My rather tattered paperback copy of The Pump House Gang, by Tom Wolfe, 1968. Yes, that's the by now obligatory photo of my Tom Wolfe bookshelf. (Photo by Mark C. Taylor) |
Tom Wolfe, photographed by Irving Penn, 1966, around the time he wrote most of the pieces in The Pump House Gang. |
It started on the beach. That was where they first saw him. They
weren’t quite sure which member of the group had spotted him first, but
eventually they became aware of him. This guy just hanging out on the beach with
a notebook. And what was he wearing? A suit? Dig, man, what kind of crazy trip
was he on? And how old was he? He didn’t look that old, but he just seemed
old, you know, like there was no way he would know who the Beach Boys were, or
that he could possibly know anything about chopped and channeled woodies. What
kind of a nutso getup was he wearing? I mean, fer Chrissake, who in the hell
wears a suit to the beach, man?
And he asked them all of these really basic questions, it
was obvious he had never been surfing. They had to explain everything to him,
which they were only too happy to do. KA-SPLOSH, the surf came roaring in, and
it almost gets him wet, and he’s got these white buck shoes on, if he gets
those babies wet they are done for, but
zoom! He moves back real fast, and doesn’t get a drop on him. Nothing seems to
faze this guy, it’s like he’s off on his own out in some other time zone,
neither hip nor square, just in his own bag with his own groovy happening going
on.
He has this soft voice, like he doesn’t want to draw too
much attention to himself, despite the Beau Brummell wardrobe. He’s got this
real high, cresting forehead, with this mass of hair swooping over from left to
right. He pulls out this notebook, this great, hulking green notebook with the
spirals at the top, and he starts firing questions, one after the other. He’s
scribbling furiously, feverishly trying to get it all down on paper as they
tell him the dope on their lives.
In the Introduction to The
Pump House Gang, Tom Wolfe’s second collection of articles, which was
released on the same day in 1968 as Wolfe’s book The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Wolfe described taking part in a
symposium on “The Style of the Sixties.” The other panelists all seemed quite
depressed about the state of the world. When it was Wolfe’s turn to speak, he
said “What are you talking about? We’re in the middle of a…Happiness
Explosion!” (p.9) The other panelists didn’t have the foggiest notion what
Wolfe was talking about, but he was right! Sure, things might have seemed like
they were going to hell back in the late 1960’s, but middle class Americans
suddenly had the leisure time and money to be deliriously happy! All of the
time! And, despite the stagnation in middle class earning power since then, we
still have a lot of things that can distract us in 2016! iPhones! Computers!
Kindles! Spotify! Netflix! We are doing less and less manual labor-which means
more time to tune out the world around us and create our own versions of
reality!
Wolfe’s real subject of The
Pump House Gang is exploring different subcultures and how they define themselves.
In “The Hair Boys,” he writes: “It is not that any of these groups is ever
rich. It is just that there is so much money floating around that they can get
their hands on enough of it to express themselves, and devote time to
expressing themselves, to a degree nobody in their netherworld position could
ever do before.” (p.103)
There are 15 pieces in The
Pump House Gang, and as usual in Wolfe’s collections, many topics are
covered.
“The Pump House Gang” follows a group of teenage surfers in
La Jolla, California. Wolfe describes how these kids have set up their own
lifestyle of surfing and hanging out-they’re a prime example of the subcultures
he examines throughout the book.
“The Mid-Atlantic Man” is a brilliant piece of reporting
about a London advertising man who travels to New York City regularly on
business and then finds himself stuck between being English and being American.
It’s a piece of Wolfe’s writing that foreshadows what a great fiction writer he
would become. It reads like fiction, since you’re inside this guy’s mind, but
you know that it’s all true! This piece shows how in tune Wolfe is to
differences and gradations in status. On page 40, we get a mention of Fabrilex,
which is the name of a fictitious company that Wolfe has used in other books as
well. It shows up at random times; look for it in The Bonfire of the Vanities.
“King of the Status Dropouts” is a profile of Playboy magazine publisher Hugh Hefner. It’s
fascinating stuff, as during this period of time Hefner was holed up in his
Chicago mansion, running the Playboy brand
and empire entirely from his house! He wasn’t out on the town partying with
blonde starlets; he was staying in, dressed in his robe, smoking his pipe,
drinking Pepsi-Cola after Pepsi-Cola, and embracing the Sexual Revolution that
he had helped to create! One of my favorite anecdotes about Hugh Hefner, dating
from this same time period, is about Hefner’s appearance on William F. Buckley’s
television show Firing Line. In his
excellent 1971 book Cruising Speed, Buckley
related the story of how a friend of his was watching Hefner’s appearance on
his show with some guests from France; however, when they tuned in, there was a
problem with the sound, so they couldn’t hear what the men were saying. Based
solely on their body posture, the French guests surmised that the slouching,
grinning Buckley, with his arching eyebrows and darting tongue, must be the
publisher of Playboy, and the erect,
ramrod-straight Hefner must be the conservative Republican writer and host! In
all seriousness, I think Hugh Hefner is quite a remarkable guy, and someone
should really write a biography about him, as I think he’s one of the figures
most responsible for the sexual revolution in America.
“The Put-Together Girl” chronicles the adventures of Carol
Doda, an exotic dancer in San Francisco who was one of the first women in
America to get breast implants.
“The Noonday Underground” is another piece that Wolfe wrote
in London, about teenagers who spend their lunch hours at dingy discotheques
listening to mod rock and buying the latest Carnaby Street knockoffs.
“The Mild Ones” is a very short piece about “work-a-daddy
citizens” who are also into motorcycles.
“The Hair Boys” is about teenage car culture, and it revisits
car customizer Ed Roth, one of the subjects of Wolfe’s first ground-breaking
essay, “The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby.”
“What if He is Right?” profiles media theorist Marshall
McLuhan, who had become an unlikely mid-1960’s celebrity. It’s an interesting
piece, opening with Wolfe staring at, and becoming obsessed with, McLuhan’s
clip-on necktie.
“Bob and Spike” dives into the New York City art world of
the mid-1960’s, as seen through the eyes of Robert and Ethel Scull, two of the
most prominent collectors of that time. Ethel was the subject of Andy Warhol’s
wonderful 1963 portrait, Ethel Scull 36
Times. There’s a marvelous description of a party that the Sculls gave at
the Top o’ the Fair restaurant in Flushing, which was built for the 1964-5
World’s Fair. The restaurant is still there, now called “Terrace on the Park.”
“Tom Wolfe’s New Book of Etiquette” is the funniest piece in
the book. It features Wolfe’s views on cocktail parties, and the rapidly
changing social mores of the 1960’s. Among other fascinating tidbits, you’ll
learn that “Socially, New York today is highly redolent of London during the
Regency period (roughly, 1800 to 1830).” (p.169)
“The Life & Hard Times of a Teenage London Society Girl”
is another piece from London where Wolfe does some great reporting and gets
into the mind of, well, a teenage London society girl.
“The Private Game” is yet another dispatch from London, this
time about private gambling clubs that had proliferated after the legalization
of gambling in England.
“The Automated Hotel” is one of the few non-fiction pieces
in which the focus is squarely on Tom Wolfe. Wolfe is the protagonist of this
piece, and he has some very harsh words for the then newly opened New York
Hilton Hotel, where he checked in while trying to avoid distractions and finish
several magazine articles.
“The Shockkkkkk of Recognition” follows movie star Natalie
Wood as she visits New York City in April of 1966 to tape an episode of What’s My Line? and to possibly buy some
paintings. Wolfe gets to observe Wood at an art dealer where she looks at a
variety of paintings. Had I been a dashing young New Journalist working for the
New York World Journal Tribune in
1966, I would have gladly accepted this assignment! I also would have accepted
the assignment, “watch Natalie Wood watch paint dry.” The day before Wood taped
the episode of What’s My Line? she
was in Boston at Harvard University accepting an award from the Harvard Lampoon for the “Worst Actress of the
Year.” No one accepted sarcastic awards like that in person, but Wood
confounded her critics by showing up. Of course, she stole the show, treating
the event like she had won the Oscar. You can watch Natalie Wood’s appearance
on What’s My Line? here. She’s very
funny as she tries to stump the panel by adopting a Russian accent, and
completely throwing panelist Arlene Francis for a loop when Francis asks her, “Are
you something other than American?” Wood replies, “Well, in my mind.”
“O Rotten Gotham-Sliding Down into the Behavioral Sink”
explains the ideas of anthropologist Edward T. Hall, who theorized that life in
New York City was getting worse because of overcrowding. It’s an interesting
theory, and I wonder what Hall would have to say about overcrowding in cities
now, fifty years later.
As noted above, The
Pump House Gang was released on the same day in 1968 as The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. While The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test has gone
on to assume classic status and is one of Wolfe’s most famous books, The Pump House Gang remains more
obscure. It’s probably inevitable that collections of non-fiction articles are
rarely ever the most famous works of authors, but despite the fact that it
might not be well known today, The Pump
House Gang, like its predecessor The Kandy-Kolored
Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, was a very steady seller. The copy of The Pump House Gang that I own is the 13th
paperback printing, from November of 1980. The
Pump House Gang went through four paperback printings in 1970 alone, so I’d
say it was pretty successful for Tom Wolfe. It’s a fine example of his
exhilarating writing style, and his sharp observations on contemporary culture.
1 comment:
Its funny to me and just interesting that Generation Y&Z are commenting smuggly, in their seeming immortal youth and vigor, on the use of their handheld devices in apprehending reality, both upper and lower case, sub and superscript. And, with my levels of testosterone at an all time low, it's seems a bit redundant, if not alarming, to see the pan gender games afoot. What’s all this falderal about the old “in and out”? Clearly it's a vestigial plot of selfish genes to increase their pool regardless of 7 billion humans choking the planet in a ravenous push for scare and dwindling resources. Perhaps what truly is happening is a neo-Malthusian end game of behavioral sink. Ah then, Thomas Wolfe coined it; “Sliding Down the Behavioral Sink.
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