More alive and less lonely On books and writers

Jonathan Lethem

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Brooklyn : Melville House [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Jonathan Lethem (author)
Physical Description
xix, 300 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781612196039
  • Introduction
  • I. Engulf and Devour
  • The Loneliest Book I've Read
  • Footnote on Sylvie Selig
  • Engulf and Devour
  • The Figure in the Castle
  • The Greatest Animal Novelist of All Time
  • The Counter-Roth
  • II. It Can Still Take Me There
  • The Only Human Superhero
  • Forget This Introduction
  • What's Old Is New (NYRB)
  • To Catch a Beat
  • Footnote
  • III. Objects in Furious Motion
  • Fierce Attachments
  • Attention Drifting Beautifully (Donald Barthelme)
  • Rock of Ages
  • My Hero: Karl Ove Knausgaard
  • A New Life (Malamud)
  • A Mug's Game
  • Steven Millhauser's Ghost Stories
  • IV. Lost Worlds
  • The Mechanics of Fear, Revisited
  • On the Yard
  • Walter Tevis's Mockingbird
  • Everything Said and Exhausted (Daniel Fuchs)
  • How Did I Get Here and What Could It Possibly Mean? (Bernard Wolfe)
  • Twas Ever Thus (Tanguy Viel's Beyond Suspicion)
  • Russell Greenan's Geniuses
  • V. Ecstatic Depictions of Consciousness
  • Consumed
  • Dog Soldiers
  • Bizarro World
  • On Two Sentences from Charles D'Ambrosio's Screenwriter
  • Remarks Perhaps of Some Assistance to the Reader of Joseph McElroy's Ancient History: A Paraphase
  • VI. Thomas Berger and I Have Never Met (Ishiguro, Bercer and PKD)
  • Kazuo Ishiguro
  • The Butler Did It
  • Footnote on Ishiguro
  • High Priest of the Paranoids
  • The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike
  • To Ubik
  • Life After Wartime
  • Thomas Berger
  • Letters from the Invisible Man: My Correspondence with Thomas Berger
  • Footnote on Berger
  • VII Ok You Mugs
  • Heavy Petting
  • More Than Night
  • You Talkin' to Me?
  • New York Characters
  • Lost and Found
  • The Original Piece of Wood I Left in Your Head: A Conversation Between Director Spike Jonze and Critic Perkus Tooth
  • Johnny's Graying Teenaged Sense of What Isn't Boring (Da Capo Best Music Writing 2002)
  • Close Reading (Ricks on Dylan)
  • Rod Serling
  • Mutual Seduction
  • VIII. Fan Mail
  • Carved in Need
  • New Old Friend (A Toast to Kenneth Koch)
  • Eyes Wide Open
  • Something About a Slice
  • Pynchonopolis
  • To Cosmicomics
  • Anthony Burgess Answers Two Questions
  • A Furtive Exchange
  • Books Are Sandwiches
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

Lethem is literature's ultimate fanboy, something he celebrates in this assemblage of reviews, literary introductions and bird walks from the last 20 years or so. In it, we observe Lethem's signature esoteric fascination with books, records, even slices of pizza. He is a champion of unknown authors, yet also claims luminaries like Kafka for himself. The collection offers a comprehensive view of his evolution as a critic - from the "erratic booklust" of his teens to the distinct intellectualism and genial crankiness of his current work. To borrow from his description of Donald Barthelme, "his attention drifts beautifully." Lethem's earnestness is satisfying, but it's his vulnerability, his willingness to expose his own flaws, that endears. "Some of these pieces embarrass me," he admits in a new essay following two on Kazuo Ishiguro. He's worked to become "more personal, more willingly subjective." A picture emerges of Lethem's critical career: an exercise in curiosity, affection and eager negative capability. One quibble: His references - from Batman to Freud and DeLillo - are mostly male. But whether he's ruminating on "MobyDick" or Karl Ove Knausgaard's "My Struggle," all of Lethem's work does what he suggests good criticism should do: It sends us back to the original texts. As he says of the Italian critic Roberto Calasso, "His readings feel familiar, as though his erudition were inside us, a pre-existing condition only waiting for diagnosis." Lethem's words remind us of our own rabid fandoms. HEATHER SCOTT PARTINGTON, the winner of an emerging critic fellowship from the National Book Critics Circle, has writtenfor Electric Literature, The Los Angeles Times and other publications.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 25, 2017]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The title of Lethem's varied collection of book reviews, introductions, and literary essays will surely resonate with any dedicated reader. Curious and adventurous readers will find a plethora of reading suggestions as Lethem (A Gambler's Anatomy) talks about authors old and new. Indeed, his dedication to contemporary writers is the main note here, though he does delve into some canonical figures, such as Charles Dickens. And his incisive, colorful, and insightful encapsulations of what makes their works special are beguiling, whether he is describing Steven Millhauser's "coolly feverish" prose or alerting readers to the "brief, elliptical, and precise" pre-Remains of the Day novels of Kazuo Ishiguro. Even as a critic, he reads with enthusiasm. In his introduction to Tanguy Viel's Beyond Suspicion, he writes, "The book's reader will meet its opening pages with an intake of breath destined not to be completely released until its last lines have been reached." He is particularly good at arousing interest in forgotten or obscure authors. Also running through his writing is a distinct love of his home town, New York City, and of New York authors, such as Vivian Gornick and Daniel Fuchs. An enthusiastic introduction by Christopher Boucher precedes the collection. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

In this collection, novelist and essayist -Lethem (Motherless Brooklyn; Fortress of Solitude) brings together decades of book reviews, introductions to anthologies and collected works, and other criticism that reveal his inquisitive and expansive reading habits. Lethem delivers these pieces in a relaxed, loose style, and as a novelist-critic, his language is typically articulate and sophisticated. He addresses the work under consideration with humorous and sometimes obsessive anecdotes about his own life, such as the stories told here in the selections about novelists Philip Roth or Kazuo Ishiguro. Lethem describes this approach as "more personal, more willingly subjective," and its overall effect is to bring the reader closer to the well-known (and less well-known) writers under review, and also to Lethem. The collection is edited and introduced by Boucher (English, Boston Coll.; Golden Delicious). VERDICT With such a wide variety of writings, at times this volume feels lacking in an overall coherent theme, but readers will be consistently won over by Lethem's sense of discovery. His sui generis criticism will leave readers wanting to read the books he discusses.-Doug Diesenhaus, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

One of America's most accomplished writers looks back between the pages of other writers' books.Lethem (A Gambler's Anatomy, 2016, etc.) is no stranger to books, between working in bookstores and writing regularly about them for venues like the New Yorker and Harper's. Here, novelist Boucher (Golden Delicious, 2016, etc.) fondly curates a thoughtful and often sly collection of Lethem's thoughts on books, films, and other works of art culled from the past two decades. The essays, reviews, and other ephemera are divided into sections, ranging from "Engulf and Devour" (books in the literary canon) to "Lost Worlds" (long-lost gems). One of the delights is Lethem's personal voice, often laced with arch humor but absent the jarring postmodern irony that sometimes marks writers at McSweeney's. The author also lacks literary pretension, tackling titans like Kafka, Melville, and Dickens but also penning tributes to Rod Serling and Batman. There are affectionate pieces about Walter Tevis' obscure sci-fi novel Mockingbird (1980) and the late novelist Thomas Berger. Occasionally, there's self-conscious commentary, as in Lethem's footnote on Kazuo Ishiguro in which he admits he's embarrassed by some of these pieces. He also offers a wonderful triptych of stories about Philip K. Dick, whom Lethem dubs a "necessary writer, in the someone-would-have-had-to-invent-him senseAmerican Literature's Lenny Bruce." There are some strange experimentse.g., a feature written entirely in footnotes, the last of which reads "I'm not making any of this fucking shit up." Another imagines an interview between the director Spike Jonze and the fictional character Perkus Tooth from Lethem's Chronic City (2009). Fans may also enjoy Lethem's encounters with writers he admires, ranging from affectionate memories of Philip Roth to a caustic encounter with Anthony Burgess. A throwaway line from an essay on amnesia sums up this standout collection: "I followed the higher principle of pleasure, tried to end where I'd started: with writing I loved and wanted to recommend to someone else. That is to say, you." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

More Alive and Less Lonely: On Books and Writers Introduction by Christopher Boucher The barber, the cheese man, and the bookie were all named Carmine--oh yeah , wheels within wheels, big time . --Motherless Brooklyn I first heard about the project that would become More Alive and Less Lonely at Fenway Park in the summer of 2015. I'd gone to the Red Sox game with my good friend Jaime Clarke, a Boston-based writer, editor, and bookseller, to see them play the Phillies. Sometime around the fifth or sixth inning, Jaime mentioned that his friend Jonathan Lethem was interested in working with my publisher, Melville House, on a nonfiction book. Jaime thought I should consider editing the project--was I interested? With that question, the game stopped mid-pitch and everyone at Fenway froze--the players, the crowd, the vendors, perhaps all of Boston. Not only is Lethem one of the most important writers of my generation, but he's also one of the brightest stars in my literary solar system--a star I've steered by for my entire writing career. The game resumed, but I can't tell you a single thing about it--my attention was elsewhere. -- Jaime put Lethem and me in touch, and Lethem sent me the work he'd collected--roughly seventy-five pieces, some never before published--all written over the past two decades or so. I was charged with identifying a framework and a focus. I didn't have to look too hard. The theme of books and book culture jumped out at me immediately. What's more, I was struck by how well these pieces cohered. Collectively, they formed a sustained meditation on the endeavors of reading and writing; a celebration of a life spent in books; a readerly call-to-action. Without knowing it, I'd been waiting to read a book like this for years. Grateful as I was to glean lessons on craft from Lethem's fiction, I did so only by inference and assumption. But this is a hotline--rare, direct access to Lethem's X-ray-like critical insight; his mental library; his infectious hunger for books of all kinds. Because these selections are culled from a twenty year span and a variety of publications, More Alive and Less Lonely invites you to travel in time a little. You might turn a page and find yourself in 1985, sitting next to Lethem at a reading by Anthony Burgess ("Anthony Burgess Answers Two Questions"). From there you can hop forward to 2009, where readers are eagerly awaiting Lorrie Moore's first book in eleven years. Flip from there, perhaps, back to 1983, where a teenage Lethem confronts the beat hero Herbert Huncke at a Brooklyn bookstore. There are delightful surprises at every turn: anthems for books you might not be familiar with (Walter Tevis's Mockingbird , for example, or Tanguy Viel's Beyond Suspicion ), radically creative anthology contributions (an essay on footnotes, for example, which itself takes the form of self-referencing footnotes), and tributes that correlate directly to Lethem's novels (most notably, "The Original Piece of Wood I Left in Your Head," a fictional interview between the film director Spike Jonze and Chronic City 's Perkus Tooth). By and large, the chapter headings divide the selections according to their mission: The work in "Lost Worlds" shines light on obscure or out-of-print titles, for example, while "Engulf and Devour" collects writing about books in the canon. "OK You Mugs" amasses Lethem's writings on media, while the selections in "It Can Still Take Me There" reflect--either directly or indirectly--on the entity of the book itself. I see these chapters as temporary containers, though, suggested routes that I'm sure you'll abandon to cut your own paths. Some readers may gravitate towards Lethem's writing on one particular writer or topic--Thomas Berger, say, or the notion of amnesia as a narrative device--while others will surely look to More Alive as a partial portrait of contemporary literature in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Lethem completists, meanwhile, might comb these writings for biographical details--I'd direct them to Lethem's anecdotes about his surprise visit to Chester Brown in Toronto ("A Furtive Exchange"), or the time he made Philip Roth laugh at a party ("The Counter-Roth"). Some of the lines of motion here are more subtle. As a student of Lethem's fiction, I found myself tracking his analysis of other writers' styles, for example. I love his description of Moore's "innate thingliness of words...their plastic capacity," the way he rejects abstraction in the work of Thomas Pynchon ("...figuring out what it is like to read Pynchon is what it is like to read Pynchon. You're never done with it.") and his reverence for Moby-Dick --which, Lethem writes, "installs itself in your brain as a kind of second brain, bigger than that which contains it, much like swallowing an ocean of language and implication." Look, too, for those tendrils that run between this book and others by Lethem. In one of my favorite moments in 2012's The Ecstasy of Influence , for example, Lethem writes that "Language, as a vehicle, is a lemon, a hot rod painted with thrilling flames but crazily erratic to drive, riddled with bugs like innate self-consciousness, embedded metaphors and symbols, helpless intertextuality, and so forth." Pair that with what Lethem says about Franz Kafka here--that "[he] grasped that language itself--even the very plainest and most direct--is innately metaphorical, fabulated, and grotesque. What's worse, consciousness, being constructed from language, has that same unholy drift..." ("The Figure in the Castle"). Finally, take note of the new, unpublished writing that appears here for the first time--the footnotes on Berger and Sylvie Selig, for example--and the spirit of restless inquiry therein. Like a detective on a case, Lethem circles back, reexamines the evidence, corrects himself and reframes anecdotes from new perspectives. It's not the answers that drive him, after all, but the questions' persistence--and, to borrow from his words on Philip K. Dick, the "beauty of their asking." In the end, I confess I was driven by my own selfish interests here; I curated a book that I myself wanted to own--one I could carry with me into bookstores, sip on the fly or gulp from in longer sittings, look to for both short bursts of insight and sustained inquiries. This book, after all, is a node, its objective to lead you to other nodes--those mentioned here, and then to other books by those authors, then to books that influenced those authors, through an infinitely expanding web of texts. Driving these connections, though, is Lethem's remarkable generosity of spirit and gratitude. Ultimately, in fact, I regard More Alive and Less Lonely as a love letter--one addressed to books, writers and readers alike. Lethem says as much in the pages that follow. He writes: "I followed the higher principle of pleasure, tried to end up where I'd started: with writing I loved and wanted to recommend to someone else. That is to say, you." Excerpted from More Alive and Less Lonely: On Books and Writers by Jonathan Lethem All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.