Part I
Susan Settlemyre Williams:
This is Susan Williams. I am in the MFA program in creative writing
at Virginia Commonwealth University. It's Thursday, March 14, 2002,
I'm in Charlottesville, Virginia, and I'm talking with George Garrett.
In your book, The King of Babylon Shall Not Come
Against You, one of the characters, Moe Katz, says, ". . .
to be a cynic implies that there is some standard of truth (however
camouflaged and hidden) against which the validity and viability of
images must be tried and tested. To believe that there is anything,
any core, behind and within the superficial appearance of a given image
is, de facto, a confession of folly" [p. 181]. Is this a way of
saying that cynicism is at heart a sort of disappointed idealism?
George Garrett: Well, that's on my mind.
You know, about the time that I wrote thatthis has just suddenly
come to me in a way, because I hadn't really thought about that particular
passage in a whilebut I do know that more than one speaker who
came to the University of Virginia during the period that I was working
on this book had the statement that there was too much cynicism in America
today. We must stamp it out, and this would be part of the educational
process, etc. And I listened to this several times, and then I ended
up on a panel with one of these people, it was a Washington Post
guy, very nice fellow, but he started in on the necessity of fighting
back against cynicism. Cynicism was the great enemy of all things. And
I heard myself defending it: We didn't have enough cynicism, that what
we needed was more, a more acute sensitivity; and I guess I let some
of that get into Moe Katz's defense of the cynical attitude toward things,
that it does imply that things should be better, if you're cynical about
them. And it implies an acceptance of things as they are, I think, if
you are not, if you feel that, as he said, that there is no core. So
I think your question is a very good one, because it's insoluble situation;
but if we did not have an ideal, then there would be no such thing as
something being cynical.
SSW: The question of whether there is a standard
of truth, camouflaged and hidden however it may be, seems to come up
often in your writing. Would you say that this is an important issue
for you? Would you say that you are, as a writer, a seeker after that
standard, as some of your characters seem to be?
GG: I'll have to look back at that. That's
what interests me about characters, anyway, is their relationship to,
not only the inner truth of themselves, but the outward and visible
truth of the world that they deal with, and that we live in an age in
which much in both areas is truncated and suppressed. I've just been
reading a book that's a bestseller right nowit's a nonfiction
book. I'm sorry to say that it's not very terrifically good, it's not
very well-written but the content is rather interesting. It's called
Bias, by this fellow who worked forBernard Goldberg, who
worked for CBS News for quite a while and then has become cynical about
it and has written this. But it's quite clear to me, for example, that
it's impossible . . . Here we are living in the Information Age, and
exemplary of that is the very equipment that we're using right now,
with that kind of really fancy little digital tape recorder and a microphone,
all of these things . . . We are in the Information Age. But what if
the information isn't any good? I've been wondering about that. Just
as I do . . . Let's use the computer to look up everything on cynicism.
But what if they didn't put everything on there? We're used to the fact
that our information comes to us in various forms; but, if it comes
from television, it comes in a sound bite. And that doesn't take us
anywhere. If it takes more than aas all these people, Mr. Goldberg
reminds us tooif it takes more than a minute, one minute, to deal
with, it's too complicated for television anyway. So it's never gonna
be on there.
SSW: That was one of Jimmy Carter's problems.
GG: Absolutely, I think. And he never did
accept the notion, for which we can be gratefulbut he never did
accept the notion the whole world is a series of sound bites and misquotations.
SSW: I wonder if it's getting worse now with
the Internet, because, so often when you surf the Web, you have no notion
of the bona fides of what you find.
GG: It seems a very hard way to find new
information, because obviously anything that ends up, as it were, stored
on the computer and accessible has got to be old information
that someone has typed in and put into the machines. What about the
things that are not? In the discovery of truth we need to be finding
what's not readily accessible and available and what may be more complicated
than requiring one minute.
SSW: Another question I had is that many
of your narrators express a strong sense of irony, even sarcasm. That's
certainly true for the narrator of "Empty Bed Blues." As a
reader, I'm tempted to give slightly more credence to a clearly ironic
narrator, maybe because he seems smarter than a naïve narrator.
How do you see sarcasm working in your stories?
GG: Maybe one of the first things to say
is that the sarcasm isn't necessarily what I meant; they frequently
take a sarcastic stance vis-à-vis something. And I think what
I'm really interested in isand maybe this comes to your point,
the point that a sarcastic narrator is not necessarily an unreliable
narrator. Sarcasm is a rhetorical device. We know when other people
are being sarcastic with us most of the time. It is usually considered,
in social intercourse and relations, a sign of being slow of wit not
to know when someone is being sarcastic with you. On the other hand,
to be too sensitive to the sarcasm of others is to be paranoid. Nevertheless,
it's out there. But in no case is a sarcastic narrator or speaker, in
a social situation, necessarily an untruthful one or an unreliable one.
SSW: I guess that's my question. If he's
sarcastic, I recognize his sarcasm.
GG: You trust the narrator more than you
might, and I've been fascinated by this technically and in reading the
work of other people a lot, how narrators establish themselves as being
worthwhile or worth listening to and the extent to which we trust them.
They have that "reliability." Lots of people, when we start
with a first-person narratorand this is not necessarily true in
any other formbut when we do an "I" story, almost always,
as a reader, we are willing to give the narrator and also the author,
the benefit of the doubt at the outset. Just as when we meet somebody
for the first time, we have a first impression, but we're not necessarilyunless
we are a little crazycompletely judgmental at the outset. We withhold
judgment and tend to give them, the first-person narrator, the benefit
of the doubt. The first-person narrator proves thenand this comes
up against experienceand may prove to be untrustworthy, unreliable,
or just not capable of dealing with the experience. So it has to be-it
gets testedand we can change. We are slow.
You know, with first-person narratorsand this
has always interested methat in the nineteenth century, ghost
stories are mostly first-person. Because we believe it if an "I"
narrator says it. And anything that pushes or stretches credulity becomes
probably more acceptable from a first-person narrator than the third-person
narrator whom we see walking along perceiving this.
SSW: Some of your stories are collages.
GG: It's just a stance that I take. I remember
a friend of mine belonged to Walker Percy's book club; they had a book
club, and they would meet and discuss serious things. On one occasion,
my friend said, "Next week one of the stories we're going to talk
about is a story of yours." I said, "Great, let me know how
it turned out." I've always liked Mr. Percy personally, but I've
never had any idea of what his attitude is. Well, this was a story in
whichit's a relatively simple onewhere you start with a
truck driver at the wheel is the point of view, third-person. And he
has picked up a man who's hitchhiking. He has to let him off, and the
man doesn't want to get off, but he's not going the right direction
at this point. So you leave the truck driverhe more or less pushes
the man out of the truck and he drives off, headed to Knoxville or somewhere.
The man that was in the truck is left stamping up and down, being annoyed,
andit's at nightwaiting for another ride to come along.
And you have just some sense you're in his consciousness. And the third
person is the salesman that picks the guy up an hour or so later and
has a different take on the whole thing and ultimately drops him off
in a town because he too is nervous about him in a different way. And
you're left with a final point of view which also is a revelation of
who he is and what he's been up to, of the man who had been the rider
in both cases. Basically it's like a baton in a race; they keep passing
this point of view to each other. It's a little bit like movie-shooting;
in other words, you stay with where the camera is. The camera is on
the truck driver, the rider, the salesman, the rider, and then this
is where it ends.
Well, he said that in the course of the discussion
about this, Percy pointed out that you are absolutely forbidden to do
this. He said what's wrong with this story is that you can't do that,
you're not allowed to change in third-person from one point of view
to another. And I realized, in a way he's right, but my own thing was
to try to get away with it. And it was really about the story, I suppose,
now that we've really been talking about these things, about how little
you can know with a stranger that you pick up or vice versa. How little
you can know of the truth of the other person. The reader always knows
a little more than the people involved.
SSW: Did you choose the third-person because
of that?
GG: I think I started out to write it all
in the first-person, but it sort of revealed the problems of the hitchhiker
quicker than I intended to do, and finally that became the whole story:
for the reader to discern what had really happened and what was going
on. Why this person was on the road, what was driving him. Something
I've never done reallya little bitjust lately I've been
reading in both fiction and nonfiction, which gets to be kind of interesting
since it's a fictional techniquethird-person point of view in
which the point of view is not the author's but is not . . . it slips
into something very close to first-person, sort of in the middle of
things. It'll start out withit's a little bit like what Virginia
Woolf does, there, with Mrs. Dalloway, where she's walking along,
and all of sudden it still is a narratorsomebody is putting this
story togetherbut without ever saying, "This is what she
thought," the very narrative represents her mental process.
What was exciting to see this in nonfiction was
people like . . . I've just been doing a piece on three prominent women
writers who had collections of essays outJoan Didion, Renata Adler,
and Susan Sontagand all three of them do this thing in the nonfiction.
They'll be talking about Gordon Liddy or Nixon orthey're all political
essays or artistic things in the case of Susan Sontag this timebut
in almost every case, they don't really slip in like the fellow who
did the biography of Reagan, pretend to be there or anything, but they
do suddenlysuddenly you're in the mental pattern as if that
person is writing this. As if G. Gordon Liddy were writing the rest
of this paragraph. I remembered having seen two writers in my lifetime
who did this very well, but I've sort of forgotten it in the interim.
One was D. H. Lawrence. Understanding that makes his work a little easier
to accept; it sounds like he's blowing his horn for all kinds of irrelevantto
the story lineideas. But actually he's giving you the thought
process of his characters in third-person. Similarly, James Gould Cozzens
wrote about professions, about law and doctoring, even one about an
Episcopal minister; and in every case he uses the language and the thought
process that they would use to tell the stories. He's picked it up as
author.
SSW: It makes it problematic, I think, with
nonfiction.
GG: Yeah, it does, very much with nonfiction
Part II
SSW: The unreliable narrator is a pretty
familiar character in your novels and short stories, including "Empty
Bed Blues." Some of the novels are a sort of mosaic of scenes and
episodes told by a succession of unreliable characters. I'm curious,
when you use this technique as often as you do, are you saying something
about the nature of truth and perception or the nature of storytelling
or something else altogether?
GG: Well, it may be something else
altogether. I guess the first two things you said are the elements that
interest me the most. Inevitably, all of these figures or narrators,
reliable or unreliable or to whatever extent reliable, are limited and
isolated in their view of what is, in fact, true. They perceive things
but are not necessarily good reporters of what they perceive and also
don't necessarily understand what it is that they perceive.
SSW: As a follow-up, when you come to the
end of one of your works, do you want the careful reader to be saying,
"Now I know what really happened"?
GG: But there's not one version. I tend to
thinkmaybe that it comes across more clearly in that novel you
were talking about, because it's kind of evolved out of a lot of other
stories and novels written earlier. So everything comes together that
I've been interested inin narrative technique in that oneand
in time. I was particularly interested in fooling around with time.
My thought on this was that there is no single version of what happened;
or, on a larger scale, the implication is, I guess, that 'way out in
the nation or in the world the same thing applies to what was happening
in this little town, that there is no absolute version: this is the
way it went. There are all these [versions], and they all have to be
taken together with the ones that we don't see.
SSW: So that was why so much of Martin Luther
King's assassination was worked in and out?
GG: Right. As an event in itself, it partakes
of the similar. Now I honestly don't know whether I was saying, in the
book or to myself or whatever, that that's a characteristic peculiar
to our age. I don't know that. It could be that it's a characteristic
peculiar to our age, that all events are more matters ofpublic
events and then this is affected privatelyare matters of image
rather than "reality." That there is no "reality."
SSW: I wouldn't consider your writing to
be exactly Postmodern, but the slipperiness of events does make the
reader aware that she or he is being manipulated and therefore calls
attention to the writing itself, in something of the same metafictional
way as the Postmodernists are doing. I'm quoting here from my class
notes on a course on Thomas Pynchon, terms like "problematized
narrative voice," "contradictory characters," "ambiguity,"
"violation of the boundaries between fiction and reality."
Those seem to describe your work to some extent as well. So how do you
see yourself in relation?
GG: That I don't really know the answer to.
I'm conscious that lots of writers, going all the way back to Chaucer
and then to the Classical writers, did some of these same things that
have been around a long time, that are discovered in the more obvious
use of some of these devices by brilliant writers like Pynchon orone
I think of is John Barth, who is very good at this too and a lot of
fun. However, they are not by any means the first. The history of literary
events and influences is not a matter of progressive, Darwinian time.
There are a couple of thingsand this I was fooling around with,
in a way, in that novel, in a different way: All past time, looked at
in one way, from one point of view, all past time is simultaneous, not
progressive, not developing. The Elizabethan idea that we're decaying
rather than progressing has a sound scientific basis, if you wanted
to accept that notion. We're wearing out, we're polluting, destroying,
and coming to the end of things another million years down the line
if not helped along earlier. So, there's that to consider.
SSW: How about one more question, since I'm
in an MFA program and you taught writing for a long time? What do you
think about the teaching of writing?
GG: One of the big questions that they've
been asking for as long as I can remember, and it's an old, tired, cliché
question, but they keep asking everybody connected with creative writing:
"Yes, but can writing be taught?" You must've run into that
all your life.
SSW: Constantly.
GG: I have too, and I don't know why they
keep asking that question. In answering it, sometimes we get some interesting
ideas to kick around.
SSW: They don't ask that about art classes.
GG: Very, very few peopleperhaps, I
have no idea, I meanbut certainly with musical instruments and
other things, just pick up a cello and become a cellist and end up playing
in Carnegie Hallthat just doesn't happen. They, first of all,
don't think that what we're doing is the same thing. They think of us
not so much as an art but some kind of a habit, a bad habit too, a wasteful
one like golf or something. It's really kind of pointless and golf would
be better. You spend your time better doing it. They do think that way
about it. They also don't realize how many cello players, thousands
in the United States right now and only a small number of them. . .
. We are, I gather, incidentally speaking of music, filling up the orchestras
around the world with young American musicians. They're in the Frankfurt
Symphony and Vienna, and our musicians are everywhere. But thousands
who learn because of nice programs in school, in high school and junior
high school, and playing the flute, playing the trombone.. . .
My granddaughter, it ended upshe's in a little
public middle school, and in middle school they lined up and handed
out instruments. "You're going be a trombonist. You're going to
play the flute. You're playing the drums." And she had fun, so
forth and so on. She's going to be a better person with a better understanding
of music. There's nothing to help you understand it so much, music or
any of the other arts, as having tried your hand at it. They don't understand,
the people who question the value of teaching reading and writing on
the level that we do, they simply don't understand that a valuable thing
need not necessarily lead to stardom, fame, or major contributions to
American literature. We were just talking about this, but they don't
see the need to defend learning to play the trombone in the high school
band when you're not going to go and be a famous trombonist, that it's
still part of the education. So we start with a base of that kind, and
then I think we get much more interested in the things we were talking
about, really fascinating things about writing. How to make things work,
tell a story in the best possible way.
SSW: Thank you very much for talking with
me today.