The paperback cover of Hooking Up, by Tom Wolfe, 2000. |
Tom Wolfe on the cover of Time magazine in 1998, as his novel A Man in Full was published. |
Hooking Up, published
in 2000, is Tom Wolfe’s most recent collection of non-fiction pieces. It also
contains a novella, “Ambush at Fort Bragg.” The writings collected in Hooking Up appeared in a variety of
publications, and demonstrate Wolfe’s wide interest in many different facets of
modern American life.
As someone who was a college student in the year 2000, I can
attest that the title piece was a pretty accurate summary of college life at
that time. Wolfe’s examination of campus life at the turn of the millennium
would provide inspiration for his next novel after Hooking Up, 2004’s I Am
Charlotte Simmons. Wolfe explains to the reader that “hooking up” is the
new way that young people meet each other. As Wolfe writes, “The old term
‘dating’—referring
to a practice in which a boy asked a girl out for the evening and took her to
the movies or dinner—was now deader than ‘proletariat’ or ‘pornography’ or
‘perversion.’” (p.6) I was naively shocked when I got to college and discovered
that people didn’t date very much—it was mainly about hooking up.
“Two Young Men Who
Went West” connects 19th century politician and pioneer Josiah
Grinnell and 20th century engineer Robert Noyce, who pioneered the
microchip and was the co-founder of Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel
Corporation. What do Grinnell and Noyce have in common? Well, Grinnell founded
the town of Grinnell, Iowa, home to Grinnell College, which was Noyce’s alma
mater. The parallels between Grinnell and Noyce are perhaps overstated in the
article—you
can hear the framing device creak now and then as Wolfe stretches it out.
However, Noyce is a pretty interesting guy to read about, as he was one of the founders
of what came to be called Silicon Valley.
“Digibabble, Fairy Dust, and the Human Anthill” bites off a
lot, covering the careers and theories of priest and paleontologist Pierre
Teilhard de Chardin, media critic Marshall McLuhan, and finally biologist Edward
O. Wilson, one of the chief Darwinists of the late 20th century. All
three men were people who had unified theories about human behavior. Wolfe is
always suspicious of those who claim to have all of the answers. (He wrote
about Marshall McLuhan in the article “What if He is Right?” in The Pump House Gang.) Wolfe is also
skeptical about Darwinism providing all of the answers to human behavior. This
piece plants some of the seeds that will sprout in The Kingdom of Speech, Wolfe’s 2016 book about how human speech
developed.
“Sorry, but Your Soul Just Died” is about brain imaging. It
fits in again with The Kingdom of Speech,
as Wolfe examines neuroscientists who think they have all of the answers to
human behavior. According to Wolfe, there are neuroscientists who think that
they could predict someone’s life down to the very minute. (p.97) Wolfe sees
neuroscience and brain imaging as being part of a great shift during the late
20th century away from the dominant theories of the century, Marxism
and Freudianism. (p.100)
Wolfe frets that this shift towards science could lead to a
collapse of personal responsibility—that people will excuse their behavior
based on their wiring. “Don’t blame me, honey. Four hundred thousand years of
evolution made me do it.” (p.104-6) Wolfe seems to wonder, if we are only these
walking, talking computers, then where’s the mystery, the poetry of life? If
everything is predetermined from birth, then why go on with the charade?
“In the Land of the Rococo Marxists” is an excellent
takedown of liberal academic pretensions. Wolfe writes about the turn of the
millennium, and how little it was remarked upon in the media. “My impression
was that one American Century rolled into another with all the pomp and
circumstance of a mouse pad.” (p.114)
Wolfe writes that “For eighty-two years now, America’s
intellectuals, right on time, as Nietzsche predicted it, have expressed their
skepticism toward American life.” (p.128) Wolfe, despite his consistently
ironic viewpoint, does not have as much skepticism towards American life,
writing: “The country turned into what the utopian socialists of the nineteenth
century, the Saint-Simons and Fouriers, had dreamed about: an El Dorado where
the average workingman would have the political freedom, the personal freedom,
the money, and the free time to fulfill his potential in any way he saw fit.”
(p.119)
This has been a favorite theme of Wolfe’s since the 1960’s, that
America is actually in the middle of a happiness explosion, rather than constantly
teetering on the brink of incipient fascism, as most liberals have said it is.
“The Invisible Artist” is about the sculptor Frederick Hart.
Hart was a realistic sculptor, and he worked on the National Cathedral in
Washington, D.C. Hart was also the sculptor for The Three Soldiers, also known as The Three Servicemen, which depicts American soldiers in Vietnam
overlooking the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. (And was added
after Vietnam veterans raised a furor over sculptor Maya Lin’s controversial
design for the Memorial.) Wolfe makes the point that although Hart worked on
several important commissions and became very successful in his own right, the mainstream
art publications never gave him the time of day, so he never became accepted as
a “serious” artist. According to Wolfe, if you don’t fit in the appropriate
boxes as an artist, you won’t get any press. This fits in very well with
Wolfe’s 1975 book on modern art, The Painted Word, in which he makes an argument along a similar line.
Wolfe writes in “The Invisible Artist” that “Art worldlings
regarded popularity as skill’s live-in slut. Popularity meant shallowness.
Rejection by the public meant depth.” (p.137) Wolfe has a point here. In the
visual arts, as in jazz, popular success is often scorned and questioned—the
assumption is that if you’ve had mainstream success you’ve “sold out” in some
way.
“The Great
Relearning” is a short piece about the late 20th century. Wolfe
predicts that the 21st century will be known as the “Twentieth
Century’s Hangover.” (p.144) It remains to be seen if he is correct or not.
“My Three Stooges” describes a great literary feud. John
Updike and Norman Mailer, two of America’s leading writers, wrote very critical
reviews of Wolfe’s 1998 novel A Man in
Full. John Irving also got into the act, swearing at Wolfe on TV and
attacking his skill as a writer.
In “My Three Stooges,” Wolfe swung back hard, calling Updike
and Mailer “two old piles of bones.” (p.152) Updike, Mailer, and Irving all
essentially said that A Man in Full wasn’t
literature, but Wolfe fired back that in fact, A Man in Full was the best kind of literature—a
book that drew on real-world reporting. On a TV show, Wolfe said that his three
critics had “wasted their careers by not engaging the life around them.”
(p.156) In other words, they should have been writing novels the way Tom Wolfe
does. This was an oversimplification on Wolfe’s part, since Mailer had been
alternating journalism with fiction since the early 1960’s, and indeed, many of
his most famous books drew heavily on non-fiction reporting—books
like The Armies of the Night, Miami and
the Siege of Chicago, The Fight, and The
Executioner’s Song. While Updike didn’t do journalistic writing, his novels
still depended on an accurate picture of a specific time in America, and his Rabbit tetralogy books are full of his
attention to real life details.
Why were Updike and Mailer so hostile to Wolfe? They may
have simply been jealous of Wolfe’s staggering sales success, or they may have
been settling scores that were decades old. Updike may have been peeved by
Wolfe’s 1965 takedown of The New Yorker, the
magazine that was closely associated with Updike for his entire career. Or, he
might have been annoyed by Wolfe’s 1964 article about him in the New York Herald Tribune, which Updike
quoted in his 1998 speech upon receiving the National Book Foundation Medal for
Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. Updike quoted from the first
two paragraphs of Wolfe’s story, which included the lines, “No sensitive artist
in America will ever have to duck the spotlight again. John Updike, the
Ipswich, Mass., novelist, did it for them all last night, for all time.” (John
Updike, More Matter, p.853) Wolfe
then goes on to describe Updike blushing. In his speech, Updike said he
remembers the evening differently than Wolfe. Updike also said that someone offered
him a program to sign on that long-ago night: “That, and the subsequent report
by Tom Wolfe, were my first taste of the joys of celebrity.” (More Matter, p.853) It seems clear that
Updike had a vivid memory of the first time his celebrity was mocked in print.
Mailer’s beef with Wolfe goes back to the 1960’s as well.
Specifically, to Wolfe’s March 1965 review of Mailer’s novel An American Dream. Wolfe’s review,
titled “Son of Crime and Punishment: Or, How to go Eight Fast Rounds with the
Heavyweight Champ—and Lose,” posits the theory that Mailer was trying to
complete with Dostoevsky, and Wolfe ends the review by comparing Mailer to
James M. Cain, author of hard-boiled fiction like The Postman Always Rings Twice and Double Indemnity.
The same month that Wolfe’s review appeared, Mailer said of the
review in a New York Post interview,
“The review is personally insulting as opposed to critically insulting.” (Conversations with Norman Mailer, p.100)
Two years later, Mailer was still smarting over Wolfe’s review, telling Newsday in October 1967: “I never mind a
bad review so long as the reviewer stays in bounds. But that one bothered me.
When Wolfe started in telling me how to write—when he said it would have
been better if I started the book on page 14—well, I objected to that. It
struck me as kind of…punky, smartass, you know.” (Conversations with Norman Mailer, p.110) Mailer was famous for
getting terrible book reviews—twice he took out ads for his books
with the negative reviews highlighted, rather than the positive reviews—so
it really says something that Wolfe’s words got under his skin.
Updike’s review of A
Man in Full had dismissed the book as falling short of literature, and Mailer’s
review took a similar tack, as it was full of questions like: “Is one encountering a major novel or
a major best seller?” There’s a bit of the pot calling the kettle black here,
as Mailer writes as though he had never hankered after having best-sellers of
his own.
Mailer does have words of praise for the book, but in the
best Midwestern, passive-aggressive style, there are always reservations: “Extraordinarily
good writing forces one to contemplate the uncomfortable possibility that Tom
Wolfe might yet be seen as our best writer. How grateful one can feel then for
his failures and his final inability to be great—his absence of truly large
compass.” Mailer is still thinking that American writing is like a heavyweight
boxing match! Thank God Wolfe didn’t have the stamina! He broke down in the
fifth round! He was busy looking at the referee’s shoes, trying to figure out
what brand they were, and then WHOMP! Norman finally landed that right hook!
Just as Wolfe compared Mailer to Dostoevsky and intimated
that he fell short and was more like James M. Cain, so Mailer compares Wolfe to
Dickens, and intimates that Wolfe falls short, so he compares him to…Margaret
Mitchell. They are both confining the other to the status of mere genre novelists,
rather than Great American Novelists.
“Ambush at Fort
Bragg: A Novella,” is moderately interesting, as it shows Wolfe’s great talent
for getting inside the minds of status-conscious, insecure men—namely
Irv Durtscher, the producer of a TV show that is about to get a murder
confession from three Army recruits.
A gift for long-time Wolfe fans in Hooking Up was the first publication in a book of Wolfe’s two
articles from 1965 about The New Yorker, “Tiny
Mummies! The True Story of the Ruler of 43rd Street’s Land of the
Walking Dead,” and “Lost in the Whichy Thickets.” Both are superb skewerings of
The New Yorker’s self-important
style. I’ve been an admirer of many of the writers associated with The New Yorker, in particular the “three
Johns,” O’Hara, Cheever, and Updike. That being said, I find the magazine itself
to be quite full of itself.
Wolfe is stinging in his critique of New Yorker editor William Shawn, who helmed the magazine from 1952
until 1987. Wolfe writes: “William Shawn has not lapsed for a moment from the
labor to which he dedicated himself upon the death of Harold Ross. To preserve The New Yorker just as Ross left it,
exactly, in…perpetuity.” (p.270)
Coming in for criticism also is what Wolfe calls the “fact-gorged
sentence,” something that, in my opinion, still plagues The New Yorker. “All those clauses, appositions, amplifications,
qualifications, asides, God knows what else, hanging inside the poor old skeleton
of one sentence like some kind of Spanish moss.” (p.273)
In an afterword, Wolfe details the heat he felt after the
two New Yorker articles were
published, as numerous national figures, ranging from J.D. Salinger to Walter
Lippmann, denounced him in print. But Wolfe survived to write another day.
It’s too bad that Hooking
Up doesn’t include the essay “Stalking the Billion-Footed Beast,” first published
in the pages of Harper’s in November,
1989. It outlines Wolfe’s thoughts about realism in American fiction writing—perhaps
it was deemed to be too repetitive, as Wolfe chronicles some of the same
arguments about fiction in “My Three Stooges.” Regardless, “Stalking the
Billion-Footed Beast” is well worth seeking out.
Hooking Up is
something of a coda to the large and distinguished body of non-fiction work
that Wolfe has left us, including such classics as The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Radical Chic, and The Right Stuff. As Michael Lewis wrote
in the November 2015 issue of Vanity
Fair, “The marketplace will encourage Wolfe to write nothing but novels.
And a funny thing happens. The moment he abandons it, the movement he shaped
will lose its head of steam. The New Journalism: Born 1963, Died 1979. R.I.P.
What was that all about? It was mainly about Tom Wolfe, I think.” (p.194) Wolfe
largely moved on from journalism after The
Right Stuff, and the pieces in Hooking
Up, while very good, do not have the same impact that Wolfe’s earlier
journalism did.