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Pop Fiction
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I started
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picking up The
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New Yorker , back when I was a sprout, in order to
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read Donald Barthelme. I think what did it were those faux-Max Ernst collages
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with which he occasionally ornamented his stories, which appeared so much
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wilder than my received notion of what that magazine was like, and the stories
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turned out to be even wilder than the pictures. His surrealistic short fiction
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was about as avant-garde as you could get on the mass market in those days. As
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the present volume reveals, Barthelme also occasionally contributed to "Notes
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and Comment," at that time the first section of "The Talk of the Town." There's
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nothing earthshaking about those pieces, falling as they do into the
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walking-around-and-peering or flight-of-whimsy tendencies of that venerable
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rubric. Still, it's hard to feature them appearing in today's version of the
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same magazine. "I remember exactly where I was when I realized that
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Post-Modernism had bought it. I was in my study with a cup of tequila and
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William Y's new book, One Half . Y's work is, we agree, good-- very
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good. But who can make the leap to greatness while dragging behind him the
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burnt-out boxcars of a dead aesthetic? Perhaps we can find new employment for
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him. On the roads, for example." In 1975, this, and not a celebrity or a
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promotional motive anywhere in sight (do I need to point out that William Y is
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an invention of the author's?).
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The term "Post-Modernism" turns up again and again in these
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essays and interviews, and it comes as a surprise to find it applied a
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quarter-century ago, not to metareferences in knowing television serials but to
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the work of Barthelme and his coevals John Barth, John Hawkes, Robert Coover,
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William Gass, etc. Who still reads John Barth? Although when you think about
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it, these writers, who came of age in the 1960s, were Post-Modern even then.
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Reading Barthelme may make you think of Surrealism, of Pop Art, of various
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species of what used to be called bricolage, but what came to my mind,
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revisiting his stories after a long absence, was the mile-a-minute
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channel-switching in the monologues of Robin Williams. Like Williams, Barthelme
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was a master ventriloquist with a dish antenna in his subconscious. From "A
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Shower of Gold," circa 1963:
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"Yesterday," Peterson said
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to the television audience, "in the typewriter in front of the Olivetti
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showroom on Fifth Avenue, I found a recipe for Ten Ingredient Soup that
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included a stone from a toad's head. ... Coming home I passed a sign that said
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in ten-foot letters COWARD SHOES and heard a man singing 'Golden Earrings' in a
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horrible voice, and last night I dreamed there was a shoot-out at our house on
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Meat Street and my mother shoved me in a closet to get me out of the line of
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fire. ... My mother was a royal virgin and my father a shower of gold. My
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childhood was pastoral and energetic and rich in experiences which developed my
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character."
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Actually,
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you won't find much of this kind of machine-gun improvisation in
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Not-Knowing , at least once past the bracing title essay, the most fully
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fleshed apologia Barthelme achieved, which barrels from Husserl to "Melancholy
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Baby" to the past-due bills on his desk in mock-peevish diatribe. You can
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imagine the voice successively issuing from a pulpit, a bullhorn, an onionskin
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page, a teletype, a Victrola--and then suddenly there's the author, speaking
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plainly as himself, "I suggest that art is always a meditation upon external
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reality rather than a representation of external reality or a jackleg attempt
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to 'be' external reality." Savor that word, "jackleg," a quarter-second
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visitation by the ghost of Horace Greeley or someone like him. Such is
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Barthelme's power when he's operating at full throttle--his piano seems to have
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888 keys.
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Unfortunately, most of Not-Knowing
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consists of leavings, marginalia, occasional pieces that do not show him at his
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best. There are some book reviews, which are acceptable but not much more; some
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movie reviews, which are pretty feeble, with that literalism that bedevils many
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literary writers when they come to dabble in the form (viz., the collected film
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criticism of Dwight MacDonald); and some art writing, considerably more savvy
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although many of the pieces originated as catalog essays and thus sometimes
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betray a rather forced enthusiasm. There is a transcription of a 1975 fiction
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symposium in which Barthelme says relatively little and the reader is mostly
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subjected to vast snowdrifts of abstraction courtesy of Gass. There are a few
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Nixon-era op-eds that are musty period pieces now. And there is a passel of
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interviews that vary greatly in quality and insight.
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The enthusiastic and
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scholarly wish to preserve the entirety of a given writer's work is
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understandable and even endearing to a point, but one of the frustrations of
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this collection is its repetitiveness. Anecdotes are retailed in pieces and
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retold in interviews; the same citations crop up again and again; I lost count
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of how many times Barthelme attests to his debt to Beckett and explains that
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his writing not resembling Beckett's is a paradoxical measure of his thrall.
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None of this is Barthelme's fault, of course. If I were to publish your
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collected table talk you would be appalled--only your spouse and your deity
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know how many times you've told those same five stories. Had Barthelme lived
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longer (he died in 1989, at 58), the majority of these items would not have
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been reprinted for another 20 or 30 years, and then probably in the usual
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dead-author package by the University of Winooski Press, for acquisition by
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selected academic libraries. Don't get me wrong: This collection has its
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pleasures, not least of which is the reminder of how strong and unique a
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sensibility Barthelme possessed, which sent me back to the incomparable
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anthology Sixty Stories (1981). But Not-Knowing is not unlike a
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dead-rock-star memento, such as all those collections of Jimi Hendrix's doodles
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and backup sessions that seemed to come out every Christmas until his estate
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finally clamped down. The impulse is partly commercial, partly sentimental,
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partly a wish to uncover just one more unsuspected gem. In Barthelme's case,
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this kind of packaging seems oddly timed, since his influence on current
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fiction is if anything at a low ebb. But maybe, just maybe, in some circuitous
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and stealthy way, Not-Knowing will play its part in revising that lapse,
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prompting young readers in particular to seek out the best work of an American
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original, part philosophe and part banana.
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