The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

122nd time a charm for long-suffering author

‘Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenanc­e’ has sold over 5 million copies since 1974.

- By Steve Chawkins Los Angeles Times

In the nearly five years it took Robert Pirsig to sell “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenanc­e,” 121 publishers rejected the rambling novel.

The 122nd gently warned Pirsig, a former rhetoric professor who had a job writing technical manuals, not to expect more than his $3,000 advance.

“The book is not, as I think you now realize from your correspond­ence with other publishers, a marketing man’s dream,” the editor at William Morrow wrote in a congratula­tory note before its 1974 publicatio­n.

He was wrong. “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenanc­e: An Inquiry into Values” sold 50,000 copies in three months and more than 5 million in the decades since. The dense tome has been translated into at least 27 languages.

Pirsig, a perfection­ist who published only one major work after “Zen” but inspired college classes, academic conference­s and a legion of “Pirsig pilgrims” who retrace the anguished, cross-country motorcycle trip at the heart of his novel, died April 24 at his home in South Berwick, Maine, the Associated Press confirmed. He was 88 and had been in failing health.

“Zen” and Pirsig’s less successful 1991 novel, “Lila,” are not easy reads. In both, he develops what he calls the “Metaphysic­s of Quality,” a philosophy that attempts to unite and transcend the mysticism of the East and the reason of the West.

“Zen” is the account of a 1968 motorcycle trip that Pirsig, his 11-year-old son Chris and two friends made from Minneapoli­s through the West. A fifth traveler was sensed but unseen: Phaedrus, Pirsig’s alter ego, brilliant, uncompromi­sing and obsessed with the search for truth. Like the real-life Pirsig, the ghost-like Phaedrus had an IQ of 170, entered a university at 15 and, as a young man, was committed to mental hospitals where he underwent electrocon­vulsive therapy.

“He was dead,” Pirsig’s narrator writes in “Zen.” “Destroyed by order of the court, enforced by the transmissi­on of high-voltage alternatin­g current through the lobes of his brain.”

On the trip, though, the “dead” Phaedrus was all too active, a real but intangible force vying for the soul of the emotionall­y unstable Chris. Chris is spared in the novel, but Pirsig’s actual son Chris struggled with drug addiction and, at 22, was stabbed to death during a 1979 mugging in San Francisco. It was at a bus stop near the Zen Buddhism center where he lived.

While the book has a more or less happy ending, “Zen” is filled with unanswered and, perhaps, unanswerab­le questions. Pirsig, who weathered schizophre­nia but was devastated by its treatment, doubts everything: reality, sanity — and himself.

“What I am,” he writes, “is a heretic who’s recanted and thereby in everyone’s eyes saved his soul. Everyone’s eyes but one, who knows deep down inside that all he has saved is his skin.”

Born Sept. 6, 1928, in Minneapoli­s, Robert Maynard Pirsig was the son of Harriet and Maynard Pirsig. His father was a law professor and dean of the University of Minnesota Law School.

Stammering and inattentiv­e, Pirsig flunked out of the university at 17, two years after he entered.

Enlisting in the Army, he served in Korea and returned to Minnesota, receiving his bachelor’s degree in 1950.

Over the next eight years, he married fellow student Nancy Ann James, studied Eastern religions in India, lived in a Mexican seaside town, wrote advertisin­g for mortuary cosmetics and, returning again to Minnesota, earned his master’s degree in journalism in 1958.

In 1960, he taught English compositio­n at what was then Montana State College, where he refused, for philosophi­cal reasons, to issue grades. Two years later, he was teaching at the University of Illinois-Chicago when he was hospitaliz­ed for an emotional collapse.

Still struggling with his illness, he set out to write what he thought would be a short essay about the journey he and his son made to San Francisco on his 1964 Honda Superhawk. The resulting manuscript turned into “Zen,” which, unedited, was nearly 30 percent longer than “War and Peace.”

In addition to fleshing out a tortured father-son relationsh­ip and sketching out a philosophy, “Zen” defended technology even as surging environmen­tal awareness was giving it a bad name.

After a long separation, Pirsig was divorced from his first wife in 1978. Several months later, he married Wendy Kimball, a writer he met while sailing off the Florida coast. They crossed the Atlantic and lived aboard his boat in England, the Netherland­s and Sweden before returning to the U.S. in 1985.

In 2012, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by Montana State University but could not attend the ceremony because of poor health.

In addition to his wife, he is survived by son Ted and daughter Nell.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States