The cover of Tom Wolfe, by William McKeen, 1995. (Standard photo on the Tom Wolfe bookshelf, by Mark C. Taylor) |
McKeen’s book follows Wolfe through his career, as he moved
from newspaper reporter to freelance journalist to best-selling novelist. McKeen
obviously did his homework, and one of the most interesting parts of the book was
his coverage of Wolfe’s 1959-1962 stint working at The Washington Post. Wolfe covered a variety of topics for the Post, and while most Washington
reporters wanted to cover politics, Wolfe enjoyed writing stories about
off-beat subjects. Thanks to McKeen’s bibliography, we’re given a long list of
Wolfe’s articles for the Post, which
range from the banal-sounding “Holiday Gets Cold Start, Mild Finish,” to a
12-part series titled “The Dispensable Guide,” Wolfe’s “mock Michelin Guide to
the cities President Eisenhower was visiting overseas.” (McKeen, p.20)
One of the things that’s so striking about Tom Wolfe’s work
is its range. Wolfe certainly had a consistent lens through which he viewed the
world.
It’s all about status! How people acquire status and how they choose to
display it are two questions that are central to Wolfe’s work. Wolfe’s interest
in status was already highly developed by the time he published his first book,
The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby in 1965. But within that lens of status, Wolfe covered a
huge range of subjects—from his early pieces for Esquire magazine chronicling new movements among American teenagers, to Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters, to the adventures of the Mercury 7 astronauts, to book-length essays on modern art and architecture, to his
fiction, where he brought the reader inside the world of New York City bond
traders who thought themselves to be “masters of the universe,” to Atlanta in the 1990’s, and to the diverse ethnic groups in Miami.
Looking back, it makes perfect sense that Wolfe’s Ph.D. was
in American Studies. Wolfe was interested in everything about America, and that’s reflected in the range of his
writing. In his best writing, Wolfe was combining elements of history,
politics, sociology, economics, and sometimes religion as well.
Wolfe’s move to the New
York Herald-Tribune in 1962 allowed him the space and freedom to write the
kinds of stories that intrigued him. During this time, he was also writing for New York, the Sunday supplement of the Herald-Tribune. Wolfe also started
writing longer articles for Esquire, and
it was his piece for that magazine about a car customizing show in California
that proved to be a breakthrough in his writing style. “The Kandy-Kolored
Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby” found Wolfe up against a deadline with a
serious case of writer’s block. Wolfe sat down at the typewriter to bash out
his notes for Esquire editor Byron
Dobell, which someone else would then tart up into some kind of a story. Except
Wolfe sat there all night long and
bashed out a 49-page memo to Dobell. When Dobell finished reading it, he merely
struck the “Dear Byron” off the beginning of Wolfe’s memo, and a new voice in
American journalism was born.
McKeen examines the most significant essays that appeared in
the first two collections of Wolfe’s non-fiction, but there are interesting
pieces of writing from these books that McKeen didn’t write about.
An amusing story is that when Tom Wolfe first burst on the
scene, people thought he might be the novelist Thomas Wolfe, of Look Homeward, Angel and You Can’t Go Home Again fame—even
though Thomas Wolfe had died in 1938. McKeen writes: “He received many letters
from admirers who professed admiration for his journalism as well as his
earlier literary works, Look Homeward,
Angel and Of Time and the River. The
letter writers often wondered why there had been such a long gap between
publication of his books.” (McKeen, p.11) Adding to the confusion was the fact
that Tom Wolfe was actually Tom Wolfe, Jr. His father was an agronomist and
also a writer and editor. Wolfe said of his father, “I always thought of him as
a writer. He kept the novels of Thomas Wolfe on his bookshelf, and for years I
thought he’d written them.” (Conversations
with Tom Wolfe, p.201) In an effort to head off any possible confusion, the
first edition dust jacket of The
Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby specifically said that Tom
Wolfe wasn’t related to Thomas Wolfe.
In his coverage of what came to be called New Journalism,
McKeen offers brief sketches of other important figures in that literary
movement of the 1960’s and 1970’s, like Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, Joan
Didion, and Hunter S. Thompson. These sketches are helpful for setting Wolfe’s
own work in a historical context, and showing how controversial the New
Journalism movement was at the time. Capote, for example, disdained the term, famously
calling his book In Cold Blood a “non-fiction
novel,” whatever on earth that was. What Capote had actually done was to use
techniques that fiction writers used and applied them to a non-fiction subject.
Although the caveat should be added that we now know that Capote did invent
some scenes—like
the last one in the book, in which investigator Alvin Dewey visits the graves
of the Clutter family.
McKeen’s chapter about The
Right Stuff is excellent, and he even quoted from the same long description
of Gus Grissom and Deke Slayton that I used in my review. McKeen gives a
too-long plot summary of The Bonfire of
the Vanities, and I wish instead that McKeen had more to say about the Rolling Stone version of The Bonfire of the Vanities. Wolfe
serialized the novel as he was writing it in 27 issues of Rolling Stone in 1984-5, and then made some significant changes
before publishing the novel in 1987. Wolfe even changed the occupation of the
main character—in the Rolling Stone
version Sherman McCoy is a writer, rather than a bond trader.
The book doesn’t pry into Wolfe’s private life, but that
seems fitting. Despite Wolfe’s great fame and his flamboyant sartorial
splendor, he never made headlines for his private life. As McKeen astutely
writes, “Wolfe embodies Flaubert’s advice to writers to be regular and
orderly in their lives in order to be wild and original in their work.”
(McKeen, p.130) McKeen also grasps Wolfe’s iconoclasm, and his willingness to
go against popular opinion and attack the hypocrisies of both the left and the
right. There were never any sacred cows for Tom Wolfe.
McKeen’s book is an excellent examination of the works of
Tom Wolfe, and McKeen’s writing and insights about Wolfe are sharp throughout. The
used copy of Tom Wolfe that I bought
is a former library book, from the Fairfax County Public Library, in Wolfe’s home
state of Virginia. According to a stamp in the back it was withdrawn because of
low demand, which is a cruel fate for such a fine book about a great writer.
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