Thursday, September 19, 2019
A Legacy of Spies
Written in 2017, this is an interesting sequel to The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Le Carré's breakout novel published in 1963, at the height of the Cold War. The Spy Who Came in from the Cold was a masterpiece, a dark portrayal of the cynical ends-justify-the-means view of the espionage services on both sides of the Cold War. A Legacy of Spies revisits the events of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold from the perspective of 50 years afterwards: the children of Alec Leamus and Liz Gold (the protagonists of Spy), now grown and deeply embittered, attempt to sue and/or extort the British Secret Service (and especially the very likable Peter Guillam, right-hand junior to George Smiley) for the wrongs done to their parents.
This backward look is an interesting idea (see Le Carré's piece in The Guardian on how he came to write Spy), and it does effectively highlight some cultural changes in attitudes toward secret services, but the issues at stake are not as powerful as those in almost all of Le Carré's other books and, accordingly, I did not find it as satisfying.
This backward look is an interesting idea (see Le Carré's piece in The Guardian on how he came to write Spy), and it does effectively highlight some cultural changes in attitudes toward secret services, but the issues at stake are not as powerful as those in almost all of Le Carré's other books and, accordingly, I did not find it as satisfying.
Monday, September 16, 2019
Just Kids
I really enjoyed Just Kids by Patti Smith (thanks to
Jillian!), which is full of vivid anecdotes, gritty wisdom and the story of her
very close relationship/lifelong friendship with Robert Mapplethorpe. I’d call
it a rags-to-richness story…richness, less in the sense of wealth than in the
variety of her experiences, her achievements and the astonishing number of
accomplished, interesting people she met or became friends with. In all of this, she remained an unusually
simple and fresh person. Here’s a small
but surprising example of her openness (although taken from M Train, rather
than Just Kids):
September was ending and already cold. I was heading up Sixth Avenue and stopped to buy a new watch cap from a street vendor. As I pulled it on an old man approached me. His blue eyes burned and his hair was white as snow. I noticed that his wool gloves were unraveling and his left hand was bandaged.--Give me the money you have in your pocket, he said.Either I am being tested, I thought, or I have wandered into the opening of a modern fairy tale. I had a twenty and three singles, which I placed in his hand.--Good, he said after a moment, and then returned the twenty.I thanked him and continued on, more buoyant than before.
Patti’s openness unlocked
paths that remain invisible to more conventional souls (me). Like, she goes to a Holy Modal Rounders
concert and becomes interested in the drummer, Slim Shadow:: “..and as he
slammed the drums, I thought, This guy truly embodies the heart and soul of
rock and roll. He had beauty, energy, and animal magnetism.” She decides to write an article about him for
the rock magazine Crawdaddy, and, over the autumn months, they start seeing each
other, as friends. As winter comes, the
impoverished Patti becomes anemic and her doctor advises her:
…to have red meat and drink porter, advice given to Baudelaire when he trudged through a winter in Brussels sick and alone. I was a bit more resourceful than poor Baudelaire. I donned an old plaid coat with deep pockets and lifted two small steaks from Gristede’s, planning to fry them in my grandmother’s cast-iron pan over my hot plate. I was surprised to run into Slim on the street and we took our first non-nocturnal walk. Worrying the meat would go bad, I finally had to admit to him I had two raw steaks in my pocket. He looked at me, trying to detect if I was telling the truth, then slid his hand in my pocket and pulled a steak out in the middle of Seventh Avenue. He shook his head in mock astonishment, saying “Okay, sugar, let’s eat.”We went upstairs and I fired up the hot plate. We ate the steaks out of the pan.
Slim becomes concerned about Patti’s health and takes her
for a lavish lobster dinner at Max’s Kansas City. Patti begins to worry that this “handsome
hillbilly might not have the money to pay the check.” But a stunned friend of Patti’s sees her with
Slim and, motioning her to meet in the ladies’ room, saying “Honey, you don’t
know who he is?” She soon informs her that
“Slim” is Sam Shepard: “he’s the biggest playwright off-Broadway. He had a play
at Lincoln Center. He won five Obies!”
The heart of the book, though, is the story of the
remarkable friendship/partnership between Patti and Robert Mapplethorpe, a friendship that
seemed fated from the beginning. For many
years, they lived together, collaborated on art projects, and were true friends
until Mapplethorpe’s death from AIDS.
Early in the book, Patti says
We headed home holding hands. For a moment I dropped back to watch him walk. His sailor’s gait always touched me. I knew one day I would stop and he would keep on going, but until then nothing could tear us apart.
Just Kids is Smith’s tribute to Mapplethorpe and their
friendship and it’s funny, fascinating, and deeply touching.
NB: 9-19-2019 NY Times just ran a piece on Patti Smith
NB: 9-19-2019 NY Times just ran a piece on Patti Smith
Saturday, September 7, 2019
Update on A Delicate Truth by John Le Carré
Just re-read a 2013 Le Carré, which I had read and liked when it first came out, but had not been particularly struck by. But this time, it hit me harder. One of the prefatory quotes, from Oscar Wilde, was "If one tells the truth, one is sure, sooner or later, to be found out". And without specific spoilers, the book deals with the aftermath of an operation gone very wrong and briskly covered up. A key player, in both the operation and the cover up, is Jay Crispin, a trader in mercenaries. Here's an assessment of Crispin by our protagonist, Toby:
And for sure, wrestling with his disgust and anger, and determined as usual to reduce them to a manageable level, he gave due thought to Hannah Arendt's concept of the banality of evil, and launched into a debate with himself about where Crispin fitted into her scheme of things. Was Crispin, in his own perception, merely one of society's faithful servants, obeying market pressures? Maybe that was how he saw himself, but Toby didn't. As far as Toby was concerned, Jay Crispin was your normal, rootless, amoral, plausible, half-educated, nicely spoken frozen adolescent in a bespoke suit, with an unappeaseable craving for money, power and respect, regardless of where he got them from. So far, so good. He had met embryonic Crispins in every walk of life and every country where he had served: just never until now one who had made his mark as a trader in small wars.
In a half-hearted effort to find excuses for Crispin, Toby even wondered whether, deep down, the man was just plain stupid. How else to explain the cock-up that was Operation Wildlife? And from there, he wandered off into an argument with Friedrich Schiller's grandiose statement that human stupidity was what the gods fought in vain. Not so, in Toby's opinion, and no excuse for anybody, whether god or man. What the gods and all reasonable humans fought in vain wasn't stupidity at all. It was sheer, wanton, bloody indifference to anybody's interests but their own.
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