I’ve read Mr. Trillin’s New Yorker articles and poetry a number of times, as well as several of his books, all witty and droll, and also went to see him at a book signing a number of years ago. So, if you’ve picked up this book expecting an understated wry reflection on contemporary society, you may be disappointed. Indeed, it is a heartbreaking memoir of a 1950’s Yale classmate of Mr. Trillin’s, Roger “Denny” Hansen, a handsome, charismatic, intelligent young man who everyone thought was eventually destined for the Presidency, but who died at age 55 by suicide. What few people knew was that, underneath his persona, Denny had longstanding feelings that he didn’t fit in at Yale, and had a number of depressive episodes.
Denny was from Redwood City, a small town in California and both he and society had very high expectations of him when he graduated from High School. Indeed, “the uncomplicated society (Sequoia high School graduates) had been prepared for had changed so much that where they fit into it had turned out to be painted in those complicated shades of gray.” Another issue is, as Mr. Trillin puts it:
“…the problem facing people who breeze through high school and college the way Denny did is that they get no training in losing, so the first defeat can be devastating.”
While Denny supposedly successfully negotiated a number of psychological, sports and academic roadblocks, it seems that his time at Oxford as a Rhodes scholar was a difficult turning point. “Life” magazine had done a profile on him some time previously, and he was followed up on when at Oxford, and was described as not happy there, as it put him up against a number of very bright contemporaries, while he himself struggled. Indeed, he feared that his true, insecure nature would be embarrassingly revealed in that environment, and he described himself many times as a poser and a fake.
After graduation, Denny attempted to enter the Foreign Service but was turned down, a blow early in his career. He worked for the National Planning Association and studied international economics, writing a seminal book, “The Politics of Mexican Development.” He subsequently worked for the NSC during the Carter administration but reportedly had difficulty putting his very good ideas down on paper, and would argue with his superiors and was generally described as difficult to get along with. A subsequent book was never published. At age 41, he obtained a professorship at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, but his literary output was basically nil, not having completed his third book before his death.
In his personal life, Denny never married, although he did have a long time platonic relationship with a colleague, Carol Austin. Nonethless, one of his internal conflicts was a fear that he would become homosexual; he did have several gay friends, and indeed his suicide was at the home of a gay friend.
The book leapfrogs among descriptions of the academic climate of the 1950’s, changing expectations, Denny’s character and internal demons, and Messrs. Trillin and Hansen’s relationship; and a gathering of Denny’s friends and acquaintances after his funeral, in which most expressed bemusement and confusion about his suicide and the difficulty all of them really knowing him. He had become more irritable and socially isolated in the years prior to his death, making such knowledge virtually impossible.
At the end of the book is a wonderful essay by the screenwriter and critic (and longtime friend of Mr. Trillin) John Gregory Dunne. In it Mr. Dunne describes not only Denny Hansen but also Mr. Trillin himself, his development, personality and writing style, in the context of the changing world that he and Denny were subjected to during and after their days at Yale. Well told on several fronts, and deepened my appreciation of the book itself.
Mr. Trillin’s final chapter includes a quote from Cyril Connolly, a contemporary British writer and critic: “Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising.” I cannot imagine a more apropos description of the tragedy that was Mr. Hansen. Five stars and strongly recommended.