ELLEN SAYS:
What would Philip Roth do?
This question, Ann Patchett said this week, is the running joke between her and her agent, as the writer sorts through the fluff of requests she receives now that she's a sought-after celebrity author. Roth, it was implied, is too big and fine to suffer fools or silly solicitations gladly. So he offers a measuring stick for Patchett, whose fame has leaped precipitously since the release of her prize-winning novel "Bel Canto" in 2001.
Yet,
oddly enough, Patchett didn't catch the irony of this observation as
she shared the stage with fellow writer Elizabeth Gilbert at the
Portland (OR) Arts & Lectures series. Here were she and Gilbert,
two writers I've long admired, chatting in front of hundreds of people like two girls at a slumber
party. Longtime correspondents by mail, they owned up to their real
reason for coming to Portland, which was so the two of them could spend
time
together. They went to yoga! They had lunch! They shopped! After
offering this glimpse of their day, Britney and JLo -- I mean, Ann and
Liz -- proceeded to talk about their lives with the once-over-lightly
gloss that affected parts of Gilbert's phenomenal
bestseller "Eat, Pray, Love." Their verbal badminton was big on
self-deprecation, but that hardly obscured the smugness in the air.
What would Philip Roth do, indeed. For women writers who think they still aren't taken as seriously as the men in their field, here was Exhibit A for why that might occur: a coupla chicks sitting around talking while an audience pays $26.50 a seat to hear them indulge in a bout of self- and mutual admiration. For all the chat-festiness of "Oprah," it's hard to envision the TV super-goddess engaging her old bud Toni Morrison like this. Morrison would flick off such public familiarity as easily as she would a bad sentence.
Maybe
the Gilbert-Patchett patter was especially galling because the status
of women writers has been in my mind lately. I had breakfast in New
York last month with one of my favorite novelists, Jayne Anne Phillips,
then met in February with a promising new writer, Lauren Groff.
Phillips lamented
that, between raising two sons and running the writing program at
Rutgers, her five novels ("Lark & Termite" is the latest) have been spaced wide -- too wide to
suit the avaricious machinery of publishing. As for Groff, her
husband and new baby Beckett were in tow when she hit Portland as part
of a West Coast promotional
tour for her new short story collection "Delicate Edible Birds."
"Two books and a baby in one year!" she said. "I'm tired."
When
I noted that Groff's first novel, "The Monsters of Templeton," was a
finalist for the Orange Prize for New Writers, she pointed out that the
Orange Prize is specifically for women, and that sent us off on a
riff about the gender gap in literature. Typically, she observed with a
certain poetic license, awards go to fiction that is written from the
point of view of a man, concerns war and has very short sentences --
Hemingwayesque, as it were. In Groff's view, this means women will
automatically get the short stick in terms of their literary stature.
Stature is a hard thing to measure, of course. But consider John Updike
and the
prominence of his obituary in print and on television when he died.
Clearly, Updike was a big gun
of the written word to anyone who was halfway paying attention. Would
any woman wordsmith (Morrison? Didion?) merit equal media firepower?
This seems a given: The bass voice still has more resonance than the soprano, metaphorically speaking. It's our conditioning, stupid, to borrow a phrase -- which doesn't mean this shouldn't change, only that it is ridiculous not to acknowledge our own internally wired biases even while trying to overcome them. But there are other reasons, too, and Groff's mention of subject matter may have something to do with it: Fiction that deals with the big topics of the day, not the domestic sphere, is more readily imbued with the gravitas of great literature -- pace "War and Peace," not to mention Don DeLillo. Sometimes the formula works, just not always.
Another factor working against women writers is the distractions. If you don't believe the surveys, trust your lying eyes: Women still handle the bulk of the job of raising children, not to mention caring for spouses, parents and friends. They do more housework. The mundane (in other words, all the daily stuff that makes the world go 'round) is their metier, which is probably why they write about it so well -- and fail to produce not only the kind of writing but also the volume that might transform them from wordsmith into literary lion. (Notice the male form.)
Joyce Carol Oates is,
was and shall always be the notable exception to this rule, but that's
the point -- what a marvel she is, and how her example supports another
critical leg of the stool -- the dignity that props up a writer's (or
anyone's) stature. I'm reminded of Oates' appearance more than a decade
ago at Portland Arts & Lectures. Like the professor she is (in
the time she creates from thin air, apparently), Oates gave a
prepared talk on the state of contemporary writing. Unlike Patchett and
Gilbert, who sat with feet tucked underneath them in two oversized
upholstered chairs, she stood at a lectern. In short, she exuded
competence and demanded respect. She served herself and the cause of
literature.
Hi Ellen,
There may be a scholarly trend that names what you experienced at the girl chatfest: postmodernism. We are in a period where what is valued is the individual perspective and subjective context. Ann and Elizabeth were modeling their post-feminist postmodern perspectives in their self-revealing (and probably self-indulgent) conversation. For another woman writer who contrasts their approach (albeit from an earlier era) I suggest the example of Susan Sontag. Her son's recent interview on Fresh Air recalled her searing intellect, intentional refusal of domestic and maternal roles, and (sadly) her lifelong restless dissatisfaction.
Perhaps we are still looking for a post-feminist model where men and women are free to be who they are without concerning themselves with conventional measurements of status. Perhaps Ann and Elizabeth aren't interested in a big NYT obit. Dignity is not exactly the hallmark of public behaviour these days.
Posted by: Anne E. | February 12, 2009 at 08:01 AM
Um, bless you, but would John Updike or James Wood call himself a Book Stud? Have the tagline, Books are better than viagra?
Posted by: Lou Lou | February 18, 2009 at 05:45 AM
Dear Ellen,
Apparently you don't catch the irony either.
Books? Babes? breast cancer? Your tacky website with the cosmoesque sidebars?
Kathy
Posted by: Kathy Bauska | February 23, 2009 at 07:44 PM
Hi Kathy,
Thanks for writing. Yes, Margo and I are deliberately down-market, as they say, and take our enterprise with a sense of humor. But as journalists we keep the focus on the books and issues relating to books, not ourselves, not only in our written work but also in our public appearances. I think that's a big difference from the "coupla chicks" presentation I saw at Portland Arts & Lectures. Not that some people weren't entertained, but a talking mule is entertaining. I think serious writers or writers who want to be taken seriously have to offer more.
But that's just me...
Happy reading,
Ellen
Posted by: Ellen Heltzel | February 23, 2009 at 08:36 PM
Heard you on the radio today (MPR) and loved your comments. So I googled to find this blog post.
I do expect more, and would especially if I paid for what I thought would be a literary discussion.
For the record (to other commenters) and speaking for myself, I prefer a playful blog title paired with serious critique and recommendations over a literary art event that lacks serious and intelligent content.
But that's just me. Thank you!
Posted by: Terri Mazurek | February 25, 2009 at 07:12 PM
Thanks for writing, Terri. I hope readers will get the joke of our bimbo-ish moniker and see that we're serious about books and what you might call mindfulness -- a woo-woo term for being involved and committed to the material. One of my yoga teachers commented, wisely, that yoga practice has to be more than just a physical workout, or the commitment won't last. It's a spiritual and aesthetic refreshment, something your whole body misses if you don't do it. That's how I feel about reading and the world of ideas. That's our version of a babe!
Posted by: Ellen Heltzel | February 26, 2009 at 08:19 AM