May 4th, 2009 / 6:14 pm
Excerpts

Variations on Hating Part 2! The Young Philip Roth Rebels

I had- and still have, but that’s another post- a huge crush on Philip Roth. Look how hot he was. In an earlier brief post (click here), I touched on a certain artist’s need to embarrass herself. I often feel the same. I think Roth did, too. Perhaps it’s a youthful impulse. Regardless, I believe Roth has three masterpieces (One which is actually four books): Zuckerman Bound (which consists of The Ghost Writer, Zuckerman Unbound, The Anatomy Lesson and The Prague Orgy ), Sabbath’s Theater and American Pastoral. (Oh, And possibly The Counterlife goes in there too.)

What  I do know from reading his work is that one gets to see a human life go through the predictable- but in no way uninteresting, in fact, I would argue, a very fascinating– transition of rebelling against the constraints of home and community (in his case, a Jewish, immigrant home and community) in search of a larger, freer life, only to realize in mid-life and old age that there’s incredible beauty and honor in one’s roots. This is not becoming conservative. Indeed, Sabbath’s Theater maintains Roth’s gleeful love of offending and, well, fucking. What does happen though, in American Pastoral and other, later works, is he learns to love every minute of his life. He learns to feel awe for his past and respect for those who gave him life. He has shrugged off the restrictions of his childhood and can now be- GRATEFUL- for it all.

But before he explored gratitude in his work, he explored telling his father and all of his father-like friends and relatives, to fuck off. Here is a fantastic passage taking place in a Jewish cemetery from The Anatomy Lesson indicating, if nothing else, a fictional exploration of desire to break free from one’s past and run into the future of a less confining world:

Zuckerman, with what strength remained in his enfeebled arms, pounced upon the old man’s neck. He would kill–and never again suppose himself better than his crime: an end to denial; of the heaviest judgement guilty as charged. “Your sacred genes! What do you see inside your head? Genes with JEW sewed on them? IS that all you see in that lunatic mind, the unstained natural virtue of Jews?”

“Stop!” Mr Freytag began pushing him off with his thick gloved hands, “Stop this! Zuck!”

“What’s he do all night long? He’s out studying fucking!”

“Zuck, no-Zuck, the dead!”

We are the dead! These bones in boxes are the Jewish living! These are the people running the show!”

“Help me!” He struggled free, turned to the gate, stumbled–and Zuckerman slid after him. “Hurry!” Mr. Freytag called. “Something’s happened!” And wailing for help as he ran, the old man to be strangled was gone.

Just white snow whirling now, all else obliterated but the chiseled stones, and his hands frantically straining to throttle that throat. “Our genes! Our sacred little packet of Jewish sugars!” Then his legs flew off and he was sitting. From there he began his recitation, at the top of his voice read aloud the words  he saw carved all around him in rock. “Honor thy Finkelstein! Do not commit Kaufman! Make no idols in the form of Levine! Thou shalt not take in vain the name of Katz!”

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16 Comments

  1. Justin Taylor

      The first Zuckerman quartet is great, but I think The Ghost Writer also stands on its own, and stands out as the best.

      Most recently I read The Dying Animal. There were a few things wrong with it, but the things that were right carried the day by a huge margin. And I do mean day- that book took most of a well-spent afternoon.

  2. Justin Taylor

      The first Zuckerman quartet is great, but I think The Ghost Writer also stands on its own, and stands out as the best.

      Most recently I read The Dying Animal. There were a few things wrong with it, but the things that were right carried the day by a huge margin. And I do mean day- that book took most of a well-spent afternoon.

  3. pr

      I haven’t read it buy my husband liked it very much. I read so much of him during an intense obsessive time and now it’s been very long since I’ve read anything. That’ll change- I’ll have another Roth phase. Interesting you like The Ghost Writer the best. You may be right. I read them all in a row, so I sort of read it all as one book. I do remember being mildly disappointed with The Prague Orgy. But I think he has troubles with endings in general. Not that I hold that against him. I can forgive a lot when a writer is as good as him.

  4. Ryan Call

      ghost writer is my favorite

  5. Ryan Call

      ghost writer is my favorite

  6. PHM

      Counterlife. Yes.

  7. PHM

      Counterlife. Yes.

  8. pr

      You know, that one I really think I want to reread. I don’t remember it well but remember it was very engrossing and a bit “meta”. Sabbath’s Theater I’ve read twice. And I don’t think I want to reread all of Zuckerman Bound- but yeah, The Counterlife. Some fake author impersonates an author? Is it a Zuckerman book? Is the author Zuckerman? I read it 14 years ago. Hm. I just remember it blew my mind.
      BTW- I don’t like his other alter ego- the guy in The Breast and a more recent novella, title which escapes me. But I love Zuckerman.

  9. HTMLGIAN

      I like in Professor of Desire or whatever where the Swedish girl growls like a dog and goes, “Argghhhhhh….” when she drinks his come.

  10. HTMLGIAN

      I like in Professor of Desire or whatever where the Swedish girl growls like a dog and goes, “Argghhhhhh….” when she drinks his come.

  11. pr

      Professor of Desire is the character of David Kapesh. That’s the guy from The Breast. Never read it. I read The Breast- I may not have finished it-but I was and am so taken with Zuckerman, that Kapesh never did it for me. But Roth has a way of being wonderfully fucked up when writing about fucking. I just prefer Zuckerman.

  12. Jonny Ross

      The Ghost Writer was only one of the Zuck books I could get through, and liked it. Goodbye, Columbus is interesting in how takes a traditional boy meets girl story and gives it some depth. And Portnoy’s Complaint. Nothing really needs to said. He really taps into that Dostoevsky/Celine black humor in that one.

  13. Jonny Ross

      The Ghost Writer was only one of the Zuck books I could get through, and liked it. Goodbye, Columbus is interesting in how takes a traditional boy meets girl story and gives it some depth. And Portnoy’s Complaint. Nothing really needs to said. He really taps into that Dostoevsky/Celine black humor in that one.

  14. David

      If I had to pick 3 masterpieces for Roth they would be:

      My Life as a Man
      Sabbath’s Theater
      Operation Shylock

  15. David

      If I had to pick 3 masterpieces for Roth they would be:

      My Life as a Man
      Sabbath’s Theater
      Operation Shylock

  16. pr

      Operatio Shylock -yes! I get that one and Counterlife mixed up – I think I read them back to back- and that was 14 yrs ago. As you know, I love Sabbath’s – but I was not crazy as My Life as A Man. I like his mid and latish stuff more than the early stuff.