Все статьи
Donald Barthelme Syllabus Прочитать статью на русском языке (перевод Webtranslation.ParaLink.com)
There was
a time when I fought against an impatience with
reading, concealing, with partisanship, the
fissures in my education. I confused difficulty
with duplicity, and that which didn’t come easily,
I often scorned. Then, in my last year of college
in Gainesville, Florida, I was given secondhand a
list of eighty-one books, the recommendations of
Donald Barthelme to his students. Barthelme’s only
guidance, passed on by Padgett Powell, one of
Barthelme’s former students at the University of
Houston and my teacher at the time, was to
attack the books “in no particular order, just
read them,” which is exactly what I, in my
confident illiteracy, resolved to do.
But first I had to find the books, a search
that began at Gainesville’s Friends of the Library
warehouse book sale. Early morning, the warehouse
parking lot was filled with about fifty men,
women, and children waiting for the doors to open.
At the front of the line were the all-nighters,
hard-core sci-fi fans, amateur Civil War
historians, and chasers of obscurities, rumored to
have been there since before midnight. Some had
brought with them hibachis and coolers and
battery-powered radios, giving the parking lot the
feel of a Gator football pre-game with less angry
hope.
When the garage door opened, I watched the
all-nighters sprint into the warehouse,
toward the wall-to-wall shelves and the sixty or
so tables of books, the odor of dampness and dust.
Some books were arranged by subject, others
democratically, Dead Souls rubbing sleeves
with Pregnancy for Dummies. By the time I
made it inside, those ahead of me had already
secured their spots: little kids rummaging through
the picture books in the far corner, a guy in
winter fatigues looking through the vintage
Penthouses, a graduate student with an
Ask Me About Postmodernism pin on his
army-surplus backpack solemnly problematizing the
literary criticism section.
The books on sale were mostly disused and
shabby, dustjackets ripped or discarded, the stamp
of the Alachua Public Library on their fly leaves
and tape marks on the spines. Toward the front of
the warehouse was a collector’s room with
inscribed books by local authors like Harry Crews
and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, but the real
activity was here in the aisles. As a section’s
inventory ran low, library volunteers carted out
cases of books from the front of the warehouse to
replenish it. Shoppers rushed to help the
volunteers unload the books, filling their own
boxes as they did, often holding up and announcing
their windfall. “Copy of Nabokov’s Lectures!”
“Copy of Ariel!”
The first book I found was a pocketbook version
of A Homemade World by Hugh Kenner (number
39 on the list), a scuffed copy full of wobbly
underlining. Fifteen minutes later, I found The
Oranging of America by Max Apple,
Manifestoes of Surrealism by Breton,
Celine’s Journey to the End of the Night,
Flannery O’Connor’s Collected Stories
(numbers 76, 36, 59, and 77).
I was shiftless and poor, so I switched the
color-coded dots from more-marked-down books to
less-marked-down books for a better deal. A
shameful gesture, I know, and worse because of my
new oath to literacy and because the books were
each about two bucks to begin with. All told, I
spent about fifteen dollars on the twenty-five
books in my dishonorable grab.
With a tractable reading list in front of me my
impatience with reading turned quickly into
avidity. Saul Bellow’s Augie March, who also
begins his attachment to books by stealing them,
says about coming late to reading, “I had found
something out about an unknown privation, and I
realized how a general love or craving, before it
is explicit or before it sees its object,
manifests itself as boredom or some other kind of
suffering.”
That object, the book on the list that turned
my resolution into a vow, was O’Connor’s
Collected Stories. I opened the book to “A
Late Encounter With the Enemy,” a story I began
doubtfully and finished stunned; never have my
preconceptions about a book been so quickly burned
into vapor. I saw: Irish name, cartoon peacock on
the front cover, blurb on the back cover saying
the stories “offer an unparalleled picture of the
Deep South,” and I thought: stories about farming,
probably characters lamenting the unpleasantness
between the races and the overall dryness of
things. There’d be ardent specificity about
moonshining and crop rotation and hog-boiling.
There’d be righteous hollerin’ between
man-on-porch and man-on-dirt-front-yard.
Instead, here was hundred-and-four-year-old
“General” Sash, twelve years off the preemy and
damned tired of remembering; and Sally Poker Sash,
his prideful granddaughter, praying that the old
man lived long enough to serve as a monument of
costume dignity at her college graduation for “all
the upstarts who had turned the world on its head
and unsettled the ways of decent living.”
Concision, conviction, and vision: Here was an
artistry I could appreciate, and be amazed by,
without wholly apprehending it. Everywhere an
unsentimental view of human weakness, with
beautiful consequences. Mrs. May? Gored. Lucynell
Crater the younger? Left sleeping at a diner. The
fool and his turkey? Soon parted. The grandmother?
Which grandmother? Doesn’t matter, doomed.
If the list’s books are skewed toward
Barthelme’s particular obsessions—one of the
entries is “Beckett entire”—this is only to its
credit. Most are novels. All but two of the books,
Knut Hamsun’s Hunger and Flaubert’s Letters
(numbers 15, 40), were written in the
twentieth century, most in the past thirty years.
And all have that dizzying sense of otherness and
surprise common to great books, an affluence of
vitality. There’s not a dull read in the group:
Wesley Brown’s Tragic Magic and Max
Frisch’s I’m Not Stiller (numbers 50, 11),
the former the story of a black conscientious
objector during Vietnam, the latter a layered
account of denied identity; the Paris
Review Writers at Work interviews
(number 31) in which Faulkner is asked, “Some
people say they can’t understand your writing,
even after they read it two or three times. What
approach would you suggest for them?” His answer:
“Read it four times.”
Difficult books inhabit the list, too. Thomas
Bernhard’s Correction (number 7), for
example, paragraphless, with dense, pages-long,
self-negating sentences, which move with the
spiraling locomotion of thought; and Andre
Breton’s Nadja (number 65), a mystifying
short novel accompanied by mystifying photographs.
John Hawkes’s The Lime Twig (number 21),
which reads like a traditional novel thrown into a
wood chipper and reassembled.
I read Barthelme’s own 60 Stories, not
included on the list (none of his books are, an
indication of Barthelme’s modesty), but a
collection both rowdier and more urbane, funnier
and wiser, than anything I had read before. “Me
and Miss Mandible,” the journal entries of a
boy-adult longing for his teacher among a
classroom of sixth-graders: “Miss Mandible is in
many ways, notably about the bust, a very tasty
piece.” And Barthelme’s re-imagined Snow
White, in which the command is given, “Revise
your lives upward!” I heard truth beneath the
jangle of comic exhalations, a hint of a world far
more vigorous than the one I knew.
By summer, with the list half-devoured, I felt
on the verge of a sort of worthiness. Because many
of the list’s books were no longer in print, I
spent a lot of time foraging around central
Florida, in thrift stores in Micanopy, in estate
sales in Palatka, and in Daytona Beach—where I was
born, and where I found what would become one of
my favorite places in all of Christendom, Mandala
Books.
On Volusia Avenue, since renamed International
Speedway Boulevard, next to a Lutheran church sits
a used bookstore with kaleidoscopic mirrors and
tie-dye psychedelia in the windows. I haven’t ever
developed a rapport with Mandala’s employees, or
its owner, who is fully bald, and whose name I
don’t know. I know his mastiff’s name, though,
Odessa, usually torpid in front of the travel book
section. The owner is not happy to be in the
used-book business. I once overheard him recalling
to an employee how he’d rejected an offer to
attend the Iowa Writers’ Workshop in the early
seventies. He seemed both proud of and
disappointed by this fact. He often comments on
the books I buy. Saul Bellow is one of his
favorites; he faults Barthelme and Robert Coover
for being “too look-at-me cutesy”; once he shamed
me for trying to haggle over Blotner’s two-volume
Faulkner biography, which he said was already
“piss-cheap.”
I found about a dozen of the list’s books, and
a dozen or so not on the list. But if buying these
old books seems like some small act of charity,
finding a collection like I Would Have Saved
Them If I Could by Leonard Michaels (number
73) leaves me exceedingly grateful—to the author,
to Barthelme, to Mandala Books. Who could have
predicted such rare verve sitting defused and
harmless-looking among Judith Michael’s tales of
passionate adventure and Fern Michaels’s tales of
adventurous passion, in a store that resides among
pawn shops and an Asian grocery store, just a few
blocks away from a black billboard showing Dale
Earnhardt’s Number 3 with goddamn angel wings?
When the summer ended, I knew at least two
things I hadn’t before: Illogical resolutions are
the most likely kept; and, whether or not this
newfound endeavor had made me more interesting, it
certainly made me more interested. “A
blunder—apparently the merest chance—reveals an
unsuspected world,” Joseph Campbell writes in
Hero With a Thousand Faces (number 27),
“and the individual is drawn into a relationship
with forces that are not rightly understood.”
That summer, I still didn’t see through the
haze of my good intentions. But I was beginning to
understand what I did not know.
|