An imaginative collection of Vidal interviews given over twenty years, full of witty, brilliant, and unconventional comments on his own life and work as well as American politics, values, and sexuality
Gore on sex, "I've tried everything, though not animals. The vegetable kingdom once held great fascination for me", to his novelist peers. Re Alexander Solshenytzin: "He is a bad novelist and a fool. The combination usually makes for great popularity in America." Gore had a marvelous idea here; reproduce his conversations with journalists and friends over several decades but in thematic, not chronological display. This book is a pure delight even if you are not a Vidal fan. One more note, on J.F. Kennedy: "Jack was sick; mostly in the body but also in the head. Kennedy loved war."
Gore Vidal did numerous interviews and discussed multiple topics. Robert Stanton worked with Gore Vidal, cutting a pasting questions and responses from different interview, to produce a book that organizes the questions in different categories. This book will be of interest to anybody who is interested in Mr. Vidal's history, upbringing, viewpoints, and opinions on both his works and the works of other authors. As Mr. Vidal had input on the final version of book, don't expect any dirt, shocking revelations or personal information of a private nature.
While there have been a few published interview collections of Gore Vidal, there’s only one that he was directly involved in, and as a result, it is the best. Views from a Window: Conversations With Gore Vidal, edited by Vidal with author Robert J. Stanton (1980), compiles nearly two decades’ worth of conversations with the author, playwright, and essayist. Full of Vidal’s characteristic wit, bravado, and imminent charm, it also conveys his deep concern for humanity’s future.
What is striking about this collection is not just the quality of the interviews, which were carried out by Stanton as well as numerous other interviewers, but the formatting. Instead of the laborious task of reading them chronologically with little to no editing, Views from a Window is arranged thematically, covering Vidal’s biography, thoughts on books and other writers, politics, and the chance of human survival. It jumps around from interview to interview, removing unnecessary, repetitive answers and offering up the choicest selections from the lot. This made reading it a rewarding delight.
These interviews present Vidal at the height of his powers, capping out around the time of his writing the philosophically-dense novel, Creation (1981). You get a sense of his patrician upbringing, his full-throated defense of sexual freedom, disdain for the American Empire, and an acerbically opinionated view of writers such as Norman Mailer and Susan Sontag. As editor, Vidal also inserted notes for factual errors or changes of judgment.
In the final section of the book, devoted to “survival,” Vidal lays out his vision for a society predicated on strict control of the public sphere and broad freedom within the private sphere— in effect, a form of liberal socialism dedicated to broad public goods and enshrined individual rights. While his views on population control have aged like milk, and his lauding of a racist eugenicist like William Shockley makes one’s blood also curdle, his overall vision of a liberal socialist society is praiseworthy.
In interviews, Vidal often gave as good as he got, and Views from a Window shows both interviewers and interviewee at the top of their game.