Saturday, December 11, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five THE MICHIGAN DAILYPage Five Joyce Carol Oa tes: Arti icial Respiration? Joyce Carol Oates, WONDER- LAND, Vanguard, $7.95. By GAIL LENHOFF VROON Our cells play strange tricks on us. For reasons which re- main obscure to those uninitiat- ed in'the white arts of cytology, a woman's uterus can generate phantasmagoric' growths, trans- forming its cell structures into foreign tissue and shaping false organs within itself. Paging through medical text books, one discovers photographs of an eye growing from the womb. Won- derland belongs in the category of such abberations, springing from a cell that, as its creater tells us: . Perhaps goes mad and starts dividing, mutiplying, blowing itself up into a bal- loon-sized tumor. Miss Oates has the talents to almost persuade us that dis- plasia, if it is large enough and sufficiently bizarre may form a magnum opus . . . almost. Wonderland leads us on the r* quest of the human soul, through the streaming con- sciousness of Jsse Vogel; w i t h several lapses into the thoughts of ladies who flow from Vog- el's churning brain as tributar- ies digress from the Mississippi. We enter the "underside" of consciousnes to gaze at reality distorted by dreams and micro- scopes. America, class struggles, a r t, philosophy, the human body are telescoped through the eye of the novel -- shrinking, multi- plying, diminishing and grow- ing at preternatural speeds. No area is left unprobed by Miss Oates' sharp instruments. She holds each page before us, as an iceman holds a glittering block that melts in our. hands, leaving us staring at an empty pair of tongs as we close the novel and wonder at what we've read. Events are stacked, one with- in another, in a series of gothic boxes that form the protagon- ist's life. Vogel is the only sur- vivor of a poor white family: his father, driven berserk by privation, shoots his pregnant wife and her children. Only Jesse is discovered, bleeding to death on his neighbor's pasture. Propelled from one environ- ment to another, the boy is slowly molded into an eminent: physician by a succession of spiritual fathers, whose form he stimulates and then overcomes. When he has at last emerged from the metamorphic process as brain surgeon and father, he The Johnson iUL Lyndon Baines Johnson, THE VANTAGE POINT, Holt, Rine- hart & Winston, $15.00. By WILLIAM GAUS Lyndon Johnson's book has not skyrocketed to the to of the best-seller lists. It has not trig- gered heated controversy or out- raged denials-well only one so far. I have not noticed any cut- ting satire in any of the national media. Pretty tame stuff, consid- ering the author, and somewhat out of character. A glance at the book will show why. It is very, very factual; very, very issue-oriented; and very, very bland. The former President now joins a large group of otherwise distinguished men who have written thoroughly un- satisfactorily material about the Johnson years. Later he said: "A program for a better society can be es- tablished and launched by any type of government, Commun- ist or non-Communist, dictator- ial or democratic. But such a program cannot be carried for- ward for long if it is not ad- ministered by a really demo- cratic government, one which is put into office by the people themselves and which has the confidence of the people." The chapters on Vietnam are full of just this type of stuff, and Vietnam occupies the greater, portion of the book. If the book itself refreshes one's memory of some major shortcomings of the Johnson Administration, what has been written about it helps one to remember that criticism of Johnson was never particular- ly fair. or discerning. In one finds his own child running from him. Just as his first fath- er stalked him with a rifle, he hunts his lost daughter, wish- ing to salvage this remnant of himself that has grown wildly beyond his control. The girl dies as he holds her, of jaundice, malnutrition and the afteref- fects of drugs, in a small boat drifting on a nameless lake. When Miss Oates steps out of the tangle of "dream", she dis- plays a fine eye for small details that evoke realities. Her render- ing of the despair, blatant in poverty and buried in the trap- pings of upper middle class, is excused with a subtle mastery that underlies her more fan- tastic experiments. The supernatural emerges from -the mouths of academic magic- ians - mystics; scientists and professional cynics-whose dis- course recalls Faust's observa- tion that: . . . The spirit of the times, in the end, is merely the spirit of those gentlemen in whom the times are mirrored. The farther one penetrates Wonderland, the greater t h e temptation to trace its anteced- ents. Here are echoes that span world art - traces of Strind- berg's phantom students a n d vampirical cooks, of Iago, Can- exciting at any point, but there is much in it, and much worth pondering. In particular, the chapters on domestic problems are sometimes stimulating. Per- haps it is because we now live under a President who will not bother with anything that can't be accomplished by Executive Order. But, whatever the reason, Johnson's domestic achievements seemed at this reading to have greater stature than when they were in the headlines - and they seemed major at the time. Chapters on subjects where the reader had some personal con- tact-in my case, the war on poverty-can be curiously satis- fying. One important fact about the book remains to be noted; it is expansive. Some may have reser- vations about spending so much for a book that conceals and con- fuses as much as it informs, par- ticularly when it is Lyndon John- son you are paying for this ex- perience. The book is worth per- using, but I cannot in all honesty say that money should be spent on buying this book rather than, say, that electric pencil sharpen- er you've had your eye on, or a new pair of gloves. Those wao have an interest in reading over portions of the'book will be hap- pier if they borrow it from a li- brary or a friend. I will be glad to let people borrow my own co- py when it is available. dy, of Voltaire's Candide. The parallels, while perhaps unin- tentional. are too striking to dismiss. And thus, against all intention, one is drawn to first doubts of Miss Oates', artistic powers, questioning whether she has animated her characters, or whether their life relies on ar- tificial respiration, on breath supplied by the ghosts of litera- ture past. Applying the ancient art of conjuration by distraction, Miss Oates has dressed the bones of her' novel in many colored tis- sues composed of the most ab- stractions and the concretest of concretisms. In the more rari- fied passages, her personages lecture us on Fate, phisiology, perception, art, dreams, person- ality ad infinitum. Frequently, she is thoughtful enough to show her hand and identify her sources. One of the main themes of Wonderland, for example, is extracted from The Wisdom of the Body: The living being is stable. It: must be so in order not to be destroyed, dissolved or dis- integrated by the colossal forces, often adverse which surround it. By an apparent contradiction it maintains its stability only if it is excitable and capable of modifying it- self according to external stim- uli and adjusting its response to the stimulation. It is stable because it is modifiable . . . (Oates quoting Walter Cannon, quoting C. Richet) Such abstractions are balanc- ed by an avalanche of concrete. Among other delicacies, M i s s Oates offers (is detailed descrip- tions of surgical operations, mass murder, Kennedy's assassina f tion, and cannibalism (T. W. monk, poet and teaching fellow at our own good University of Michigan, takes home a piece of cadaver's uterus which does not quite taste like chicken, to his mild amazement). Like Swift, Miss Oates mag- nifies characters and human functions into grotesques. This brief extract, by way of a sam- ple, has been removed from a lengthy portrait of Vogel's se- cond mother, Mrs. Pedersen. The lady has just fainted in the bathtub: What an enormous body! .. . her brests were swollen, yellow- ish bulbs of flesh, the nip- ples raw, a deep red, circled with rows of tiny goose-pimp- les as if she were very cold, though the upper part of her torso was flushed with a heat rash and her belly and thighs were also flushed. She breath- ed feverishly, rapidly. Lumps of flesh hung down from her belly onto the floor tile. She was like a ball of warm breath- ing protoplasm, an air of some- thing fruity, yeasty, sour ris- ing from her. Jesse saw that she had vomited onto the floor just behind her head, and a narrow line of stale vomit led from her mouth down her neck and shoulder to the floor. Indeed the novel is highly structured by the flowing of bil- ious excretions and blood. In the first fifty pages, the main source of narrative tension is focused on the contractions of the protgonist's stomach: Is he go- ing to vomit, and having vomit- ed once, will he vomit again? One of the reasons that the mass murder of the Harte family is so shocking may be explained by the fact that in lieu of the an- ticipated vomit, we are splat- tered with blood., To counter this, Miss O a t e s concentrates the second half of Part I on graphic descriptions of eating and digression on fatty tissue, as Mrs. Pederson stuffs her adopted son like a Proven- cal Goose. These initial motifs, once set, are supplemented by morning sickness, constipation, n o s e - bleeds, and cameos of patients: A huge fat man, not much older than Jesse; billows of flesh, flab, blubber, bare wob- bling chest smeared with vomit and blood-darting crazy eyes. Oh, those eyes! A woman who jams a fruit glass up her womb, a man bleeding from the groin" the testicles slashed, hated so viciously and slashed so viciously." There, is no edict that com- mands a novelist to refrain from incorporting outside sources. Of- ten these prove to be the most in- teresting parts of the book. Nor am I one of the professionally squeamish who suggest that the graphic depiction of atrocity is somehow despicable or cruel, But an author must realize that the audience reads the same newspapers and magazines - that the reader has enough of a liberal education to expect the author, if not to camouflage, then to integrate her components. I hesitate to accuse Miss Oates of inserting elements for their own sake, but I hesitate only because the scope of Wonder- land is so broad that most any- thing can be and is applied to it. The major flaw in the novel is, unfortunately, its style. One can, of course, beg the question and maintain that stream-of-con- sciousness lays the burden of. language on the mind of the pro- tagonist. The kindest conclusion would be that Miss Oates is not to blame for Wonderland's defi- ciencies. One has, however, only to reread the first ten pages of The Sound and the Fury to real- ize that even a tale told by an idiot can display wondrous craft and control. Shifting chronolog- ies, shining italics, the clutter of detail and data can not conceal the fact that Joyce Carol Oates is careless with her prose. The novel is saturated w it h cliches, which she loves to string about nouns in clusters: "baf- led, blind rage," "a cold, fierce, driving rain", "his spirit was be- coming automated, mechanized." One suspects that the writer is not quite sure what she wishes to say, throwing in overwgorked phrases and repeating synonyms, fearing to cross out extraneous elements which just might turn out to be relevant. She has a tendency to trip over her own feet, often by mixing referents for no ostensible rea- son. Her extended conceits are weakened because she insists on hammering the opposition of reality and dream into the read- er's weary mind: The choir is singing now of a little town that is filling up softly with snow, its n'usic musty and unreal; outside there is hail, real snow,tviolent and wild. When she does produce a rare, fine image, it is too frequently buried because, in order to im- press us with the many, many levels of the mind, she qualifies her sentences to render the po- tential complexity of her observa- tion clearer, and clearer and yet more clear: ... He could not concentrate because he kept thinking of Shelley upstairs, ,or rather not thinking of her but envisioning her. Yet he did not really en- vision her, not the girl Shelley. but rather the ghostly "scan" of his own brain, Dr. Vogel's brain, a photograph of a grainy oblong in which a certain area was heavily shaded by the ra- dioactive isotope in the form of his daughter's face, like a tumor . . . located in the front- al ragion of his brain . . . a Importance of Being Gay b 0 0 k S Merle Miller, ON B E I N G DIFFERENT, Random House, $4.50. By JIM. TOY A gay man who wants to discover the sexual preference of another person will often ask, "What's his (or her) story?" Behind that question may lie the assumption that sexual prefer- ence is the result of a long and corplicated developmental pro- cess, that the factors influenc- ing sexual preference are many and varied, and that their in- teractions vary from person to person. In On Being Different: What It Means to Be a Homosexual Merle Miller has given us his story. Miller, a gay white man of fifty, once married, now 'a partner in a long-term gay rela- tionship, has spoken honestly, it seems, and painfully, it is clear. Miller seems to view his homosexual preference as a re- sult of parental influence and other societal pressures. (Miller has not set down his opinion of the role of body chemistry in sexuality - a matter of current scientific research). That Miller wrote his book at all is a heartening sign. His life style (by his own statement, it took him some forty years to come out of the gay closet) would in no way seem to indi- cate that he would ever reveal his gay feelings in a national publication. But Miller's book is a reworking and expansion of an article that he prepared for the magazine section of the Sunday New York Times. In 1969, as Miller states, oc- curred the Stonewall Rebellion, the first revolt against the omnipresent straight (heterosex- ual) repression of gay people. In the wake of this New York demonstration there followed an outpouring of gay anger and gay pride across the continent. Mil- ler's reaction to these events re- sembled my own-at first unbe- lieving surprise, then hesitant participation in meetings, march- es, and confrontations of straight, society, and finally some kind of deep commitment to the libera- tion of gay people. I find Miller's statement some- what defensive, from title ("On Being Different") to conclusion ("If I had been given a choice . . I would prefer to have been straight"). I think I am angrier than Miller, or less tired (Miller is fifty-I am forty). But I find myself agreeing with many of the insights that Miller has scat- tered throughout his book, and wish that he had sown them more profusely. The December issue of Play- boy terms Miller's work digni- fied and graceful. Dignified it is -gentlemanly, even. But grace- ful? Kind, perhaps. No rhetorical display, no polemics. Low-key. Conversational. Colloquial. Short. Jerky. Radicals may scorn this mild utterance of a colourless man. Poor people will not want to spend $4.50 for sixty-five small pages of large type. Voyeurs will come off unsatisfied. Yet I find this essay of importance. We need many personal statements from a variety of gay people, women and men. The gay move- ment has published its chroni- cles. Gay radicals have express- ed their anger in terms so rhetorical that the substance a p p e a r s only fitfully through clouds of rhetoric. Therapists continue to issue what I can view only as biased statements of theory. But Miller has given us his own story, nothing more. From it, and from others as yet unpublished we can deduce what we may. For this, and for Miller's courage, I am grateful. posterior frontal tumor in Dr. Vogel's brain. He forced himself to read: Abnormal tissues show abuorm- al scans., I confess I blushed at certain passages that reminded me of long discarded freshman papers: Trick, at the door, screwed his face up and made a sudden, almost convulsive spitting ges- ture. 'Love! What the hell is love?' he said. Jesse stared. 'Good-by! Good night!' Trick cried. He waved good-by. Es- caped. For a few minutes J e s s e stood without moving, staring at the doorway where Trick had stood - he could see again that screwing up of a man's face, the puckering of the lips. His heart pounded viciously. He kept seeing that face, that ugly face . What the hell is love? At times Wonderland becomes a parody of itself, a clutter of too familiar anecdotes, retold with a jaundiced smile. M i s s Oates seems to be telling us, like Cunegonde: Alas! my dear, unless you have been raped by two Bul- garians, stabbed twice in the belly, have had two castles destroyed, two fathers and mothers murdered before 'your eyes, and have seen two of your lovers flogged in an auto- da-fe, I do not see how you can surpass me. Because the novel has such posibilities, one is tempted to play at Pangloss and speculate, all events being linked, w h a t she could have produced: if only she hadn't . . if only she . The book has some features that are of' interest. If nothing else, it refreshes the memory as to certain distinctive features of the Johnson yeais. As the read- er is told of the earnest, high- minded exchanges that took place between Johnson and Everett McKinley Dirksen, for example, he will undoubtedly feel that maybe a little something has been left out. On the other hand, read- ing of Johnson's great reluctance to run for a full term in '64, of how a few intimates had to coax him out of a firm decision to withdraw, one may gain the im- pression that something has been put in that might be deleted at no sacrifice to accuracy. Additionally, events that look- ed contrived even then are still brought forward at face value. Consider this description of the Honolulu conference of 1966 at- tended by American and Vietna- mese leaders: I was impressed, as I think every American at the long conference table in Admiral Sharp's headquarters was, as I listened to the Vietnamese des- cribing their hopes for their country and their countrymen's hopes for themselves. Ky spoke candidly of their problems, their mistakes, their setbacks. But he spoke confidently of their plans, their goals, and their determination to go ahead with political development in spite of the risks. place, for example, it has been correctly noted that Johnson's tart, pithy descriptions of men and events are too often absent. An example of needed color is suggested by Johnson's descrip- tion of Robert McNamara as "the fellow with the Stacomb on his hair." Granted, the former Pre- sident's memoirs are in need of something, but they are not in need of that.. Similarly, Johnson's c o m - plaints of regional prejudice and snobbery have received wide- spread attention. John Kenneth Gailbraith, for example, disin- genuously offered his own back- ground as sufficiently similar to Johnson's to be proof that the regional prejudice sensed by Johnson is an illusion. Lack of candor and introspection are not exclusively Johnsonian traits, it would seem. Complaints about the Eastern press,.,or about anything else, do not dominate the book, however. It is basically a massive recital of the issues of the Johnson years and Johnson's response. It is not The girl Karin Berg in Rolling Stone describe( a rhvng a superlativevoice. a feeling foralyric at hand, a feeling for beat and melodic line, and, whais t e eelings and warmth are underied with intelligence" has a new album.The girl is Helen Reddy ao t ur includes her current single,"No Sad Song;'written by Carole King andToni Stern;"I Dont Rememero MChildhood'by Leon Russell,'Time"by Paul Parrish, and songs by John Lennon, Randy Newman, Donovan, Alex Harvey, David Blue and Helen Reddy herself. ST.857 D e o Be Super Big1 ON CAMPUS plersoElty Turn 'em on with a smoking Super Poster, Ideal for student cam- paigns, rallies & :room crtos ra decorations. A great '' idea for gift or gag Send any B&W, color, polaroid or magazine print, slide, negative, cartoon or drawing & weIl SUPER-IZE it for you. 'Better originals make better posters. Super sized poster I Today's Writers . . Gail Vroon is a movie review- er for The Daily who has re- I k