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82
BOOKS
BETWEEN OBSTACLES AND FICTION
NEW
YORK (AP) -- On a leisurely spring afternoon, author E.L. Doctorow sits for an
interview in his office at New York University, a professorial figure with a
high forehead and soft beard, his wry smile fitting for a man who always seems
to be debating how much he's willing to tell. With books by Stendhal, Tolstoy
and other favourites stacked on shelves behind him and his own books on
shelves in front of him, it is a comfortable setting for the author of
Ragtime, Billy Bathgate and other acclaimed bestsellers. A professor of
creative writing at NYU, the 73-year-old Doctorow has been publishing novels
for more than 40 years and remains committed to storytelling at a time when
readers seem preoccupied with politics, diets and spirituality. "Fiction
writers have always faced obstacles of this sort," he says. "So part of the
game is figuring out how to move the audience. "I stay away from theory, from
any aesthetic plan or ideal of what fiction should be. The books always come
out of very private mental excitement. I just pursue it and if it turns into a
book that's great." Although known for historical novels based in New York
City, Doctorow has always been willing to experiment. He has written a Western
(Welcome to Hard Times) and science fiction (Big as Life). He has written in
third person and first person, about religious quests (City of God) and
matters of the flesh (Billy Bathgate). His current book, Sweet Land Stories,
is another departure, fiction set mostly in such unlikely terrain (for
Doctorow) as Alaska and Kansas. Instead of urban legends stocked with the
likes of Henry Ford and Harry Houdini, he presents a series of old-fashioned,
non-urban tales. "I edited an anthology of short stories in 2000 (The Best
American Short Stories) and I realized that some of the writers I was enjoying
most were from other countries -- from the Caribbean, from Latin America, from
Eastern Europe, Korea, China. "And they were not doing the classic modern
short story. . . . These people were writing stories more like the tales being
written in the 19th century. They didn't start close to the end of the action.
They took their time. And I felt, 'Yeah, why not?' " Doctorow did not do any
firsthand research for his stories. Instead, he began with an image or a
historical event, as in A House on the Plains, based on the true story of a
murderer who hides out in rural Illinois. The characters in Sweet Land are
outsiders, finding -- or losing -- their place in a world that has granted
them little actual power. Walter John Harmon is the story of a cult commune in
Kansas. In Jolene: A Life, a young woman from the South survives three
marriages and ends up in Hollywood, dreaming of the movies. Doctorow's prose
in Sweet Land seems nothing like that of his previous works, but there is no
single Doctorow voice. He is expansive in Ragtime, terse and epigrammatical in
Lives of the Poets, reflective in World's Fair. In Sweet Land, he is plain and
naturalistic, as if the open territory of the stories inspired a direct
approach in his work. Doctorow is a longtime liberal and the book's final
story, Child, Dead, in the Rose Garden, comes closest to political commentary.
The main character is a special agent, B.W. Molloy, who tries to discover how
the body of a dead boy ends up on the grounds of the White House. Molloy finds
himself frustrated by a secretive administration and oppressed by Washington,
D.C., as a whole. Edgar Lawrence Doctorow, named after Edgar Allan Poe, was
born in New York in 1931. His father ran a music store, his mother was a
pianist. In those pre-televised times, Doctorow grew up amid discussions of
art and politics, in what he has called "a lower middle-class environment of
generally enlightened socialist sensibility." He majored in philosophy and
studied drama. He has long complained how movies have ruined his books
(Ragtime, Billy Bathgate), but Doctorow actually started out in film, serving
as a script reader for Columbia Pictures. While there, he read so many
Westerns he decided to write one himself, a "knockoff" called Welcome to Hard
Times that was released in 1960. "It was a rookie novel," Doctorow says. "I
think it holds up. It's been in print ever since, but it didn't teach me much
as a writer." After Big as Life, an admittedly failed attempt at science
fiction, Doctorow emerged as a major writer in 1971 with The Book of Daniel, a
panorama of politics, family and morality during the Cold War era. Over the
next 20 years he became the rare writer blessed with both a popular and
critical following. Ragtime, published in 1975, is a million-selling novel
that won the National Book Critics Circle prize. Billy Bathgate, another best
seller, won the NBCC in 1990.
He has been called a "historical" novelist, but his books are just as preoccupied with the future. World's Fair centres on the imagined utopia of the famed 1939 exhibit. The Waterworks, set in New York in the 1870s, is both a detective story and a parable about the dangers of science and technology. "Doctorow, as much as anyone, shows how silly the distinction of historical fiction is," says Kevin Baker, author of the acclaimed Paradise Alley, a novel set in New York in the 1860s. "His books are inhabited by real characters, and you're conscious of the age they're living in, but you never feel he's writing about some distant time, set in amber. You feel it's all happening now." Doctorow considers himself an American writer -- not a historical writer, or a "New York" writer, even as several books about New York history can be found on his shelves. While New York is commonly disparaged as something apart from the rest of the country, Doctorow sees it as no less American than the Midwest or the other backdrops for his current story collection. "New York has always been the big contact city. That's why it's so alive. It's where the immigrant cultures have made contact with the native residents. This is an infusion of energy and cultural data," he says. "If you think of the country as always renewing itself, perfecting itself and achieving something, you think of New York. If you think of the most pluralistic place in the country and the most predictive of the ways the rest of the country will be in a generation of two, it would be New York." -Hilel Italile
End of the article.