The Painful and Instructive Case of B S Johnson, who never saw a Garde he didn't want to Avant
There's a very interesting strand of literary biography emerging these days and this is a great example. Another of this type would be Roger Lewis' crazy Anthony Burgess and Norman Sherry's three-part, 2251-page bio of Graham Greene. In these biographies the biographer himself appears on the page, he shows you around, he moans about the lack of information about those crucial months in 1951, he tells you about the saucy minx he met whilst researching in Sardinia, he gets depressed and discusses giving up the very book you're reading – it's all great fun and a completely different reading experience to those giant stalactites like Leon Edel's Henry James or whatsisname's whatsisname, you know the ones I mean.
However, before we go any further, let it be said that reading a literary biography is a vile, treacherous, low, abject thing to do. You don't see animals reading literary biographies do you? Well, don't do it yourself then! Read the actual books the biographed author actually wrote, instead. These biographies are a waste of everyone's time. What are we, armchair purveyors of the crassest pop psychology?
It's the art that matters, everything else is the Twa Corbies
As I was walking all alane,
I heard twa corbies makin a mane;
The tane unto the ither say,
"Whar sall we gang and dine the-day?"
"In ahint yon auld fail dyke,
I wot there lies a new slain author;
And nane do ken that he lies there,
But his hawk, his hound an his agent fair."
"His hound is tae the huntin gane,
His hawk tae fetch the wild-fowl hame,
His agent has jist been arrested for downloadin' kiddie porn,
So we may mak oor dinner sweete."
"Ye'll sit on his white hause-bane,
And I'll pike oot his bonny blue een;
Wi ae lock o his gowden hair
We'll theek oor nest whan it grows bare."
"Mony a one for him makes mane,
But nane sall ken whar he is gane;
Oer his white banes, whan they are bare,
This literary biography sall blaw for evermair."
Okay, sorry, I got carried away.
B S Johnson was stuck in a truly awful intellectual space. He was a total believer in artistic progress & so saw the connection between Tristram Shandy and Ulysses in a heartbeat. He saw that Joyce and Beckett had murdered the traditional realist novel in the pantry with a blunt instrument. Anyone dealing with plot & character & three acts & dialogue after Ulysses should be run out of Booktown on a rail (which by the way I have always wanted to see done). So he wrote these ferociously modernist novels, and the same 92 people bought them from Travelling People in 1964 to the posthumous See the Old Lady Decently in 1975. He was in a minority of a minority of a minority. So his life was difficult. He hated pop music (he liked jazz, he was completely predictable in many ways) but he ended up writing to the Beatles for a grant on January 4th, 1968, when they set up Apple :
Dear Paul MacCartney
I read in the Sunday times recently that you were setting up a fund to help experimental film makers
(he did little films, plays, essays, he hustled like mad trying to make a life).
Paul didn't reply.
BS Johnson is the poster boy for a particular artistic cul-de-sac and of course he committed suicide. His story must be read with love and pity. A great biography, but, you know, don't read it.