It's
not necessary to read John Fante in order to understand what Bukowski
was shooting for; one of the nice things about Buk is that even if
you don't really get it – and most people don't – there's still
something to enjoy. Readers of Bukowski who dream of being writers
have tried – without success – to repeat what he did; generally,
they begin with the notion, not without reason, that in order to
write like Bukowski one has to live like Bukowski. The first mistake
comes, however, in thinking that any form of emulation is the same as
art. The second mistake is in looking at his body of work and seeing
only “a drinker with a writing problem” as a writerly friend of
mine once proclaimed him to be.
Although
he openly balks at influence in his later work, Charles Bukowski does
give one writer credit. And no, it wasn't Hemingway. And no it wasn't
any of the Beats, with whom Bukowski is often mistakenly categorized.
The writer that he credits the most – beyond the French writer
Céline
– is John Fante.
Fante
is the author of Ask the
Dust,
Dago Red, West of
Rome, The Road to Los Angeles,
Brotherhood of the
Grape,
and others. In the Black Sparrow edition of
Ask the Dust,
there's a short preface by – you guessed, Charles Bukowski – in
which he claims that Fante's work was the only work he found in the
library that seemed like it was written for him. Fante wrote about
growing up in a poor blue collar family in Colorado, about being
Italian-American, about being Catholic, about being a writer, about
being a writer and selling out to write movies, about his troubles at
home, about his combative relationship with his children (including
the writer Dan Fante), and about his own feelings of inadequacy.
Fante was one more in a slew of West Coast writers – that include
Nathanael West and John Steinbeck – who had trouble making it in
the East Coast / New
Yorker style
controlled world of literary publishing.
When
you read Fante, you begin to hear the echo that drew Bukowski in and
that echoed in his work as well. As a matter of fact, you hear the
same thing when you read Céline,
or Steinbeck, for that matter, though they are as stylistically
removed from Fante and Bukowski as Mahler is from Metallica. You see
more of Buk's style in Fante – but of course, it's not the same,
either, any more than Hemingway wrote like Sherwood Anderson. Fante's
sense of hyper-drama is different from Bukowski. With Bukowski, the
tone is more acerbic, and even at his raunchiest, more judgmental.
Fante's hyper-drama is comically inflated:
“So
it happened at last: I was about to become a thief, a cheap
milk-stealer. Here was your flash-in-the-pan genius, your
one-story-writer: a thief. I held my head in my hands and rocked back
and forth. Mother of God. Headlines in the papers, promising writer
caught stealing milk, famous protégé
of J.C. Hackmuth haled into court on petty thief charge, reporters
swarming around me, flashlights popping, give us a statement.”
Ask
the Dust
is about getting published... the hunger, the failure, and even in
face of potential success, the inevitable failure. Fante's world is
one in which there is always moral balance: something good must be
accompanied with something bad. The protagonist, Arturo Bandini, is a
young writer living on nothing but good will and stolen oranges in
Depression-Era downtown LA. His one credit is a short story, “The
Little Dog Laughed” published in a magazine edited by J.C.
Hackmuth,
his literary hero. He carries copies of the magazine around, passing
autographed copies to people who aren't really impressed. And as if
the comic hubris and ego-crushing wasn't enough, Bandini then meets
Camilla, a waitress, and falls in love with her. But she's in love
with the bartender Sam, and Sam despises her. The only way Bandini
will win Camilla over, Sam tells him, is to treat her badly.
The
book is poignant in it's descriptions day to day living, love and
loss and failure, Catholic guilt, and the self-doubt every writer
experiences. Camilla is impressed with him at first, but only comes
around when he's abusive. She spends time in an asylum, goes back and
for the between Arturo and Sam. She ends up throwing Bandini over for
Sam, who wants to be a writer – he writes westerns – and who is
also dying of cancer. Bandini ends up dedicating a copy of his book –
which he finally writes and is finally published by J.C. Hackmuth –
to Camilla and throwing into the desert.
In
the messy business that fiction writing has become – or maybe, that
it's always been – there's always been the question as to whether
what a writer writes in fiction bears any resemblance to real life.
And with a pop culture that has both hyper-reality television and
fantasy laden tomes, both of which serve as escape hatches rather
than magnifying glasses of contemporary life, there's even more
suspicion of writers who want to write something real. Fante was
roundly criticized for this in his non-screenplay work. Bukowski was
critisized for it too, though mostly by academic critics who didn't
acknowledge anything after the Modernists.
The
art in Bukowski is something you have to read with a knowing eye to
catch. He had no intention of pointing it out, because he believed (I
think correctly) that it wasn't his job to spoon feed infantile
readers.
The
art in Fante is a lot like that. It's easy to dismiss it as masked
autobiography, or – the gods help us all – “creative
non-fiction” (the bane of literary trends over the past 20 years).
The point isn't whether the story is about a struggling young writer
or a struggling young wizard. Literature isn't meant to be an
escape... though it often can be. Literature – especially fiction –
is a lens that brings life into hyper-focus. Fante accomplishes this
in a grand tradition that he picked up from writers like Knut Hamsun,
and which can also be seen in Eurpoean writers like French writer Céline,
Italian writer Curzio Malaparte, and German writer Günter
Grass. For that matter, the mantle was also picked up by writers like
Stephen Crane and Nelson Algren. And maybe part of the true art is
that while most readers look at Fante and see a Catholic writing
about Catholic guilt – and at Bukowski and see a drunk writing
about drinking – there's something else happening that you only see
if you bother to pay attention.
[This was written, primarily to continue a discussion that Kaplowitz and I have had on Grindbone Radio, as well as off air. I also wrote it because, well, I wanted to add my thoughts to his well written piece here.]
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