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Smiley's People
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One thing you have to admire
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about Jane Smiley, no matter what you think of her fiction: She puts her money
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where her mouth is. Two years ago, Smiley published an essay in
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Harper's --a manifesto, really--claiming that readers have been conned
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into seeing Huckleberry Finn as the "definitive" American novel when
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it's actually a mess and a moral disaster. Among her charges was the claim that
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the bond between Huck and the escaped slave Jim was an evasive white fantasy.
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Twain, she says, doesn't care what happens to Jim; Jim is just a dumb sidekick
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and the novel a precursor to the kinds of buddy movies in which a sweet black
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cop played by Danny Glover stands aside while a white hero played by Mel Gibson
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saves the day.
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What's
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more, Smiley wrote, readers have always sensed that the happy ending is slapped
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on, a cop-out; probably the book would have dropped out of sight if certain
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self-promoting writers hadn't started talking it up early in this century.
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These literary bullies--T.S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, and later on, Lionel
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Trilling--were invested in a single, skewed view of American writing. They
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believed that its great theme was the struggle of the individual wandering
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alone in the wilderness, and they turned Huck into a mascot for the Lonely
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Searching Man. What made Smiley especially angry was how these canon-builders
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dismissed all the 19 th century novels that didn't conform to this
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guy-in-nature pattern (unless the novels were written by Henry James). They
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decided that the once-beloved social novel--Smiley's prime example is Harriet
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Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin --was a weepy, feminine waste of
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time.
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Iremember reading Smiley's article at the time and
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blanching. One hates to use a sexist's favorite word, but she came off as
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shrill. On the other hand, if you set aside her excessive loathing of Twain,
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some of her points are hard to argue with. She's , for instance, that until
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recently, men who wrote about alienation stood a decent chance of being taken
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seriously by critics, while a whole genre of social novels written by women got
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pooh-poohed as earnest and sentimental.
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Is it possible, or even
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desirable, to revive the lost tradition of social fiction? In The All-True
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Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton , Smiley has supplied a test case.
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It's set in the Kansas Territory, shortly before the Civil War, when the area
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was an anarchic battleground between Northern abolitionists, poor pro-slavers
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from Missouri, and speculators out to make a buck.
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The
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eponymous heroine was born and raised in Quincy, Ill., and orphaned, just as
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the novel opens, at the age of 18. Lidie is tall, homely, a tomboy--and
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somewhat anachronistically aware of all the 19 th century clothing
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and marriage customs that infantilize women. She's a burden to her extended
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step family, so when Thomas, a serious-minded man from Massachusetts, passes
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through town on his way to Kansas, she marries him within the week. She knows
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he's running guns for abolitionists (blond, effeminate, and brave, he's the
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Northern counterpart to Gone With the Wind 's Ashley), but she's totally
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unprepared for the hardscrabble life she's chosen. The first few chapters are
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gripping re-creations of the hideous journey to Kansas and the daunting task of
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building a cabin from scratch while drunken strangers jeer at you and threaten
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you with rifles.
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From her diatribe in Harper's , you'd
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think Smiley was out to revive Stowian melodrama, with its coincidences,
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angelic children, and neat distinctions between good and evil. Wrong. At every
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point, Smiley upsets the usual expectations. Coming from the no man's land of
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Illinois instead of North or South, Lidie represents the realist's take on
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slavery--in her heart she's against it, but she finds the abolitionists smug,
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intoxicated by their own abstract words. Instead of love at first sight,
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Lidie's romance with cold, fussy Thomas is slow and confusing, and halfway
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through the book, just as she's prepared to investigate the possibility that
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they're in love, he's suddenly murdered. (I might not have revealed this plot
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point if it weren't announced on the book jacket.)
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Here the
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story turns into a kind of absurd picaresque: Lidie, driven by rage at her
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loss, disguises herself as a boy reporter in hostile Missouri and sets out to
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find Thomas' killers. But Smiley blocks her path with various obstacles, until
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Lidie ends up broke and dying on the side of a road, and a slave-owning family
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takes her in. Unwilling to give up the notion that she has a mission, she
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embarks on a final escapade: She tries to liberate Lorna, the family's angry,
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put-upon slave-maid.
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At which point, it becomes obvious that Smiley isn't
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writing a traditional "social novel" at all. She's writing a sendup of
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Huckleberry Finn . The parallels are obvious. Lidie equals Huck, and
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Lorna equals Jim--Lidie even has a mischievous young cousin who's a stand-in
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for Tom Sawyer--and the whole point of the book is to shine the harsh light of
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reality on Twain's irresponsible fantasy. Unlike Huck's adventure, Lidie's ends
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in disaster. Lorna is caught and sent down the river to a violent fate in the
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South. And Lidie learns, learns, and learns her lesson: She's been selfish and
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. Desperate to escape the plantation where she's been recuperating but lacking
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the willpower, she has selfishly accepted the defenseless Lorna "as my reviver,
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felt the cool, firm sensation of her hand on my neck as a promise."
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The ending of Lidie
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Newton is quite stunning as parody. But for someone so bent on unmasking
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pieties, Smiley is not above her own kind of sanctimony. In its curious, modern
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way, this novel is a sermon. It attacks sentimentality, ideology, and piggish
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male heroism, preaching ambiguity in their place. "No one could describe what
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was true in Kansas and Missouri," the newly mature Lidie announces at the end.
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The message is deep--Smiley may be the subtlest didact ever to write a novel.
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But was it worth taking down Huckleberry Finn for? Only if it serves as
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a building block to a better Smiley novel in the future, one in which her
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brilliant lessons of disillusionment fly faster, because they're spurred on by
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a bigger, warmer imagination. This would be the real coup: to unite Smiley's
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cold, corrective realism with the joy--still unmatched--of that increasingly
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misunderstood writer Mark Twain.
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If you
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missed the links within this review, click for the of how critics dismissed a
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"whole genre of social novels written by women ... as earnest and sentimental."
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And 's a comparison between Lidie Newton and an early Smiley novel,
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Duplicate Keys .
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