Page 6--Sunday, September 23, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Se ook Another tale offools and failure Red carpet JAILBIRD By Kurt Vonnegut Delacorte Press, $9.95 K URT VONNEGUT has described his works as "bitter coatings on very sweet pills." The assessment seems accurate for all of his works through Slaughterhouse Five, a novel which beneath its bitter coating - the bombing of Dresden, the pitifulness of its hero-- had a sweet core: The possibility of salvation via babies and timelessness and a certain sort of love. Vonnegut's work has matured since that excellent, if pink- cheeked, book, and his latest offering, Jailbird, is a pill of a more homogenous composition, with an emphasis on the sour, if not the bitter. But some of the sweetness lingers, mostly in small graces and good jokes: The bits of everyday poetry Vonnegut has always loved. The book tells the life story of Walter Starbuck, protege of a reluctant American industrialist. Raised from a low station in life, he is sent to Harvard (extolling that institution occupies a large part of the book) and becomes a government hack, holding positions in Europe and America. Starbuck becomes an aide in the Nixon White House, plays an unwitting role in Watergate, goes to prison, gets released, becomes an officer in an enormous conglomerate, and is sent to prison by yet another scandal. Given the haphazard nature of a lot of recent fiction, Jailbird comes off as a fairly unified book. Vonnegut is dealing with his favorite theme: Failure. The protagonists of his last three books (Billy Pilgrim, Eliot Rosewater, Paul Proteus, et. al.), are incontestable failures, having managed at best to snatch some modest form of grace from practical defeat. The graceful people in Vonnegut rarely "win" (or "succeed"), and the winners are never graceful; the powerful are sometimes villains, more often fools. In Jailbird, the winners find among their number Nixon, Roy Cohn, and various robber barons. The object of one of Nixon's sharper wisecracks, Starbuck comments, "Perhaps that is my proper placeinhistory - as the butt of the one good joke by Nixon." Vonnegut's books are peppered with glib little gags of this kind. The author has often likened his fiction to a series of jokes, such as those told by a stand- up comic. Are these little maxims to be taken as punchlines? They fly like flags over the story of Jailbird, (e.g., "America could be paradise, if only all high posts in government were filled by Harvard men"). They often seem to be morals as well as punchlines, but it's difficult to decide whether they are in- tended to convey any useful infor- mation. The success orsfailure of Jailbird, and of Vonnegut's other post- Slaughterhouse Five efforts - Break- fast of Champions and Slapstick - depends heavily upon that issue. Is such a simplistic, naive, sour style viable? Vonnegut's style may be termed the language of American failure. Matter- of-fact -generalizations on the order of "Prosperity is just around the corner" are doused with pessimism and black humor: Andrew Kurtzinan is a senior Honors English major. - - By Andrew Kurtzman "Sacco and Vanzeti returned to in this respect, but it has large im- Massachusetts after the war, fast plications for his fiction. If his simple friends. Their sort of common sense, telegraphic style is a way of making the holy or not, and based on books paradox of American life clear, the unreasonableness of human nature Harrard men read routinely and plain, then he succeeds without making withou t ill effects, had alwa.s plain why life does indeed seem logical seemed contemptible to most of their for most Americans. Their loves or "'Jailbird" does not relegate its author to utter pessimism for the rest of his days, but it does rep- resent a gap in his under- standing of the American condition.' sacred than men," in the words of Star- buck, who admits, "I still believe that about women..,. all seemed more vir- tuous, braver about life, closer to the secrets of the universe than I could be." This appears truein Vonnegut's work in general - women seem to live more gracefully within the paradoxes, though they are no less a part of them. They are graceful and courteous, usually, and it is these virtues that Vonnegut admires most. His heroes are true heroes in that they usually possess a high degree of composure when being made the butts of cruel jokes by fate. Vonnegut is awfully sloppy in much of the dialogue he writes for his charac- ters, male or female. Starbucks' nor- mally reserved wife says things like, "You might just see it again at the next full mooooooooooooooon," and the characters say pretty much what the author wishes them to say, often un- characteristically. But his narrative is well-constructed, and for all its faults, Jailbird is a fine and thoughtful book about the problems of high power and American society, and cruelty in the name of foolish adages. There are many points where the book becomes funny, appealing, and wise; as when Vonnegut encounters his father in Heaven in the book's preface, only to discover that he's chosen (one of the benefits of Heaven) to be nine years old for all eternity. Vonnegut has chosen to be forty-four. He is forced to watch his father's underwear bein stolen. There is much ingenuity in Von- negut's fancies, but a good deal of in- dulgence, too. Often they outlive their usefulness. Jailbird does not relegate its author to utter pessimism for the rest of his days, but it does represent a gap in his understanding of the American con- dition. There are wonderful ideas in the book, and no one excels Vonnegut at creating a seedy pageant of parody. The problem of lovelessness remains, but not necessarily forever. In the wor- ds of Vonnegut's protagonist, "I still believe peace and plenty and happiness can be worked out in some way. I am a fool." welcome as Steinem meets Alice Lloyd By Elizabeth Slowik* neighbors. Those same neighbors, and those who liked to guide their destinies without much opposition, now decided to be terrified hb that common sense, especially when it was possessed byi the foreign-born." Vonnegut purposely reduces the com- plexities of history to such simple equations. He does so to make a larger point: That the human race is capable of belief in almost any credo, so long as it makes the basic meaninglessness of the universe easier to accept. But it seems that Vonnegut creates poor fools, not villains, to support this. His charac- ters strive desperately after nothing at all under a pretty name, doing large amounts of damage along the way. His protagonists are the sole exception. They are disillusioned, somewhat self- effacing, and for the most part robotic. In Breakfast of Champions Vonnegut speaks incessantly of human behavior as chemically determined - we are all robots, in effect. In Jailbird Starbuck comments of his youth: "I was a robot programmed to behave like a genuine aristocrat. Oh, to be young again!" ONNEGUT IS not always suc- cessful in evoking the paradoxes of the human condition in all their magnitude. Part of the problem may be his attitude toward love. In Slapstick, Vonnegut states that he can- not distinguish between his love for a dog and his feelings for a human, and that, "Perhaps because I was so per- petually intoxicated and instructed by Laurel and Hardy during my childhood in the Great Depression, I find it natural to discuss life -without ever mentioning love." -Vonnegut is quick -o admit'hisfailing- pursuits, no matter how foolish, do lend direction and shape to their existence. In Vonnegut's heroes, we have one disconnected balloon of a man after another whining for courtesy rather than love, begging for common sense. His catch phrases are coats-of-arms for those who have relinquished any hope for meaning: "So it goes," "Hi-ho," "It's alright." Vonnegut clearly presents a case for his theory that our hearts, not our heads, are what so often do us damage, but is silent on the issue of the nature of our hearts. Women are "more spiritual, more tended a reception at Alice Lloyd's Red Carpet lounge after her recent speech at Hill Auditorium, the students flocked around her, eyes shining, minds clicking in a whirr you could almost hear. They surrounded the wood table where the feminist leader perched: Seated on the table behind her, sprawled over the couch next to her, precariously wobbling on chairs and shelves, standing, standing, shifting from one foot to the other as they" strained forward to hear glorious Gloria speak. "I feel like a disciple kneeling at your feet," said one young woman as she set- tled herself cross-legged on the floor. "Don't say that. It makes me up- tight," replied Steinem. And uptight is an adjective that does not apply to Gloria Steinem. Admit- tedly obsessed with journalism and feminism, Steinem has combined her. monomanias into a dynamic career and a personal credo. "I can't watch a TV movie without throwing a shoe at sexist and racist remarks," she said.' Steinem -is thin, long-haired, and still sports those famous aviator-style glassed. Frequently she waves her han- ds to emphasize a point. Behind the glasses her eyes are doused in make- up, but not to hide wrinkles - at 45, Steinem looks like the older sister of a typical University freshperson. Steinem left Toledo, Ohio (where "the boys got construction jobs in the summer and made a lot of money and girls were secretaries") and splashed into journalism in 1963 with "A Bunny's Tale." The article, which appeared in Show magazine, was an account of Steinem's undercover adventures up through the ranks of Hugh Hefner's Playboy bunnies. Leonard Levitt wrote in a 1971 Esquire magazine profile, "Gloria revealed that the girls in the cloakroom did not get to keep their tips, that the hours were excruciatingly long, and the pay .embarrassingly short. Her point of view, however, was more like that of a labor leader than a Women's Liberator ..." Steinem admits that she didn't recognize herself as a feminist until she was past 30. "It happened gradually ... finding it was most im- portant to me to be 'described as a feminist, that I was speaking for my group" instead of "working on someone else's cause." Several times she delighted in her youthful audience, ex- claiming she was encouraged to see the Elizabeth Slowik is co-editor of students had become feminists so early in life. At Alice Lloyd, Steinem fielded questions with consistent ease that ranged from whether she has children to the difference between humanism and feminism. In between, she gave advice to a lesbian who wanted to tell her co-workers about her sexual preference. Virtually everyone in the audience, mostly Alice Lloyd residents and Pilot Program students and staff, claimed to be a feminist; with Steinem's incisive replies, who would declare otherwise? Not all feminists revere Steinem as the students in thelounge so obviously did. Some charge that Steinem has sold out-as editor of Ms. magazine, she makes a tidy income each year and enjoys influence and power with politi- cans, publishers, and the public that few in her field have attained. They say she has left a hole in the galaxy of feminist leaders. But Steinem points to the new, non-profit status of Ms., making it part of the Ms. Foundation, as evidence that her critics are an example of "the crabs in the basket phenomenon, where one person of your group goes up and the others try to pull you down." With its altered tax status, Ms. will distribute some issues free or at a discount, and its writers will be able to pursue additional investigative ar- ticles. Ms. now can continue on a dif- ferent plane. "We no longer have to prove discrimination," Steinem ex- plained. "Our audience changes all the. time. People read intensively for two years" then move onto their own brand of feminism. "We publish things no other magazine does," boasted Steinem. B UT STE INEM'S 'griting talent has been criticized as much as her alleged oppor- tunistic exploitation of the women's movement. "... . Editors who have handled her copy say that if she believes that her writing alone made her famous, she may be deluding her- self about her prose and her charm," Levitt asserted in Esquire. In the September 1979 issue of Ms., which was devoted to campus coverage, Steinem said she believes I Americar longer h revolutioi a"...A tainly wo thefirst p revolutic much mo their mo years of t and orgar I was... years dur most val We still workers, mothers. experienc most rad you could feminist - and not At a pr Auditoriu replied t journalist editors w "We (tI profound changed. back, est transform tos into a always sh the grou knew hov tic gems t "The id involvem4 result of into mas We're not Politics importani Her list of Caesar Cl mayor Jc Kenneth t president Kennedy much tim ton, co-s Clyde; pu helped S Book in 1 crony of Kurt Vonnegut c -u Wtew"