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My Orthodontist Immortalized by Mona Simpson!
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"Open a little wider, Honey," Dr. Spritzer said. He looked even better
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than he had at the cake sale. His good face seemed to pop out of the
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tight-necked green smock.
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"So, how did you survive your cake?" he asked my mother over my head.
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"Ours was very tasty, actually."
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"Let's see here." He moved something suspiciously like a pliers in my mouth.
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"Well, it looks like she's going to need some braces for da teef, I'm
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afraid."
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--Mona Simpson, Anywhere But Here
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Three decades after enduring one of the more agonizing rituals of
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adolescence, Chatterbox has no difficulty recognizing in Dr. Josh Spritzer--the
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vaguely caddish Beverly Hills orthodontist who seduces and abandons Adele
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August (played by Susan Sarandon in the just-released
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movie)--Chatterbox's own orthodontist. By this, Chatterbox doesn't mean
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that Simpson's novel captures certain universal truths about Beverly
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Hills orthodontists. Rather, Chatterbox means that Simpson captures one
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specific Beverly Hills orthodontist, named Nathan Seltzer, who straightened
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Chatterbox's teeth during the Nixon administration.
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Anywhere But Here is, of course, a novel (and a very good one; the
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movie is only so-so). That said, it should be noted that Simpson, like most
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people who create works of the imagination, has been suspected now and then of
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drawing on the lives of real people. Her mother, Joanne Simpson, is widely
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assumed to be a prototype for Adele August, the exuberantly selfish mother in
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Anywhere But Here ; her brother, Apple Computer's Steve Jobs, is
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similarly thought to be a prototype for Tom Owens, the biotech mogul in her
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last novel, A Regular Guy . (To read an ambivalent Harvard
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Advocate article by Simpson's niece, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, about her own
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story's being appropriated in the latter work, click here.)
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Not even the tiniest of the small literary magazines, however, has likely
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given any consideration to Simpson's apparent use of Dr. Nathan Seltzer as a
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prototype for Dr. Josh Spritzer. Here is how, in the novel, Adele August
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describes to her teen-age daughter Ann her first date with Dr. Spritzer (the
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scene in the movie is nearly identical):
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"He did something last night that grown-ups do sometimes that show you
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really, really care about someone."
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"What?"
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"Oh, honey, it's something adults do in bed. But not many people ever do it.
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It means you really, really like the woman. You'll know when you're older. It
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just means they're really, really serious about you. They wouldn't do it with
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just any woman."
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But a few chapters later, Ann overhears her mother talking on the phone to
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Dr. Spritzer, and
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I could tell from the way her voice rose in waves of enthusiasm--too much
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music, nerve and light--that Josh Spritzer didn't want to be listening. Her
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breath gathered as she began each sentence.
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A few chapters after that, Adele is taking Ann on rides past Dr. Spritzer's
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apartment and saying things like "I'd like to tell his psychiatrist a thing or
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two." A few chapters after that, Ann observes, "Josh Spritzer seemed to be
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dropping my mother." And a few chapters after that, he does. (In the movie, Dr.
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Spritzer hangs up on Adele the morning after their first date because she tells
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him she loves him.)
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Although Dr. Spritzer's reluctance to get enmeshed in Adele August's life is
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presented in both book and movie as entirely rational, given Adele's extreme
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neediness, both emotional and financial--Ann can't wait to be old enough to
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leave home--there is also the sense, in both the book and the movie, that Dr.
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Spritzer is a little bit of a jerk. Since first encountering the novel a dozen
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years ago, Chatterbox has assumed the sexual relationship in the book was
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entirely made up, but nevertheless has wondered how Dr. Seltzer felt about
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being portrayed as a love-'em-and-leave-'em '70s swinger. Chatterbox figured
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Dr. Seltzer would be flattered to be described in the book as handsome, and
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even more flattered by the hunky portrayal of him in the movie by an actor
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named Hart Bochner. But Chatterbox also figured Dr. Seltzer would
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consider the moral dimension of the Dr. Spritzer character somewhat wanting.
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Here was a man who'd devoted his life to making crooked things
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straight . Was Simpson taking something straight --the uprightness
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of Dr. Nathan Seltzer--and making it crooked ? The more he thought about
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it, the more it seemed to Chatterbox that Dr. Seltzer, no less than Lisa
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Brennan-Jobs, had a right to tell his side of the story.
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The morning after seeing the movie, Chatterbox excitedly rang up Dr.
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Seltzer's office, where, according to the phone book, Dr. Seltzer was still
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straightening teeth on Wilshire Boulevard. But the receptionist who answered
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announced the office as that of another orthodontist named Joseph Cannon. Dr.
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Seltzer, she explained, had passed on eight or nine years ago--possibly not
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even aware of the literary fame that Simpson had foisted upon him.
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