![]() This must be the place! … I looked out across the city room of the Herald Tribune, 100 moldering yards south of Times Square, with a feeling of amazed bohemian bliss … Either this is the real world, Tom, or there is no real world … The place looked like the receiving bin at the Good Will … a promiscuous heap of junk … Wreckage and exhaustion everywhere … If somebody such as the city editor had a swivel chair, the universal joint would be broken, so that every time he got up, the seat would keel over as if stricken by a lateral stroke. In 1962, after a cup of coffee here and there, I arrived at the New York Herald Tribune. In any case, by the time I received my doctorate in American studies in 1957 I was in the twisted grip of a disease of our times in which the sufferer experiences an overwhelming urge to join the “real world.” So I started working for newspapers. That will give you the general atmosphere. Sammler’s Planet at one sitting, or just reading it, or being locked inside a Seaboard Railroad roomette, sixteen miles from Gainesville, Florida, heading north on the Miami-to-New York run, with no water and the radiator turning red in an amok psychotic over boil, and George McGovern sitting beside you telling you his philosophy of government. Try to imagine the worst part of the worst Antonioni movie you ever saw, or reading Mr. Such a novel would be a study of frustration, but a form of frustration so exquisite, so ineffable, nobody could describe it. How morbid! How poisonous! Nothing else like it in the world! But the subject always defeated them. No one ever wrote such a book, as far as I know. Half the people I knew in graduate school were going to write a novel about it. Millions of Americans now go to graduate schools, but just say the phrase-”graduate school”-and what picture leaps into the brain? No picture, not even a blur. I’m not sure I can give you the remotest idea of what graduate school is like. ![]() I had just spent five years in graduate school, a statement that may mean nothing to people who never served such a stretch it is the explanation, nonetheless. I was aware of what had reduced me to this Student Prince Maudlin state of mind. I wanted the whole movie, nothing left out. Chicago, 1928, that was the general idea … Drunken reporters out on the ledge of the News peeing into the Chicago River at dawn … Nights down at the saloon listening to “Back of the Stockyards” being sung by a baritone who was only a lonely blind bulldyke with lumps of milk glass for eyes … Nights down at the detective bureau-it was always nighttime in my daydreams of the newspaper life. I had a fierce and unnatural craving for something else entirely. God knows I didn’t have anything new in mind, much less anything literary, when I took my first newspaper job. Damn it all, Saul, the Huns have arrived. Bellow, Barth, Updike-even the best of the lot, Philip Roth-the novelists are all out there ransacking the literary histories and sweating it out, wondering where they now stand. I know they never dreamed that anything they were going to write for newspapers or magazines would wreak such evil havoc in the literary world … causing panic, dethroning the novel as the number one literary genre, starting the first new direction in American literature in half a century … Nevertheless, that is what has happened. I doubt if many of the aces I will be extolling in this story went into journalism with the faintest notion of creating a “new” journalism, a “higher” journalism, or even a mildly improved variety. From the Februissue of New York Magazine.
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