Thursday, May 5, 2016

Book Review: "Falling Man" by Don DeLillo


Falling Man (2007)

4 Stars out of 5

Don DeLillo

256 pages

Don DeLillo started writing somewhat late in life after having started his life in an Italian/Catholic neighborhood in the Bronx. Considering his penchant for writing on the American way of life and who is it that tells that story, it is tempting to search for some of his inspiration from these early years. DeLillo would disagree: he points to jazz, cinema greats such as Scorcese, Kubrick and others, and of course to certain authors like Joyce and O’Connor. He seems to feel that historically the job of communicating to and about American society was best held by novelists; perhaps best of all by modernist writers such Faulkner and Hemingway or such post-modernist writers as Pynchon (a writer that DeLillo has been both praised by and compared to by others). But after the assassination of JFK in 1963, DeLillo feels an era was begun that consisted of a “…series of catastrophes…” and that this created in Americans a sense of “fatality, widespread suspicion, of mistrust…” DeLillo has perhaps compared these changes in stark contrast to his happy and contented suburban childhood to form an opinion of the writer as “the Bad Guy”, as someone who “must oppose systems… power, corporations, the State, the whole system of consumption, and of debilitating entertainments”.

DeLillo has taken up his challenge of being the “Bad Guy” and written 17 novels. He has twice been a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in Fiction (“Mao II” in 1992 and “Underworld” in 1998). His early novels from the 1970’s were generally light and somewhat comic in several cases, but starting with his 8th novel “White Noise” (1985) he started down a darker path, and he gained a critical stature that had not previously been his. He stayed on this path with “Libra” (1988), a fictionalized account of Lee Harvey Oswald, with “Mao II” (1991) and its account of how novelists function in a media- and terrorist-dominated society, and with his best regarded novel, his 11th “Underworld” (1997) and its depiction of America during the Cold War. After “Underworld” his novels begin to shrink in length and critical approval. He has written another six novels since “Underworld”. In 2001 he published “Cosmopolis” just after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the US by Islamic terrorists. And while this book has been compared to Joyce for its updating of “Ulysses” from Ireland to modern America, it was also criticized for among others things being insensitive to the effects of 9/11. In 2007, his next novel took on this daunting subject and in typical DeLillo fashion he wound within the story of the falling of the twin towers an intimate story of a marriage unraveling, the curious story of a performance artist (rather than the mass media) re-telling a part of the 9/11 catastrophe, and he does it all while employing a tone that emphasizes the desensitization to violence and to life in general that is going on within modern America.

“Falling Man” begins with an ash covered man with an “unfocused gaze” carrying a briefcase stumbling to a halt in the street; too tired, too injured to go further he collapse onto the curb. Improbably, a New Yorker stops his truck and asks if he can give the hurt man a lift somewhere. Thus begins DeLillo’s attempt to tell a story that describes the 9/11 attack on America, and to do it by giving “…memory, tenderness, and meaning to all that howling space”. The man covered in ash is Keith Neudecker, a 39 year old lawyer that worked in the World Trade Center. His Good Samaritan takes him to the home of Keith’s estranged wife Lianne and their son Justin. Keith begins his physical and emotional recovery with a reluctant Lianne. As Keith begins his recovery we meet Lianne’s harsh-spoken mother, Nina and her European (and perhaps former German terrorist) Martin. Keith regains his strength and seeks out the owner of the briefcase he absent-mindedly picked up in the evacuation of the buildings. She is Florence, a “light-skinned Black woman”. Keith begins a relationship with Florence, not for sex but rather for the sharing of memories, the altered reality they separately experienced in the stairwells fleeing the WTC. Lianne spends much of her time leading an Alzheimer’s group in a therapy based on journaling. Those in her care struggle to remember the events of their lives or even of their day in order to complete their journals. In the latter parts of the novel, Keith largely leaves Lianne in order to participate in a World Poker Tournament, while Lianne has several occasions to observe a street artist re-enacting via a safety harness an AP photograph by Richard Drew of a man falling from one of the towers on 9/11.

This book is replete with multiple layers and artful language. The title and characterization of Keith suggest Keith’s personality disintegration. That Keith goes from a lawyer and amateur poker player to a professional player by the book’s end is of course just the edge of the book’s message. Is Keith’s reconstruction a function of 9/11 or of how its story is told is closer to one of the core truths of this book. DeLillo’s search for a novelist’s attempt to interpret the meaning is found in this book instead to come from the street artist Lianne observes. There is no tenderness; there is no meaning, only spectacle to these acts. Like the mass media that reproduced the photograph of the actual falling man for a short period after 9/11, there is only the cold depiction of a man falling to his death. What meaning there is from that event will not come from the photograph or from the performance artist. There is only a numbing of the collective mind to the violence and loss of innocence that took place on that day. The terrorist and the mass media work together to create on a large scale Keith’s “unfocused gaze”.

This is perhaps best illustrated by the three children in “Falling Man”, one of which is Keith’s son Justin. He and two peers spend their afternoons staring through binoculars for “Bill Lawton”. It is with difficulty that the reader and Keith decipher that the children impressed with the fear and confusion of 9/11 are looking for bin Laden. The kids explain they learned Bill Lawtons’ name from the TV. The poignancy of their fear is one thing, but the continual distortion of events by the mass media is yet another. This distance and disconnection between the people, the events of their lives and those that tell the details of those events speak of the times we live in. Fragmented language and distorted vision are the new tools of communication. The acts of terrorists are certainly bad enough in themselves, but this cloud of misinformation and obfuscation is quite another. We live as a people with an unfocused gaze. Courtesy of the mass media’s re-telling of events, we like Lianne’s Alzheimer patients struggle to remember the actual events of our lives, or at least their true meanings and emotional impact.

DeLillo’s desire to tell stories such as 9/11 free of “the mercies of analogy or simile” reaches its climax in those stairwells of the WTC. Opening the book as he did with an anonymous Keith falling to his knees in the ash-covered streets of Manhattan, out of context and meaning; DeLillo gives the meaning and the emotion felt by the immediate victims as some rushed down and others up the stairwell. Here the reader finds and feels the pain and confusion of the people. There is no analogy or simile, only simple experiences that have value for us all. DeLillo amply demonstrates with these closing pages that the novelist can still tell the true story of an America as “…a time and space of falling ash and near night”. DeLillo has been criticized as having left the broad panoramas of his earlier masterpieces (Underworld, Mao II, Libra), but by focusing on the close-ups of domestic life and its tediousness coupled with glimpses of the how the outside world crosses with the individual, he accomplishes something new and valuable about world views. Is the average American re-constructing himself from a group mentality, one created by the mass media – watching the politics of the new millennium, does one really have to wonder? DeLillo has taken up his challenge to the writers of the world and sounded both his clarion call to wake up, and has at the same time created an empathic picture, a small one of those that experienced 9/11 first hand. This is a book well worth reading for its exploration of the events of 9/11 as well as one from which to learn about the underworld of modern life.

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