-mw -IF The World, the Flesh and the Devil Touches - With the Emphasis on the Latter Letters of C. S. Lewis, edited, with a Memoir, by W. H. court, Brace & World. Lewis. Har- $5.95. It has been said that there are two sorts of people who admire the work of C. S. Lewis: those who have read The Screwtape Letters and those who have read The Screwtape Letters and something else. Al- though Lewis has published credita- ble works in many genres, including an excellent piece of literary criti- cism. several good novels and some mediocre poetry, only Screwtape has enjoyed any wide and lasting popularity. Lewis's philosophy and his meth- od of rationalization are well-suited to the epistolary form. In Screwtape he was able to criticize many cur- rent ideas of morality and fashion without being faced with the embar- rassing necessity of having to justi- fy his views. By creating a fictional demon, he could cast aspersion on The staff artists are Belita Lewis and Bob Griess. Both are students in the college of The University of Chicago, and are interested in selling their work. They can be reached for this purpose through o"+r editorial offices - telephone MI 3-0800,Y extension 3265. whatever he chose by having his de- mon praise it. Logical bases and justifications were not important; insight was. All of Lewis's philosophy carries a hollow ring of common sense with it. But whenever he opens himself up to close scrunity, as he does in some of his theological works, much of ,the sense becomes inaudible above the din of pedantry. His most successful books (with the exception of The Allegory of Love) have been his most direct. His style is scholar- ly at its best, sterile and pedantic at its worst. This is hardly surprising when viewed in the context of Lewis's life as portrayed in this volume of his letters.rSequestered in childhood, he turned to writing at an early age as an outlet for his moderately fer-, tile imagination. Even before the age of literacy, as his brother re- counts in the introductory memoir, Lewis gave vent to his imagination by renaming himself. He wisely de- cided that Clive was not a suitable name for a young man and, putting a finger to his chest, announced "He is Jacksie." He also displayed some of his future logic by refusing, from then on, to answer to any oth- er name. Lewis attended several stifling English public schools and, by his own account, found them distaste- ful. He then discovered what was to be his home for the major portion of his life: Oxford. His letters from Oxford take on a new tone of excite- ment. Always an avid reader and amateur critic, he found the literary climate of Oxford in 1916 ideal for his purposes and soon decided that he wanted to spend his life there as a don. He wrote his father that "this place has surpassed my wild- est dreams; I never saw anything so beautiful, especially on these frosty nights." He added, however, that "it is fearfully cold at about four o'clock on these afternoons. We have most of us tried, with va- rying success, to write in our gloves." An anti-pacifist, Lewis entered the infantry in 1917 as an officer. Although his views on pacifism re- mained the same, he quickly discov- ered that the army was not for him. When wounded in the back by mis- p 1 a c e d British artillery, Lewis wrote to his father asking if a dis- charge could be arranged. Although the discharge was not forthcoming, the war ended soon, and Lewis re- turned to Oxford and his studies. He graduated with distinction and subsequently found his own niche in the faculty, a niche that was to hold him until 1954, when he final- ly moved to Cambridge. Lewis has won fame not as an ex- cellent literary critic, which he was, nor as a good writer, which he was, but as a theologian, which he was not. Raised as a Christian, he be-, came an atheist in his youth, and then returned to Christianity at Oxford. Although this is not by any means a unique experience, Lewis discovered, somewhat to his sur- prise, that he was able to write quite sensibly about Christianity. In doctrine, he favored the funda- mentalist stand over the modern- ist, but only slightly. He tried, as much as possible, to remove him- self from controversy in his popu- larizations of Christian philosophy. Sometimes he did not succeed. He met with some resistance from theologians when he introduced a carnate devil into his works. Antici- pating this response, he prefaced the introduction in this way: "I know someone will ask me, 'Do you really mean, at this time of day, to re-introduce our old friend the dev- il-hoofs and horns and all?' Well, what the time of day has to do with it I don't know. And I'm not par- ticular about the hoofs and horns. But in other respects my answer is, 'Yes, I do.' " He also took issue with a certain popular notion of "heaven with a little bit of hell in it." Al- though he spent much of his time grappling with the problem of the Lewis's letters reveal a side of the man not often seen in his publishe work. He stands revealed as mee' and scholarly, a man with a lively wit, a vast fund of knowledge and a joyous enthusiasm for literature. The volume is sprinkled with notes on everything from his distaste for The Canterbury Tales to his affec- tion for Tolkien to his disregard of Kierkegaard. Whenever he casts off the scholarly cloak and speaks of his personal preferences to his clos- est friends, his faults melt away, leaving his charm, wit and good taste. M ~ , - ~ f N. Black Digging Out by Anne Richardson. McGraw-Hill Book C o m p a n y. $4.50. Black comic books can be fun when the jig of human inanity (not insanity) described therein is origi- nal, fanciful and creative. When the black comic ballet is reduced to a shuffle of the mediocre or a proces- sion of the self-made miserable, black comedy is a drag. Anne Richardson's Digging Out is such a drag. Its inadequacies are ^(omrounded by the anemic dramat- "read within the comedy. It may be of value as readings in bla'k comedy for junior high schoolers who have not sharpened to the pure bitter-lemon taste of the It is a Marjory Morningstar gone wron , without maudlin romance but with an imminent and long- awaited death in what is overtly ex- plained to be a very uninspired family. Mother awaits death in a cancer- ous metastasis. "'Candy, candy, can- dy,' she said . . . 'Mallowmars, Her- shey bars, M & M's, Barton's best.' Typical that she remembers so many names of products on the market." Father spends his free moments in the bathroom, often with The New York Times. And daughter, the narrator, witnesses the drama with revulsion, no sense of absurdi- ty and only some of the now- tritened rebelliousness of her gen- eration. The essentials of the book, how- ever, are in the aunts and uncles and cousins. People who sold the se- cret hiding place of their Pale vil- lage to the Cossacks fora ticket-to America. They are a painted and impotent gang, often bamboozled by their de- ficient sense of elegance, inspecting the linen, often attempting to avoid probate. Several were raised by the same German maid, a woman (typi- cally) with old-country problems of her own. They are Jews: being Jewish is a near requisite for being a current black-comic type. But their Jewish- ness is an oppressively dull thing. It does not contribute to the black comic attempt. "Somewhere I must find a place to bear my American children, whom I will mother, and who in turn will leave me to find their own Americas," the narrator says in her last dramatic mumbling. "Sweet Jesus, has anyone the strength for such exploring?" But perhaps it is not the cultural hangup or the weak slalom to dra- ma which hurts the book most. Dig- ging Out is static; and good, funny black comedy is dynamic. It is Bruce Jay Friedman's. Stern being dragged home each night by several massive evil hounds. It is John Barth's Goat Boy being bounced through WESCAC's (West Campus Computer's) Belly and coming out unEATen. Black comedy, to a great extent, means the motion of Hook evading the crocodile, although per- haps more restrained, as directed by the cultural setting. If the anecdotes were funnier or if there were dialogue, Digging Out might not need motion. But as it turns out, it does need some action, something more brazen than the wag of a powderpuff on a cancerous face in a deathbed. The drama of a young woman planning her escape and ruminating her revulsion is not worth laboring.- It is this basic lack of action that hinders Digging Out. The book goes nowhere. Neil Bruss Mr. Rruss is a third-year student major- ing in philosophy at the University of Michigan. Balloons are Crittenden. Available, by Jordan Atheneum. $4.50. Jordan Crittenden was born in 1937 in Wichita, Kansas, and as he approached the age of thirty he de- cided to write a novel. He men- tioned this to the man at the c h e c k -o u t counter of Horders, where he was paying for two reams of good bond paper. "If I hadn't spent my formative years in an unenriched environ- ment I would have been an author myself," the man said. "You make excuses for yourself; I've published already in The New Yorker, Punch, and Harper's Ba- zaar, to name but three of what we call the quality slicks. Howhmuch will that be?" "Look," the clerk said, coming around the counter and grasping Jordan's arm, "I'd like you to meet my wife. She's taking a creative lit course at the Famous Writers School by correspondence, and I'm Patches of Purple Shreds of Mot The Ravishing of Lol Stein, by Mar- guerite Duras; translated by Rich- ard Seaver. Grove Press. $3.95. The next best thing to starting with the end is ending with the be- ginning. So Duras tries both. It all begins with the cataclysm: the de- ception, the lost love. At a ball, Mi- chael (twenty-five), leaves Lol (sev- enteen), for Anne-Marie, (age: un- specified). This is all trite of course, so Duras must do something more to interest us in the forlorn Lol. But given a banal trauma, -a superfluous setting and minimally outlined -sup- porting characters, Lol has prob- lems being an engaging protagonist. Well, if all else fails, you can al- ways try saying nothing: so Lol taci- turnly modulates from boredom to disappointment. And it works. She walks, she marries, she watches -she even transcends. Having recognized, at the ball, the im- p o s s i b i 1 i t y of discovering "the word" (truth? logos?) that would justify her desire to desire, she be- comes a remote kind of anti-God, busy "reconstructing the end of the world"-specifically, "time in all its purity, bone-white time." So far, there is promise of poetry: with good style and an idea to go with it, Duras is equipped to write litera- ture. But she is afraid to trust tal- ent alone. She wants to be theatri- cal Clearly, Lol is meant to fascinate; but the story isn't quite so simple. Deceived once and forever, ray- ished by her best friend's lover, Lol is doomed to love vicariously. She is to be all woman. The locus of her erotic identity is not herself but an- other woman,any other, such as her best friend Tatiana. If only Lol. didn't take things so literally! The scenes of her diligently gazing at lovers through hotel windows are so embarrasingly heavy-handed that one wonders why the author didn't notice. r But Duras is, again, too worried about being spectacular. She re- veals, about halfway through the story, the identity of the mysterious narrator (after the suspense has, no doubt, become unbearable): he is Lol's lover! (Coup de theatre). At the end of the novel, Lol visits the ball-room where her tragedy took place. (Dramatic.) Sex scenes. (Ah!) Is this technique? Certainly it's not consummate art. Could it be that the next best thing to a trite story is no story at all? Precisely. Duras is at her best when her plot is least discernible, "drama" forgotten. At times like this, the narrative, camera-simple, intrigues us. The alternation of long lyrical paragraphs with much short- er concise ones is well timed: the phrase progression is rhythmic. Sometimes, too, the prose has a kind of eerie, thinly abstracted quality: partly because the narra- tor, describing the gestures of his girl, often only imagines, tenta- tively interprets and occasionally misunderstands her; partly because Lol is a half-dead girl who can't even remember how to forget. Yes, Duras is a writer. But in- stead of relying on the effectiveness of her style, she adulterates it with stage effects. The result is lyricism without poetry. Juliana Geran Miss Geran is a second-year student majoring in philosophy at The Univer- sity of Chicago. sure it wol good." When th drove Jor drive-in ane bespectacle burger skir window. "( she said. onizing day "Loretta, Jordan Cril "Pleased dan. " 'Wait," s two dozen Jordan wha writing. "Well," h dungsroma low named faced by a Auden, thai the book 0 effect thai many mode able, all se tion will sc much bette] Leonard ene sack of "This not resque, red( I say gray) l a sense of tl ny, too, in a As I see H liard ball b billiard ba things whic unpleasant. Like the t Thomas Py minus any : mystery, p Freud com Howard is about 500 r read Malcol Leonard dumbly ove "Malcolm ventures t own, being i sive, and th see at all th society. Hov er than Mal meets some aim to writ days." Leonard i steering-wh4 ranged him the horn in 1 Loretta g dan's eyes t car window~ are small, a ting into th filling when Mr. Lavine i student in the at The Univer Christian Hell, he concluded that it exists, is the polar opposite of Heav- en and is the final ruin of those consigned to it. "If a game is played, it must be possible to lose it." He remained troubled, however, by the figure of a God who "seems unwilling, or even unable, to arrest the ruin by an act of power." Lewis carried a drastic 'either-or' rationality with him throughout his life. He felt each man had a number of clear-cut choices in life. The choices lay between Christ as "a lu- natic or an imposter," "marriage . . or else total abstinence," Chris- tianity or paganism. When reading Lewis's letters, one thinks of his comment on Cow- per's correspondence: "He had nothing-literally nothing-to tell anyone. about; private life in a sleepy country town where Evan- gelical distrust of 'the world' de- nied him even such miserable so- ciety as the place would have af- forded. And yet one reads a whole volume of his letters with unfail- ing interest." Almost, but not quite. John Gray M. Gray is a second-gear student ma- joring in bio-chemistry at the Univer- sity of Michigan. 4 MIDWEST LITERARY REVIE"W February, 1967 February, ,,1967 Ml D W E S- T L 'I T E R A R,