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Sad Sack Superman
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Like Hermann Hesse's
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Steppenwolf and anything by Antonin Artaud, Frederick Exley's A Fan's
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Notes is one of those books that gets pushed on you by crazy people. I was
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in Munich in the early 1980s, widening my horizons on a Eurailpass, when it was
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pushed on me. An aging beatnik with a ragged knapsack plunked down next to me
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in the Haufbrauhaus and started raving about the "book of books." He brought
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out a tattered paperback and thrust it at me, insisting that the volume was too
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important not to be passed on. When I asked the man what A Fan's Notes
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was about, I expected an answer profound and mystical; instead, he fixed his
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bright eyes on me and said, "Frank Gifford. It's all about this guy who loves
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Frank Gifford."
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A
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Fan's Notes , which is being canonized this month in a Modern Library
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edition and whose author is the subject of a new biography by Washington
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Post critic Jonathan Yardley, is actually more of a memoir than a novel,
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and is only incidentally about the former New York Giants halfback Frank
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Gifford. First published in 1968, the book has been kept alive by zealous
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readers who feel compelled to promote it, Amway-style, to everyone they meet.
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Read a chapter or two and you'll know why. Written by a self-pitying autodidact
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for consumption by self-pitying autodidacts, A Fan's Notes divides the
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world into two camps: tortured, bewildered misfits (Exleys) and serene,
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fair-haired conformists (Giffords). In America, Exley implies--indeed, he
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shouts it--a person is either a suffering poet or a cheerful drone.
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I'm in pain, you're in pain. It's the classic invitation of
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the memoirist, the ploy that teams reader and writer against the world, and
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it's also the classic lament of the barroom, which is where Exley's painful
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story opens. While watching a televised Giants game, indulging his overweening
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passion for football, he collapses from alcoholic exhaustion. The breakdown
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occasions a jigsaw of memories: of an upstate New York boyhood dominated by a
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local-hero dad; of doomed attempts to make it in the straight world of
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Manhattan advertising; of romantic humiliations at the hands of perky
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centerfold blondes; and, finally, of dreamlike interludes in sadistic mental
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hospitals.
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Where have
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all the anti-heroes gone? Literary dementia seems dated now, but there was a
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time when a month in the funny farm was as de rigueur for budding
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writers as an MFA is now. To be sent away was a badge of honor, to undergo
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electroshock a glorious martyrdom. "Was I, too, insane?" Exley asks when he's
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committed. "It was a difficult admission to make, but I am glad that I made it;
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later I came to believe that this admission about oneself may be the only
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redemption in America." This notion was once a staple of big novels (see
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Catch-22 or One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest ), and Exley plays it
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for all it is worth, ennobling himself through nausea. A rosy-cheeked suburban
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family seated next to him at a football game makes him want to "cut my
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jugular." When he falls in love with a beautiful Midwestern girl, her "milk
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flecked with butter" complexion renders him impotent.
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Exley is so over-rich in his descriptions of
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all things wholesome and American that his disgust is infectious. His prose is
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moist with lyrical revulsion. Autumn days are blinding in their goldenness,
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pretty girls suffocating in their softness, young executives crucifying in
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their crispness. Exley, as sensitive as a rotten tooth, can bear the world in
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the smallest doses only, and any extended period of consciousness forces him
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back to the bar, the hospital. In one chapter, "Journey on a Davenport," he
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tucks himself in on his mother's couch and goes on a sort of existential
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sit-down strike. "In a land where movement is virtue, where the echo of heels
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clicking rapidly on pavement is inordinately blest, it is a grand, defiant, and
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edifying gesture to lie down for six months."
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Exley's
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self-loathing is really self-love. His is an Olympian degradation. His voice on
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the page is a rummy baritone, fat and resonant but capable of a cruel
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exactitude, as when he describes a girlfriend's melting love for him. "[T]here
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came a point when Bunny had a kind of terrifyingly loose and constant
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moistness, the kind of totally loose submission one detects in a woman he has
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impregnated, the moist eyes, the warm moist hands, the loose moist breasts
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beneath the cotton blouse." At other times Exley's smoky eloquence turns blowsy
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and verbose. "Thus it was that the days of my youth flew by like violently
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clashing confetti." Exley writes, in short, like what he was: a middle-aged,
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unpublished novelist tuning up to write his magnum opus just as soon as
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he finishes one more drink.
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The amazing thing is that Exley's postponement of his great
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work inspired a great work about postponement, a portrait of the artist as
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procrastinator. The drunken bore of A Fan's Notes is never boring. He's
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vibrant with resentment, alive with failure, a sad sack superman. When he gazes
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up from his stool at fleet Frank Gifford catching a touchdown pass, it's a
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transporting thrill, a brief ascension. Exley found consolations in his sloth,
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among them an awe of physical transcendence. His talent for disgust and mockery
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was saved by a paradoxical gift for praise.
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Exley's
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life of splendid indigence didn't change when his book met with wide acclaim.
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According to Jonathan Yardley's Misfit , Exley didn't become rich, just
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somewhat famous, though this was enough to turn his alienation into an act, a
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tiresome self-caricature. From the bar of Greenwich Village's Lion's Head pub,
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where he reigned as a sort of rumpled deadbeat Buddha, he attracted a circle of
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seedy admirers who kept him in cold beer and pocket change in return for
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recycled, embellished anecdotes concerning his hard-luck youth and years of
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wandering. He hectored friends and publishers for money, repaid people's love
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for him with cold neglect, and followed up on A Fan's Notes with two
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sequels, neither of which the critics deemed interesting. In Yardley's
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affectionate yet dubious portrait of a man he knew only through rambling
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late-night phone calls, Exley was a classic one-hit wonder, a writer who never
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overcame his breakthrough.
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The wonder, of course, is that Exley broke
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through at all. Yardley's book does little to solve the mystery of how a man
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with no apparent self-discipline, minimal formal training, and colossally
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self-destructive habits managed to write a contemporary classic on his first go
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round. To make the job of reconstruction harder, Exley wrote few letters,
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rarely lived long at one address, and wasn't given to intimate conversation.
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When he died of a stroke in 1992 (too early to see his adored Frank Gifford
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dragged from an athletic state of grace into the oily tabloid muck), he left
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behind no significant paper trail other than the memoirs that made his name.
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Yardley hunts in their margins for clues to Exley's inner life, with modest
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results. He concludes, on the basis of a few short passages, that Exley was
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strangely obsessed with oral sex. On even less evidence he speculates that
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Exley may have had homosexual leanings, to which readers may feel entitled to
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ask: Doesn't everyone?
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Yardley's conclusions don't
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add up to much in any conventional biographical sense, and he admits as much in
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his prologue: "[Exley] lived on another planet, if not in another universe."
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Still, Yardley's book has value as a study of just how small and brief and
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enigmatic certain writers' lives can be once you've subtracted their work from
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the equation. Exley put all he had into his books, and what he had, besides his
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talent, was shockingly little: a troubled heart, a bottle, an affection for the
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home team, and a cacophony of chemical imbalances. It's no wonder that crazy
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people love him: Exley did more with less than any writer I can think of. His
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failure will endure.
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