I Sunday, January 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, January 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five _ PROF LE Joseph eI er's two novels in two decades haven't spoiled him By TONY SCHWARTZ HERE'S THIS GUY sitting over breakfast, saying some very funny and ingenuous things in a voice garbled by a mouth- ful of scrambled eggs and a heavy Brooklyn accent. He is wearing, among other things, an old grey turtleneck, a red flannel shirt and a brown striped sportscoat. He is 52 years old but with his trim body, vital eyes and bushy silver-flecked hair, he looks younger. This is Joseph Heller, best, known as the brilliant novelist whose Catch-22 has sold over eight million copies worldwide, since it was published 13 years ago. Today, however, he's just a very nice guy you're having breakfast with, the sort you can't help but like immediately. And that's good to know aboutj the man who wrote a novel which was itself so likeable and so easy to identify with. Against the backdrop of Vietnam, Catch- 22 was ,a hilarious, brilliant -,nd powerful indictment of the in- sanity of war. Yossarian, the protagonist, was a sane, intel- ligent, moral figure in a situa- tion where such concepts seem- ed unknown. Today Catcn-22 has become a part of aur Jan- guage, adapted to any number f illogical and inexplicable ironies. What makes Joseph Helier so ikeable is his utter lack of pretension. On the one hand, he'll tell you quite frankly that1 he loves being in the limelight and that the major reason he came to Ann Arbor to speak at the underclass Hopwood award ceremony is because John Ald- ridge of the English Denart- ment here asked him to. Heller felt grateful- to Aldridge (who he'd never met) for the glow- ing cover-story review Aldridgel rote of Something Happenedl n a recent Saturday Review/ orld. On the other hand, and! ust as ingenuously, Heller tells ou that he felt no pressilre to uickly produce a second block- uster following Catch-22. Un-1 ike many successful first novel- sts, who work furiously toI rove their initial effort va sn'tI fluke, Heller took 13 years to r i t e Something Happened.E oyalties from Catch-22 gave im the leisure to write at his wn pace. man. Among the dislikes he probably the best experience of1 made known while here were my life, even the combat. I hadI teaching, the critics, and v-ilk- no sense that any injustice was ing about his work. Jos ph He- being done, and my officers1 ler, by contrast, likes all three, were not like Yossarian's. May-1 and more. be I would have protested if itc Take Ann Arbor, for instance. had been Vietnam or Korea, but "I often make quick impres- WW II wasn't and I loved it.")i sions. When I arrived at my After the war, Heller entered hotel here (Campus Inn) it was college, had his first brush with 1 about 6 p.m. I saw some faculty writing and enjoyed, as he puts people having cocktails at the it, .the "sweet experience of bar and a lot of people in the getting published in national1 lobby. I figured this was a live- magazines." As a sophomore, 1 ly place. Some college towns he took a creative writing| ':\ss i:;;5ig sy::is 4::uiiij;jqL Y-}:i4ii .:"gagi'rsisi }i # ii":4: i inilma Y "4bill is i ",:::i +"i i > Heller on writing: "After I see the whole book in terms of a con figu- ration, with many details, then I begin to break it down into parts and I write it on a word to word, or a sentence to sentence basis. I'dk usually shoot for one typewritten page in a day. That's very pa ins- taking. What I really mean is that it's a pain in the ass." -. you walk in and nobody's at the course and the stories he pro- bar." Heller felt even better duced appeared the following1 about Ann Arbor after encoun- year in such publications as tering the largest audience of Esquire and Atlantic. In typi-I his career for the Hopwood cally anomolous fashion, Hellerl reading at Rackham. It was graduated and promptly gave t also, he says, one of the most up writing for the next four1 receptive. years. His explanation is sim-1 "I enjoy traveling almost in- ple: "I'd learned enough in variably," he explains between other courses to know that my bites of an uncharacteristically stories were largely imitation." large breakfast. "I want some After getting his M.A. in sign that there is large audience English, Heller taught for a I which wants to hear me. If couple of years at Penn State you're out to sell books, you ("a stultifying place") and then don't come to campuses, you go returned to New York to work to bookstores to sign auto- in a small advertising agency.i graphs. And I guess another "Within three or four weeks,"i reason I came to Ann Arbor is he remembers, "I had my am-; that it has an extremely good bition back. The idea for Catch- reputation among New York 22 came to me in one day, just City high school students. A the way the idea for Something' lot of 'em come out here and Happened came in an after-1 never return." .inoon." Helier spent the nextI IN THE COURSE of his two eight years on Catch-22 and fin- days here, Heller made clear ished it in 1961. A short time thathe is an a'thor who defies later he got the idea for Some- easy categorization. His career, thing Happened and 13 years for starters, took an odd route. later-last January-he handed h ..-.,in the written manuscript. The only breaks in between the reg- ular writing during that time were a couple of years off to write the play "We Bombed in New Haven," an occasional short-term rewrite of a screen-1 play and, during the last four years, a post teaching fiction-1 writing two days a week at City College. Despite his caterpillar - like1 writing speed, Heller denies it comes from an obsessive me- ticulousness. "There are many neurotically painstaking writers who write very short novels," he explains. "Both my books are longer than I thought they would be when I planned them but no longer than I wanted jELLER SAYS that he en- them to be when they were joyed the challenge of teach- finished." At the same time, ing - the other major work Heller believes the time he activity of his last four years- takes gives his work an added until this semester. He tells his dimension. "I work slowly and students that he thinks it's a patiently. There is almost noth- mistake to attempt to write a ing careless in either book. I1 novel before the age of 25. "You want something a little more -spend two years writing and by than just narrative content on the time you finish, your stand- any page I write. Each one is ards have changed so much rich with meaning, with what's that what you thought was hot happening. I try to do more stuff at first won't be such hot than just move the plot line stuff at the end. I see it happen along. It might be just a pun, over and over." Another thing a transition, a trick of language Heller liked about teaching is -but it's there." that it helped organize his time while he was writing. "I know NOT ONE TO make an idle this sounds awful, but it's like claim, Heller poses a chal- i walking my dog and jogging > lenge. "Open the book at ran- (which he does three miles a dom," he suggests, "and I'll day). Both give me a chance show you what I mean." For to think and a place I have to the next five minutes, he ani- be at a certain time." matedly explains the meaning Now that Something Happen- of a paragraph transition, the ed is out, Heller has more in- intended ironical effect and the terest in reading reviews, doing larger meaning he had in mind. !interviews and giving readings, Perhaps"it is this self-conscious- than in teaching. And his new ness which prompted one re- book has received a far differ- viewer to call Beller a "writ-:'bo a eevdafrdfe-> er's writer." Does Belier him- ent response than Catch-22 did elf shre that vie I when it first came out. The -tIreviews back then were mostly think of myself in any compli-ba;frSmtigHped mentary way that anyonewouldb; r Somethin Haene like to describe me. I haven't, they have been generally ex- calld tat ad cellent., John Aldridge, in the heard myself called that and } review Heller liked so much, I'm nt sure I des eit,uts called it "the most important I wolntojct"B~ass novel to appear in this country "Look," he s a y s, laughing in at least a decade." The ook heartily, "I like praise." is a narrative meditation, done The power of Something Hap- Doubtless that's so, but given in the preettneb aened (and of Catch-22) is Doubles tht'sso, ut ive inthepresent tense by a manI that the situation seems so real, Heller's output, it must make named Bob Slocum. Slocum is a t soainescapsble Ad him one of the all time mas- a successful executive in a the charm of Joseph Belier is ters at delayed gratification. In large company-drawn from but Itha ar a ise disus the first years of Something not based on Time Inc. says Sion, he could leave the car, Happened he worked on it for Heller-who has much going for take a few steps away, and then a couple of hours every morn- him and is nonetheless very 'n- turn back good-naturedly to say ing. "There were many morn- happy. Heller claims to be kgthis: ings when I couldn't write. I shocked but not displeased by "Listen. If you don't like the would sleep late. If I didn't get the degree to which readers answers I've given youmake out of the house by 10 or l1:30, identify so emotionally with p ynwr I wogv dn'u make I wouldn't get to my studio till Slocum. Nor is he upset thatu Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBEN JS p 11 and by then I'd have phone many find the book so unre- calls to make. By the after- lievedly depressing. "I tell them noon, I wouldn't feel like writ- to keep in mind that this is a' ing." Things changed shortly novel and Slocum is a fictitious after "We Bombed in New character. It's not an accusa- Haven" closed on Broadway. ; tion. I know many people in Heller then sat down to finish his position who are content Something Happened. Although with what they are. He has an he had scores of typewritten added dimension-an ability or pages, he numbered a yellow a curse to see himself without page '1,' spread hundreds of any delusions. He has an al- notecards in front of him, and most obsessive need to examine began rewriting the book in himself." longhand. Heller makes no apologies for "Usually I'd work two to three the bleakness of his character's hours in the morning. The after- situation, but neither does he noons would be a lot of think- pretend to understand it fully. ing about what I'd written, and "Writing is a cold, cruel, calcu- in the evenings I might write lating business. You're glad the more or think about the next boy is dying-or that Slocum is section. After I see the whole trapped-because it gives you book in terms of a confiwira- the effect you want. To me it's tion, with many details, then I sheer music. begin to break it down into "People want to know how parts and I write it on a word come Slocum is the way he is to word, or a sentence to sen- and I can't tell them. There is tence basis. I'd usually shoot no explanation I know of. It's a for one typewritten page in a combination of circumstances- day. That's very painstaking. some of which I try to suggest What I really mean is that it's -but if there is a way out I a pain in the ass." don't know it." TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M. "THE MOST MARVELOUS PARTY IN TOWN!" T. E. KALEM, Time Mag. PATRICIA MORISON ; *. in A NEW MUSICAL COMEDY REVUE Words and Music by INOEL[CO WARD JANUARY 17-19 Power Center Box Office-763-3333 renelsation* v on sale tin, the fishbowl irst five people to correctly com- )lete the crossword puzzle receive dozen fresh bagles. 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Ten Mile Rd. 0 " Southfield, Mi. 48015 f + + -" EDUCATONAL CENTER " " TEST P1EPARATION _______ SPECIALIS7S SIN CE 1938 +INT Please for an I+ ' is t .mow Jewish Community Centers of Chicago OFFER UIMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES IAL WORK ORIENTED COUNTRY CAMP ,MP CHI-located 50 miles north of adison and the University of Visconsin SITIONS: Counselors-Male Female upervisory pecialists-Waterfront, Campcraft, Arts & Crafts, Nature, Athletics, Tennis, D r am a, Music, Sailing, Water-skiing, Dance, Senior Adult Program Staff, Office Staff "ERVIEW DATES: Jan. 27 and 28 call Mrs. Cooper (SAB Rm. 211) at 764-7460 appointment with Mr. Jerry Witkovskv UNIVERSITY THEATRE SHOWCASE INSPECTR( r7 HOUND A PLAY BY TOM STOPPARD +J/ J.ANUlARY 19-211975 . ARENA THEATRE - TICKET INFORMATION CALL:764-0450 yl' d I i -or m -Am Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS I IJT IS A COMMON cliche about' about writers that their books are generally more interestiig than they are. Take, for in- stance, Arthur Miller, who spent, time on campus last year. De- spite his wisdom and the awe in which his plays are ; irly held, Miller was a cold, inac- cessible and not very likeable He was born in Brooklyn and raised in the residential sec- tion of Conev Island. At 19, he enlisted in the Air Force and like Yossarian, became a B-52 bombardier. (With characteris- tic self-effacement, however, Helier makes it clear that in other ways, he was no Yossa- , rian. "I was young when I went into the war and it was .... :L ,' f ... Irt 3 .... i1 ' tM I i . .r: ,i..'. 1 : :.howww.s ilr r r r rn r rrr rrJ ..: -r T I . gjl frr;i fU t . s: ' : I I !j1 1 F) II --- I.1 Tired of Hassles? 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