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Arts and Culture

Happy 50th, ‘Catch-22’

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Posted on Aug 26, 2011

By Heller McAlpin

“Yossarian Slept Here: When Joseph Heller Was Dad, the Apthorp Was Home, and Life Was a Catch-22”
A book by Erica Heller

“Just One Catch: A Biography of Joseph Heller”
A book by Tracy Daugherty

The trouble with writing a truly great first novel is that you spend the rest of your career trying to live up to it. Joseph Heller, who followed “Catch-22” with a handful of ambitious but less celebrated novels, developed a clever response to what must have been an exceedingly annoying question: “How come you’ve never written a book as good as ‘Catch-22’?” His parry: “Who has?”

book cover

 

Just One Catch: A Biography of Joseph Heller

 

By Tracy Daugherty

 

St. Martin’s Press, 560 pages

 

Buy the book

book cover

 

Yossarian Slept Here: When Joseph Heller Was Dad, the Apthorp Was Home, and Life Was a Catch-22

 

By Erica Heller

 

Simon & Schuster, 288 pages

 

Buy the book

This repartee appears in both his daughter Erica Heller’s memoir, “Yossarian Slept Here,” and Tracy Daugherty’s biography, “Just One Catch,” timed to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Heller’s brilliant satire on the illogical absurdities of war and bureaucracy. The two books are very different, but when read in conjunction they present interesting counterpoints.

“Just One Catch,” the first full-scale biography of Heller, offers a more complete, cosmetically burnished picture of his life. Daugherty covers the author’s modest roots in Coney Island, Brooklyn, where he was born to Russian immigrant parents in 1923; his service in Europe as a bombardier during World War II; his 1945 marriage to Shirley Held, whom he met in the Catskills; his work in academia and as a copywriter in the Mad Menschish world of magazine advertising; and, most significant, his evolution as a serious comic novelist.

Daugherty combines a novelist’s flair for character and narrative with astute critical analysis of Heller’s work. He’s especially strong on context, providing the political, literary, personal and broader cultural milieu in which each of Heller’s books was produced. Discussing “God Knows” (1984), for example, he sums up Heller’s oeuvre to date: “With this fourth novel, Joe’s prophecy skills improved. Just as ‘Catch-22’ seemed to anticipate Vietnam, ‘Something Happened’ the ‘Me Decade,’ and ‘Good as Gold’ the neoconservatives’ lock on political power, ‘God Knows’ sketched the greedy, grab-what-you-can entrepreneur who would spark the United States’ deepest economic crisis since the 1930s.”

“Yossarian Slept Here” is a more personal project. Erica awkwardly attempts to intertwine Heller family history with that of the legendary Apthorp apartment building, erected by William Waldorf Astor on Manhattan’s Upper West Side in 1908. Joseph and his wife moved into a modest apartment there with newborn Erica in 1952, upgrading to much grander digs 10 years later, after the success of “Catch-22,” which bifurcated their life into B.C. (Before “Catch”) and A.C. After her parents’ divorce in 1984, Erica’s distressed mother downsized into a third Apthorp apartment. When Shirley died from lung cancer in 1995, Erica, who had moved back home to nurse her, stayed on, downsizing further still into the apartment she has occupied since 1997. The no-longer-majestic building was eulogized more memorably in former resident Nora Ephron’s 2006 New Yorker article, “Moving On: A Love Story.” Erica’s chapters on its troubled condominium conversion come as distractions from the Heller story.

The real focus of “Yossarian Slept Here” is neither literature nor real estate but dislocation: displacements caused by success and divorce. Caught between her parents during their rancorous split after nearly four decades of her father’s “dedicated philandering,” Erica finds comfort in recognizing how deeply tied her father remained to her mother despite his second marriage to the bubbly private nurse who tended him through his battle with Guillain-Barre syndrome.

From both these books emerges a portrait of a hardworking, fast-talking, blunt, mischievous, “magnetic, charismatic” wisecracker—and a father who inscribed a copy of his first novel to his daughter, “With the hope that when you read this book in 10 or 15 years, you will love it at least a little—and that you will love me too. Daddy.” Fifty years later, Heller’s daughter loses me when she confesses—but not until we’ve read her whole book—that she still hasn’t read her father’s magnum opus.

[To see long excerpts from “Yossarian Slept Here” click here. To see long excerpts from “Just One Catch” click here.]

Heller McAlpin reviews books regularly for NPR.org, San Francisco Chronicle and The Washington Post.

(c) 2011, Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group

 

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M Henri Day's avatar

By M Henri Day, August 28, 2011 at 2:07 am Link to this comment

Great burlesque novel ! But as anti-war satire, it doesn’t quite reach the heights attained by its illustrious predecessor and (I presume) literary source of inspiration, viz, Jaroslav Hašek’s unfinished Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za sv?tové války, often translated into English under the abbreviated title, The good soldier Švejk. Pity that pan Hašek didn’t do more philandering and less drinking ; in that event, perhaps, he might have finished the novel before shuffling off this mortal coil….

Henri

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Paul_GA's avatar

By Paul_GA, August 27, 2011 at 7:12 am Link to this comment

My favorite comic novel, hands down. I didn’t like Closing Time at all—too much of a downer. Catch-22 was, and is, perfect—no need for a sequel.

Too bad the movie wasn’t up to the book—but then, few movies based on great literary works rarely are. Arguably, For Whom The Bell Tolls is the rare exception that proves the rule; but I digress.

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By Arouete, August 27, 2011 at 12:51 am Link to this comment

Truthdig. When are you going to give your readers a break. This print format SUCKS! Surely there is a high tech designer in the unemployment line that can do better. Pulease.

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By johson, August 26, 2011 at 11:18 pm Link to this comment

Yossarian Slept Here,vrey good

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By bowwowboy, August 26, 2011 at 8:53 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Today, of all the things I am most proud of about
my father’s writing, it is his scathing indictment of
the madness and stupidity of war, government and big
business, all recounted in such passionate and
pitiless detail, that still resonate resoundingly.

Erica Heller, “Joe the Plumber vs. Joe Heller, the
Writer, The Huffington Post, November 18, 2008

Alas, this graph should be amended to read “what is
rumored to be his scathing indictment. . .recounted
in such passionate and pitiless detail,” since the
actual experience of reading said indictment was not
something Ms. Heller chose to undergo, or relish, or
endure, or whatever the appropriate verb is here. I’m
sure she has her reasons; since she apparently agrees
that the book deserves its high reputation, perhaps
she could share with us what those reasons are.

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By prosefights, August 26, 2011 at 6:29 pm Link to this comment

Success and failure are both difficult to endure. Along with success comes drugs, divorce, fornication, bullying, travel, medication, depression, neurosis and suicide. With failure comes failure.

Joseph Heller

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David J. Cyr's avatar

By David J. Cyr, August 26, 2011 at 5:43 pm Link to this comment

QUOTE, Book Reviewer: Heller McAlpin:

“Fifty years later, Heller’s daughter loses me when she confesses—but not until we’ve read her whole book—that she still hasn’t read her father’s magnum opus [Catch-22].
_____________

Evidence, perhaps, of her unhealed childhood scars.

http://www.chenangogreens.org

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LocalHero's avatar

By LocalHero, August 26, 2011 at 2:25 pm Link to this comment

WTF? She hasn’t read her father’s masterpiece!?

To quote Hit Girl, “What a douche.”

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By SarcastiCanuck, August 26, 2011 at 12:57 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Maybe she’s lazy and waiting for the movie to come out….What,it came out in 1970?Pass the vodka and prozac,please.

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By GoyToy, August 26, 2011 at 11:54 am Link to this comment

ribbie:

My reaction too—but words failed me.

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By ribbie149, August 26, 2011 at 9:07 am Link to this comment

She hasn’t read “Catch 22”!  Why does she think that
anyone cares what she has to say about her father if
she hasn’t even found the motivation to read his most
important work?  Incredible.

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