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[padg] Nicholson Baker update from today's NY TIMES
March 4, 2008
A Debunker on the Road to World War II
By CHARLES McGRATH
SOUTH BERWICK, Me.
Nicholson Baker no longer collects old newspapers. For the last
decade or so he has lived in an old farmhouse in this little southern
Maine town, and he now accepts that Maine winters and the quirks of his
local news agent do not make him a person ideally situated to assemble a
complete archive of The New York Times.
In 1999, pillaging his own savings, Mr. Baker purchased some 6,000
volumes of bound newspapers from the British Library, which was trying to
unload them. Included were extensive runs of The Chicago Tribune, The New
York Herald Tribune and Joseph Pulitzer?s World. He stored this
?majestic, pulp-begotten ancestral stockpile,? as he called it, in a
warehouse in nearby Rollinsford, N.H., until 2004, when it moved to
Duke University.
?I went a little over the edge,? Mr. Baker said recently about some of
his newspaper-gathering efforts, and he added that being able to send his
bound volumes to Duke was ?a blessing.?
?I don?t have to lie awake at night worrying about them,? he said. ?But
it was also like sending your kid off to college a terrible
blow.?
To research his new book, ?Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II,
the End of Civilization,? which comes out next week from Simon &
Schuster, Mr. Baker read old newspapers online and on microfilm, and he
also borrowed hundreds of books from the library at the
University of New Hampshire, about 20 minutes away in Durham, which
had granted him professorial privileges. Until just recently, when he
began to cart them back, they were all stacked in Mr. Baker?s barn: piles
of Churchill; of Herbert Hoover?s postpresidential papers; war records,
biographies, letters, diaries.
?I felt a little guilty at first,? Mr. Baker said about borrowing so many
books. ?But once you get past 100, the rest is easier.?
?Human Smoke? is an unusual book even for Mr. Baker, now 51, whose career
has unspooled in a way as unpredictable as one of his fastidiously
meandering sentences. For a while he was known as a sort of Proustian
miniaturist, an elegist of the quotidian, fascinated by, say, the weave
and design of a paper towel, the symmetry of an ice-cube tray, or the
miracle of Jiffy Pop. His first novel, ?Mezzanine,? was about a man
riding an escalator on his way to buy a shoelace; his second, ?Room
Temperature,? was about a father feeding a bottle to his 6-month-old
daughter.
Then Mr. Baker acquired a reputation for literary erotica; a copy of his
novel ?Vox,? about phone sex, was one of
Monica Lewinsky?s gifts to
Bill Clinton. He also wrote a novel, ?A Box of Matches,? about a man
who gets up in the dark every morning, lights a fire and broods about
things like toe-holes in socks and self-service gas pumps. While
researching a books of essays about, among other things, the fingernail
clipper and the movie projector, he discovered that many libraries were
purging their shelves of old books and newspapers, and he became so
concerned about rescuing them that he wrote ?Double Fold,? an impassioned
exposé.
But ?Human Smoke? is like these other books only in its attempt to slow
down time and look at things carefully. Mr. Baker himself and his
Nabokovian style are largely absent. The book is a collage of sorts, a
series of short, documentarylike moments from August 1892 to Dec. 31,
1941. Most of them are punctuated by the refrain ?It was ... ? followed
by a date.
He had intended to write a book about the
Library of Congress during World War II, Mr. Baker said, but then
realized he ?didn?t understand the war itself it made no sense.? So he
began reading the newspapers of the 1930s and early ?40s, just as someone
living through those events would have, and the papers in turn led him to
books, and to contemporary letters and diaries especially.
?The papers gave me a sense of what it must have been like for people
back then,? he said. ?The simultaneity of everything the sense of being
a little bit at sea.?
He added: ?Over and over again I would take out the five most important
books on X subject, and then I?d go back to The New York Times, and by
God, the story that was written the day after was by far the best source.
Those reporters were writing with everything in the right perspective.
Sometimes I think historians are a little like sauté chefs: they cook
everything up and soften the edges.?
An early draft of ?Human Smoke? was a sort of quest narrative, he said
a book about a Nicholson Baker-like figure trying to learn the truth
about World War II until his wife talked him out of it.
?My own little chirpings turned out to be completely irrelevant, and once
I took out the first-person pronoun, the book really started to move,? he
said. ?What people actually said was far more interesting than anything I
could address, so I ended up being a juxtaposer, an arranger, an editor
more than a writer. The satisfaction is winding up with something a
little messier and less pat than what you thought.?
?Human Smoke? deliberately has no argument, but Churchill appears as more
of a warmonger than he is usually portrayed, and there is far more than
in most textbooks about pacifist opposition to the war in the United
States and Britain and to Britain?s pre-Blitz bombing campaign of German
cities.
?I came to the Second World War with a typically inadequate American
education.? Mr. Baker said, ?and I was surprised to discover that
Churchill had this crazy, late-night side. He was obviously thrilled to
be in the midst of this escalating war. This is a man who wanted Europe
to starve he wanted to starve it into a state of revolt.?
He added: ?I?ve always had pacifist leanings, and so one of the things I
wanted to learn was how do you react to the Second World War if you?re a
pacifist. That war is always held up as the great counterexample, the one
that was justified. And I got hungrier and hungrier to answer the
question: Did the Allies? response to
Hitler really help anyone who needed help? One of the things I
discovered, for example, was that the most impressive opponents of the
war were also the people most actively arguing that we had to help the
refugees. There was a complete overlap.?
Talking about starvation in the Warsaw Ghetto during the British
blockade, Mr. Baker became so worked up that he had to pause, take off
his rimless glasses and rub his eyes, and then he went on: ?What are you
going to do when Europe is threatened by Hitler, this paranoid, dangerous
person? My feelings about the war change every day. But I also feel that
there is a way of looking at the war and the Holocaust that is truer and
sadder and stranger than the received version.?
On a wintry afternoon last month, Mr. Baker, with the help of a visitor,
reluctantly took back his first load of books. The volumes, including
biographies of Hoover and Vera Brittain, the English writer and pacifist,
and the letters of Helmuth James von Moltke, the German resistance
fighter, filled the entire back seat of the visitor?s rented Nissan
Sentra. During the ride to and from the University of New Hampshire, Mr.
Baker sighed a couple of times and said, ?Oh, man.?
He is a tall, gangly man with long arms and was able to ferry the books
12 at a time from the parking lot to the library. The visitor fumbled and
allowed Hoover and Brittain to squirt from his grasp. At the counter Mr.
Baker had to leaf through a number of the books, removing torn slips and
Post-it notes he had used as bookmarks, and every now and then he paused
to glance at a passage.
?The trouble with doing this is I?m seeing some stuff I wish I had used,?
he said.
Barbara B. Eden
Director
Department of Preservation and Collection Maintenance
Cornell University
Library
B15 Olin Library
Ithaca, NY 14853
email: beb1@xxxxxxxxxxx
phone: 607-255-5291
fax: 607-254-7493
http://www.library.cornell.edu/preservation
Barbara B. Eden
Director
Department of Preservation and Collection Maintenance
Cornell University
Library
B15 Olin Library
Ithaca, NY 14853
email: beb1@xxxxxxxxxxx
phone: 607-255-5291
fax: 607-254-7493
http://www.library.cornell.edu/preservation