The Sunday Times
January 31, 2010
JD Salinger’s silent rebel yell

The author of The Catcher in the Rye, who died last week, was the voice of teenage angst, but the words he never published are almost as important

He stopped publishing in 1965 and retreated from the world but his influence continued, stretching beyond literature to the worlds of film and rock music

Stephen Amidon and Robert Collins (interviews)

JD Salinger was never just a writer. From the moment his debut novel, The Catcher in the Rye, started being passed around by angst-ridden American teenagers in 1951, it became clear that the book’s influence on a world that its author so clearly mistrusted would be immense.

Over the next half-century this story of a teenage prep school dropout named Holden Caulfield would echo far beyond the classrooms where it was both the most assigned and the most banned book of its time. Salinger has spoken like no other author to the fringes of society, from indie rockers to cutting-edge film-makers to deranged assassins. Beloved by people who might not ever read another novel, he was the poet of youthful alienation before youth really knew what that was.

Anyone who doubts the breadth and depth of Salinger’s influence need only look at the roster of gunmen who found warped inspiration in Caulfield. Mark David Chapman had practically learnt The Catcher in the Rye by heart by the time he killed John Lennon in 1980.

After the shooting, Chapman reportedly sat on the pavement and began to read the book inside whose cover he had inscribed the words, “This is my statement”. John Hinckley, who shot President Ronald Reagan less than six months later, was also obsessed with the novel .

While it would be unfair in the extreme to say that Salinger deliberately inspired killers, The Catcher in the Rye, which has sold more than 65m copies since publication, certainly speaks to the wounded, estranged sensibility that seems to exist primarily in teenagers — and in those who cannot let go of being teenagers.

All Salinger’s characters are brilliant, hypersensitive outcasts who think they can see through the world’s phoneyness even though this clarity brings them nothing but pain. Caulfield in particular captures the bewilderment of adolescence better than any American character since Huckleberry Finn.

“Salinger’s voice as a writer seemed to confirm the reality of adolescence for me,” says Andrew O’Hagan, the novelist. “This was a guy who homed in on a particular dismay that can exist in people who are between childhood and adulthood. I think he made poetry of that.”

“He saw the teenager,” Hanif Kureishi agrees. “The teenager was always going to be there in the post-war period and he was the first person to put his finger on it, to exemplify it.”

Salinger’s influence was perhaps at its strongest in the 1960s, when youthful rebellion was still finding its voice. Nowadays, when teenagers are practically expected to run wild, there is less hunger for his work.

“I read him when I was a teenager and a young man, in my teens and twenties,” claims Martin Amis. “It was like someone shining a torch on your own thoughts … I think it was a very pure voice he had. There was no one like him.” Amis, however, admits to not having looked at Salinger’s work in years. Indeed, there is something of a childhood romance about this infatuation among writers. It has been said that The Catcher in the Rye has influenced more first novels than any other book but has never inspired a second.

“I very much loved his books,” says Will Self. “I loved them obsessively. And then I repudiated them. I think I understood even in my teens that Salinger was essentially a case of the genius as arrested development, that there was something sentimental and pretentious about his writing.”

Salinger’s influence in other genres defies these limits. Rock bands from the Cure to the Beastie Boys have acknowledged deep debts to his work.

Salinger also wielded a powerful influence over the film world, even though the only movie directly based on his work is the forgotten My Foolish Heart (1949), which is based on Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut, a short story published in The New Yorker in 1948. Salinger hated it so much that he never permitted a film version of The Catcher in the Rye. This did not prevent it being one of the most sought-after properties of the past halfcentury. Actors from Jack Nicholson to Tobey Maguire hungered after the role of Caulfield, although no one seemed to want it more than Jerry Lewis, a fact that makes Salinger’s reluctance understandable. Then there’s the film-maker Wes Anderson. The protagonist of Anderson’s movie Rushmore, a failing student with a broad interest in extracurricular activities, is clearly based on Salinger himself. Anderson’s oddball masterpiece The Royal Tenenbaums is inspired by Salinger’s stories of the Glass family, whose seven siblings share the same intelligence and piercing cynicism as the Tenenbaum kids. Legend has it that Nicholson’s haunted writer in Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, who goes mad as he retypes the same sentence, is a gloss on Salinger in his later years. Which brings up a less tangible but equally profound influence that Salinger exerts over the imagination of rebels — his silence. Almost as important as the words he has published are those he has not. In her essay The Aesthetics of Silence, Susan Sontag claims silence “is the artist’s ultimate other-worldly gesture; by silence, he frees himself from servile bondage to the world, which appears as patron, client, audience, antagonist, arbiter and distorter of his work”.

Salinger’s silence is one of his most powerful artistic statements. “There is a marvellous peace in not publishing,” he once claimed. “I love to write. But I write just for myself and my own pleasure.” He stopped publishing in 1965, retreating to an impenetrable New England compound. Its numbing isolation was described by Joyce Maynard, his teenage lover, in her 1998 memoir At Home in the World, which pictured a manipulative, health-obsessed recluse who ate frozen peas for breakfast.

Salinger’s silence was further bolstered when he stopped Ian Hamilton, the British writer, from publishing a 1986 biography in a lawsuit that went all the way to the US Supreme Court. The novelist Don DeLillo’s Mao II (1991) is a haunting study of a burnt-out writer, clearly based on Salinger, who is at work on a “dead” novel that occupies an entire room of his fortress-like home.

What will be uncovered when the safes where Salinger reportedly kept his later work are opened is one of the most tantalising mysteries of contemporary writing.

January 10, 2010
Generosity by Richard Powers
The Sunday Times review by Stephen Amidon

Everybody wants to be happy. But does anyone want to be happy all the time? Without shades of melancholy grey, wouldn’t perpetual bliss make life unbearably bland, a sort of whited-out death on earth?

These questions stand at the heart of Richard Powers’s provocative 10th novel. Set in contemporary Chicago, it ponders the fast-approaching time when neuroscience will allow us to control our emotions. The story centres on Thassa Amzwar, a 23-year-old Algerian immigrant who has fled that nation’s brutal civil war after the slaughter of most of her family. Although she has much more reason to be depressed than the self-involved American students at her film school, Thassa is the picture of happiness, emerging from the “walking corpse” of Algeria “glowing like a blessed-out mystic”.

Not surprisingly, that sort of personality doesn’t go unnoticed in a nation founded on the pursuit of happiness. Her writing professor, Russell Stone, a depressed has-been, quickly falls in love with her and starts to worry that her apparent happiness might be a case of “massive anesthesia from post-traumatic stress disorder”. After Thassa sees off a would-be rapist by the sheer positive power of her personality, there is no longer any chance of hiding her brilliant light under a bushel. She comes to the attention of Thomas Kurton, a visionary geneticist who believes she can help him isolate the happiness gene. After he apparently hits pay dirt, the media circus comes to town, leading to blanket coverage in the national press and an invitation to appear on an Oprah-type chat show. In a country where happiness is seen as something that can be purchased on the open market, Thassa becomes “pretty much a publicly traded commodity”. Soon, the pressure threatens to take a toll on her that Algeria’s death squads were never able to exact.

Powers, whose previous novel The Echo Maker won the National Book Award, has always been adept at exploring the problematic frontiers of contemporary science. Here, his acuity and satire are as sharp as ever, allowing him to deconstruct brilliantly the commercially charged world of genome mapping, where a few Brahmins are well on the way to patenting and controlling the stuff of our being. “Homo sapiens is already divided…into demigods and dispossessed, those who can tame ­living chemistry and those who are mere downstream products.”
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He also takes some effective swipes at the mass media and at college writing courses, where “feelings are the new facts. Memoir is the new history. Tell-alls are the new news”.

What really makes Generosity tick, however, are its characters, who are as multifaceted and alive as any Powers has ever created. Kurton is the sort of rabid capitalist who makes optimism seem like one of the seven deadly sins. His belief in a future where everyone will be bathed in gladness should make readers long to retreat back into the gloom of our depressing past. Stone is also a fine creation, a gifted nonfiction writer whose 15 minutes of fame ended when he realised he didn’t have the stomach for telling unhappy truths about his fellow man.

It is Thassa, though, who holds pride of place in the novel. With her, Powers shows that a predisposition for bliss can, ironically, make a person’s life hell. As the corporate smiley faces begin to close in on Thassa, the reader is placed in the unusual position of rooting for a beloved heroine by wishing a bracing dose of misery on her

January 3, 2010

Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem

The Sunday Times review by Stephen Amidon

Jonathan Lethem’s much-anticipated new novel is set in Manhattan in a year that is a hybrid of 2004 and some future date. Marlon Brando has just been reported dead, but the New York Times publishes a war-free edition and the Chinese have sowed deadly mines in outer space. A grey fog envelops the financial district and a Christo-like artist creates gaping “urban fjords” throughout the city, into which citizens occasionally plummet. Most perilously, an escaped tiger (which may, in fact, be an amok subway-tunnelling machine) is rumoured to be behind a series of cataclysmic events around the island.

Populating this surreal landscape is a collection of characters with larger-than-life names — Perkus Tooth, Richard Abneg, Chase Insteadman, Georgina Hawkmanaji, Laird Noteless. Despite these scenery-chewing appellations, however, Lethem’s cast remain decidedly spectral, often overshadowed by the looming skyline of the novel they inhabit.

Take Insteadman, the book’s narrator. A simple description suggests a fully fleshed character capable of commanding the reader’s interest and sympathy. A former teen-television star now ­living comfortably on residuals from his one-hit show, he is back in the media ­spotlight because his fiancée, an astronaut named Janice Trumbull, is trapped in outer space. Her heartfelt letters to him are printed in the tabloids, earning him the sympathy of this most hard-hearted of cities. Trying to get on with his life, Insteadman befriends the hard-to-like Tooth, a pamphleteer and music critic who lives in marijuana-shrouded isolation, and Abneg, a former housing crusader who works for the city’s billionaire mayor. He also conducts an impulsive, guilt-inducing love affair with a sexy ghostwriter named Oona, who may be more implicated in his life than he knows.

Despite these numerous facets, Insteadman remains two-dimensional. He is so rigidly a vehicle for the author’s various thematic ­concerns that it is difficult to find him credible as a human being. Perhaps this is the point. Chronic City is above all a novel that sets out to map the fuzzy terrain between the real and the virtual, the “ersatz and actual”. However, this agenda often leaves the reader confused as to where he stands.

Lethem moves his large cast through his futuristic terrain like a tech wizard blueprinting a complex video game. In fact, it comes as little surprise that a role-playing game called Yet Another World plays a significant part. This involves several of the characters searching for a seductively beautiful urn that one of them spots in an alternative-healer’s office. Occasionally it seems that Lethem’s Manhattan is nothing more than a sweaty, turbulent simulation. One character even suggests the city may have been created by a giant computer, and that they are all just “little simulated beings…who sincerely believe they’re truly alive”.

At times, Lethem’s narrative takes on a panoramic majesty, especially when it focuses on the crumbling city. At one point, he perfectly evokes what lies beneath the erupting pavements, where “lines of television cable and fresh water and steam heat and outgoing sewage and telephone wire and whatever else…cohabit in the same intestinal holes that pavement-demolishing workmen periodically wrench open to the daylight and to our passing, disturbed glances”.

The occasional power of Lethem’s prose fails, though, to pave over the poorly connected tangle of plot and characters. It is no coincidence that the book’s most affecting character is the one most physically removed from its action — Janice, the “lostronaut”, whose rambling letters from her geosynchronous prison are oddly moving. The same cannot be said for the characters who spend more time on stage. Lethem may have set out to create a vivacious mural of a city in decay, but, in the end, he manages only to create a series of gorgeous fjords into which his people vanish.

Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem
Faber £14.99 pp480