to extricate ourselves from our families yet simultaneously remain tied to them. We all have to go through the life and death cycles of good and bad relationships, and we all have to deal with the undeniable, biological need for fucking that throws a molotov cocktail into the whole mess.

I mean, a passage like the one below seems pretty universal to me:

“I was twenty years old. When you are twenty years old, and twenty-one, and twenty-two, and twenty-three, and twenty-four, what you want from people is that they tell you about you. When you are twenty, and twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three, you watch the world for the way it watches you. Do people laugh when you make a joke, do they kiss you when you lean into them at a party? Yes? Aha—so that’s who you are. But these people are not to be trusted, your contemporaries, your screwed-up friends and girlfriends—that’s not because of you that they kissed you, but because of them, something about them, those narcissists, whereas you were asking about you, what did they think of you? Now you have no idea.”

I think the book is about any person who wants to get to the self-actualized point where he or she can work at a job they love, read The New York Times, The Economist, The Wall Street JournalThe New Yorker and all the best-selling and important novels of the time (and the past) on a regular basis, donate money to causes, master the art of culinary awesomeness, cut slacking out entirely, learn 4 new languages, travel to solidify those languages, become engaged in a community (online or in real life), follow sports and care about them, go to concerts, support artists, and have time for a mind-blowing and meaningful relationship. Etc. Etc. Etc.

And, even though we know it is fundamentally impossible, we want to do all of this very important, earnest work before the age of 30.

No wonder we’re “Sad.” The pressure to do everything, the pressure that we put on ourselves, is overwhelming. But the beauty in Gessen’s book hovers in his humor and the moments where emotions overpower the intellectual drive and his three main characters act on instinct instead of book smarts.

So if you can get past the horse-in-blinders focus on MEN AND THEIR EXTREMELY IMPORTANT PROBLEMS in this novel, and the very self-assured comma-happy grammatical structures (which seem a little too cutesy for me; like, as if Wes Anderson’s visual aesthetic had been contained in the form of punctuation) then I highly recommend All the Sad Young Literary Men as a book that anyone our age should read.

And, for what it’s worth, here is Keith Gessen’s List: Books That Changed My Life.

Honoré de Balzac, Lost Illusions (1837-39)

Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace (1865-69)

Don DeLillo, White Noise (1985)

Joseph Brodsky, Less Than One: Selected Essays (1986)

Michael Houellebecq, Elementary Particles (1998)

Thomas Frank and Matt Weiland, eds. Commodify Your Dissent (1997)

Irving Howe, A Margin of Hope (1982)

Philip Roth, Zuckerman Bound (1979-85); Sabbath’s Theater (1995)

Adam Ulam, The Bolsheviks (1965)

      Saul Bellow, Herzog (1965); Humboldt’s Gift (1975)

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Top Ten Irish Novels, Briefly Annotated


A very worthwhile list from our friend, Dr. David Rosenwasser:


All are novels; none are short collections. All are 20th- or 21st-century, with one exception. Dates are approximate.

1. Molly Keane, Good Behaviour
She is the greatest Irish novelist, and there are other novels by her nearly as good as this one about a large woman with a small mother and a brother with a secret. Keane is Protestant Ascendancy and a gourmet chef: her favorite ingredient as a writer is vinegar. 1985 or so.

2. William Trevor, Two Lives
Two novels bound together by the Protestant writer the New York Times called the greatest living short story writer in English. Why does Trevor bind these two short novels together? Well, both feature a 59-year-old woman . . . Read them and think about it. 1999 or so.

3. Anne Enright, The Gathering
A recent Booker Prize winner and the best novel I have read lately. A woman searches her memory to come to terms with her brother, the Irish past, and her own narrative complicity. Beautifully written, oneiric. 2007 or so.

4. Edna O'Brien, House of Splendid Isolation
Part of a trilogy by the grand dame of Irish fiction (Wild Decembers in the same trilogy is also terrific), this novel tells the tale of a May-December love affair between an IRA terrorist on the run (and he is the May!) and an aging, resentful, reclusive woman whose house he crashes. Around 1995.

5. Elizabeth Bowen, The House in Paris
Bowen is the most underrated of the great Modernist novelists in English. She is a disciple of Woolf and a pal of Molly Keane (and like her, an Ascendancy Protestant). This novel, one of her three greatest, inhabits the points of view of two kids in a strange house in Paris. There is a long flashback to Ireland. The ingenue is likened to Alice in Wonderland. Around 1935.

6. James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Joyce has to be on the list, and although it is not as great as his best work, Dubliners, Portrait becomes great once we realize it is a comedy and not the romantic novel of education some of us thought it was when we were force-fed it in high school. The discourse of Catholic damnation has never been so vividly mocked nor Irishness so subtly sent up. 1915 or so.

7. Roddy Doyle, The Commitments
Thius first slight novel in The Barrytown Trilogy gets better the more seriously you take it and is wonderful to compare with the film, which Doyle co-wrote and changed a lot. A troop of kids on the dole in 90s Dublin form a soul band--and the comedy of cultural appropriation begins.

8. E.O. Sommerville and Martin Ross, The Real Charlotte
S & R are pen names of two Ascendancy women collaborators. This late 19th-century novel is saturated with spite. It is funny, harsh, and unrelenting about Irish men and the women who love them, hate them, and love to hate them, among other subjects. 1893 or so.

9. Flann O'Brien, At Swim Two Birds
Joyce's successor and Oedipal son writes this zany tale about characters who revolt against the novel they are in; the tale is spliced with a brilliant translation of an actual medieval Irish myth, Sweeney Astray, about the anti-hero Sweeney, turned into a bird for opposing Christianity. 1935 or so.

10. John Banville, The Sea
A fairly recent Booker Prize winner and a wonderful novel to compare with The Gathering. A male oneiric voice this time, a recollection of a young love by an old man. Around 2003.


Have any other suggestions? Let us know!

"Everything's okay."


Dov Alfon, editor-in-chief of Israeli newspaper Haaretz, decided to give all of his journalists the day off last Wednesday and have the news scribed by some of Israel's finest living authors instead. It proved to be a worthwhile experiment.

Avri Herling's stock market report:

"Everything’s okay. Everything’s like usual. Yesterday trading ended. Everything’s okay. The economists went to their homes, the laundry is drying on the lines, dinners are waiting in place… Dow Jones traded steadily and closed with 8,761 points, Nasdaq added 0.9% to a level of 1,860 points…. The guy from the shakshuka [an Israeli egg-and-tomato dish] shop raised his prices again…."

The weather, a poem by Roni Somek:

"Summer is the pencil
that is least sharp
in the seasons’ pencil case."



The New York Times would never do something like this. And even if they did, would that New Yorker sensibility get the best of the authors and make the news even more neurotic, paranoid, and pessimistic than it already is?


Thanks to Marcia for the link.


1 person (unemployed) + time = Poet [I can do math too!]

John Patrick Shanley, College of Mt. St. Vincent (commencement speech)

"Not to bring up something upsetting, but when you leave here today, you may go through a period of unemployment. My suggestion is this: Enjoy the unemployment. Have a second cup of coffee. Go to the park. Read Walt Whitman. Walt Whitman loved being unemployed. I don't believe he ever did a day's work in his life. As you may know, he was a poet. If a lot of time goes by and you continue to be unemployed, you may want to consider announcing to all appropriate parties that you have become a poet."


from nytimes.com

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Daily Math



This:




Plus This:






Will hopefully turn Dan into this:








Photo 1: I paid $2.95 for this notebook. I spend more than that on bagels some days and this Beach Lady Notebook has proven to be more faithful, knowing, and supportive than any bagel I've ever met.

Photo 2: My brand, spankin' new Olivetti Lettera 35 typewriter given to me for the price of on-the-house, courtesy of The-Now-Retired-Eadie.

Photo 3: Raymond Carver typing away in Syracuse, New York, 1984.

Not pictured: My new short fiction workshop at The New School. I paid $647 for this workshop. I could have bought about 216 of my favorite Beach Lady Notebook for that same price. I won't know what the better investment will be until the workshop ends, but I'll keep you posted.


Sunday, June 7, 2009

you will love me for this

Hey everybody. It's Sunday in NYC. It's warm, delicious, and Roger Federer has won the French Open, earning him a career grand slam! I didn't think I could be more excited, until...

Thanks to  JJ, I have a sweet tip that will get you almost 125 free new songs. Just click on this link which takes you to the Urban Outfitters blog, and you can d/load each of their 5 LSTN playlists. #5 has tracks by Lemonade and Grizzly Bears. #4 has Lissy Trullie (my fave!) Little Boots, Tiny Masters of Today (so precious) and nervous breakdown specialist Wavves. #3 has Black Lips! and Mike Bones! #2 gets you Japanese Motors and PB&J. #1 has Dr. Dog (goooo Philly) Albert Hammond Jr. and Black Kids.

So happy downloads, happy iPods, happy summer!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Finally


Yup. She's mine. Don't know what "she" is? Then stay tuned. Plenty more pictures are sure to come.