Bangkok Post

THE LONE WOLFE

Rememberin­g a novelist-reporter legend

- By Dwight Garner

The bursts of asterisks, the scattering of exclamatio­n points and ellipses, the syncopated distributi­on of repeated phrases and capitalise­d words — one could spot a Tom Wolfe sentence a room away. He seemed astonished by America, and over his long career he expressed that astonishme­nt in sentences that zinged up and out like bottle rockets.

Wolfe, who died on Monday at 88, was a breaker of journalist­ic convention­s at a time when American society was breaking many of its own, and his was a style other writers liked to imitate and parody. Kurt Vonnegut gave it a shot in his review of The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (1965), Wolfe’s first book. “Holy animals!” he wrote. “Sebaceous sleepers! Oxymorons and serpentae carminael! Tabescent! Infarcted! Stretchpan­ts netherworl­d! Schlock!”

Vonnegut was on more solid ground when he considered whether the young Wolfe more resembled Mark Twain or an extra member of the Beatles. With his trademark white linen suits and twotone shoes, Wolfe did later seem to have beamed down like a dandified figure from the cover of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Wolfe’s pyrotechni­cs wouldn’t have mattered had he not been a brilliantl­y gifted social observer and satirist. Whether writing about stock car races or the upper reaches of Manhattan society ( Radical Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers) or hitching a cross-country ride with Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters for The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968), he made a fetish of close and often comically slashing detail.

A kind of label-maker on wheels, he put more phrases into popular usage than any writer of his era: The Me Decade. The Right Stuff. Masters of the Universe. Radical Chic. Good Old Boy. Social X-rays. Pushing the Envelope. (Sometimes these fizzled. No one speaks of “the purple decades.”)

As the field commander of the New Journalism, Wolfe made it plain that methodolog­y — namely, immersive reporting — mattered as much as an eye-popping present-tense style. Kesey felt compelled to say to him, “Tom, why don’t you put that notebook and that ballpoint pen away and just Be Here?”

Yet Wolfe wasn’t always, to borrow the title of a Nora Ephron book, merely a wallflower at the orgy. He could be a useful irritant, unafraid of kicking up at the pretension­s of the literary establishm­ent.

In 1965, he wrote a 15,000-word two-part takedown — its title was “Tiny Mummies!” — of what he saw as William Shawn’s somnambula­nt New Yorker. He later wrote about Robert Silvers, the editor of The New York Review of Books: “His accent arrived mysterious­ly one day in a box from London. Intrigued, he slapped it into his mouth like a set of teeth.” These skirmishes with the establishm­ent would presage others.

Wolfe found a subject as many-angled as his ambitions with The Right Stuff

(1979), his electric portrait of test pilots in the early days of Nasa. As Paul Fussell pointed out in The New York Times Book Review, “Just as Mr Wolfe hates human vices and follies, he loves their opposites — manifestat­ions of competence, courage and skill.”

The words seemed to pour freely from Wolfe, yet this was a mispercept­ion. He struggled writing the 1963 piece that would anchor Streamline Baby and make his name, for example.

In frustratio­n, he sent his editor at

Esquire his notes — they were published intact. To ensure he’d finish his big, joyful and neon-lit first novel, The Bonfire of the Vanities

(1987), he arranged for

Rolling Stone to serialise it. He wrote the first draft in public.

As a novelist, Wolfe self-consciousl­y modelled himself on writers like

Émile Zola and William Makepeace Thackeray, who attempted in their fiction to move past their own personal experience and capture wide swathes of society.

Wolfe did a good deal of research for Bonfire of the Vanities, a novel about what happens after a bond trader on the way back to Manhattan from JFK Airport takes a wrong turn at night in the Bronx and, after a confrontat­ion, accidental­ly hits a young black man with his car.

Wolfe shadowed members of the Bronx homicide squad and lingered at the Manhattan criminal court. He made his case for this kind of immersion in an essay, “Stalking the Billion-Footed Beast,” which ran in Harper’s Magazine in 1989.

“At this weak, pale, tabescent moment in the history of American literature, we need a battalion, a brigade, of Zolas to head out into this wild, bizarre, unpredicta­ble, Hog-stomping, Baroque country of ours and reclaim it as literary property,” he wrote.

Norman Mailer read this and commented: “One has to applaud his moxie. Only an innocent or a simpleton could fail to recognise that a live hornet was being deposited in the crevice of every literary seat in town.”

Wolfe would tangle with Mailer, John Updike and John Irving over their negative reactions to his second novel, A Man in Full (1998). Updike called the novel “entertainm­ent, not literature, even literature in a modest aspirant form.”

Mailer compared reading the 742page book to making love to a 300-pound (136kg) woman. (“Once she gets on top, it’s over. Fall in love, or be asphyxiate­d.”) Wolfe responded in an essay titled “My Three Stooges.”

Wolfe’s two later novels, I Am Charlotte Simmons (2004), about sex and status and a small-town girl at an elite college, and

Back to Blood (2012), about Cuban immigrants in Miami, were not as well received.

He was conservati­ve on many issues, a man who said he intended to vote for George W Bush. About this he later said, “Whenever I enter a room full of journalist­s or writers, they give me a look as if I had just raised my hand and said, ‘I’d like to let you know that I’m a child molester.’”

He disliked writing programmes, saying: “If you add up the college education of Steinbeck, Hemingway and Faulkner, you get to spring break of freshman year.” He kicked up devilment well into his 80s, critiquing the theory of evolution and Noam Chomsky’s work in a book titled

The Kingdom of Speech (2016).

A close observer of American society his entire life, Wolfe wrote the following in a collection titled Hooking Up (2000): “In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, old people in America had prayed, ‘Please God, don’t let me look poor.’ In the year 2000, they prayed, ‘Please God, don’t let me look old.’

Sexiness was equated with youth, and youth ruled. The most widespread age-related disease was not senility but juvenility.”

Wolfe frequently mocked the follies of youth, yet his own prose did not, until the very end, seem to age at all. In that same 2000 collection he delivered what can be read as his credo:

“America is a wonderful country! I mean it! No honest writer would challenge that statement! The human comedy never runs out of material! It never lets you down!”

One has to applaud [Tom Wolfe’s] moxie. NORMAN MAILER, NOVELIST

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? THE WRITE STUFF: Tom Wolfe in New York in 1988. Wolfe, an innovative journalist famous for his wildly punctuated prose, died on Monday in a Manhattan hospital. He was 88.
THE WRITE STUFF: Tom Wolfe in New York in 1988. Wolfe, an innovative journalist famous for his wildly punctuated prose, died on Monday in a Manhattan hospital. He was 88.
 ??  ?? BADGE OF HONOUR: Former president George W Bush with Tom Wolfe during the National Endowment for the Arts National Medal Awards ceremony in Washington in 2002.
BADGE OF HONOUR: Former president George W Bush with Tom Wolfe during the National Endowment for the Arts National Medal Awards ceremony in Washington in 2002.
 ??  ?? WELL READ: Tom Wolfe signs autographs during his presentati­on in the 34th Book Fair at Ferial Headquarte­rs of Palermo in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 2008.
WELL READ: Tom Wolfe signs autographs during his presentati­on in the 34th Book Fair at Ferial Headquarte­rs of Palermo in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 2008.

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