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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT0149>
<title>
July 12, 1993: Biography Or Soap Opera?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 56
Biography Or Soap Opera?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A forthcoming volume on Teddy Kennedy draws some fire for "creating"
the thoughts and words of its subject
</p>
<p>By PAUL GRAY--With reporting by Elizabeth Rudulph/New York
</p>
<p> When a book makes headlines months before its scheduled release,
the publisher and author can normally uncross their fingers
and alert their accountants. Is such euphoria warranted even
when the headlines are rotten? That question concerns Simon
& Schuster and Joe McGinniss, the best-selling writer (The Selling
of the President, 1968; Fatal Vision) whose forthcoming biography
of Edward M. Kennedy, The Last Brother, has been prompting a
blizzard of bad news. Biographic License? headlined the Washington
Post. The New York Times put the matter, bluntly, on its front
page: Kennedy Quotes in New Book Are Invented.
</p>
<p> The stir was triggered by 2,000 advance copies of the first
123 pages of McGinniss's book, which Simon & Schuster had been
distributing to whet booksellers' interest. They contained a
statement about McGinniss's extensive research, adding, "Some
thoughts and dialogue attributed to figures in this narrative
were created by the author, based on such research and his knowledge
of the relevant people, places and events." When questioned,
McGinniss admits that his subject granted him no interviews
for the book; he also allows that he regularly inferred in his
narrative what Kennedy might have been thinking. "I absolutely
did that," he says. "It was necessary to achieve the purpose.
My goal was to give readers an understanding they've never had
before of what it must have been like to have lived the life
of Teddy Kennedy."
</p>
<p> There is a name for writers who claim privileged access to the
inner workings of people they describe. The name is novelist.
And it is impossible to read the released portion of McGinniss's
book without feeling set adrift in a muddled and decidedly fictional
realm. The introductory chunk purports to follow Ted Kennedy
from the assassination of his brother John, on Friday, Nov.
22, 1963, through the President's funeral and burial the following
Monday. The events of these four days were exhaustively rehearsed
in William Manchester's The Death of a President (1967); McGinniss
acknowledges his indebtedness to Manchester's work by quoting
it six times.
</p>
<p> But beyond draping his story across Manchester's framework,
McGinniss poses as an all-knowing narrator who jumps in and
out of people's heads--usually, but not always, Teddy's--according to his mood of the moment, and plausibility be damned.
Here is the account of Teddy's thoughts as he meets young Caroline
Kennedy in the White House on Friday afternoon: "She did not
yet know that her Daddy was dead and that her mother, even then,
was flying back to Washington wearing a dress still stained
with his blood and with flecks of tissue from his brain." The
trouble is that according to McGinniss's story, Teddy does not
yet know most of these details either. All he has learned by
now--and McGinniss insists on Teddy's prolonged isolation
from the events in Dallas--is that J.F.K. has been killed
and that his body and widow are en route to Washington. No other
grim specifics. How then can McGinniss document Teddy's concern
over Caroline's ignorance of facts he himself had not heard?
</p>
<p> And here is Teddy on the day after the assassination, walking
on a beach in Hyannis Port near the Kennedy compound with his
sister Eunice Shriver: "Suppose--not that there is any evidence
he considered this--he suddenly just veered left, away from
his sister, and plunged, fully clothed, into the roiling, frigid
waters of Nantucket Bay? Just swam out into the mist until exhausted?"
It is difficult to know what to make of a suicide impulse that
the author announces, while introducing it, is without any foundation
in fact.
</p>
<p> McGinniss's most useful character is Joseph P. Kennedy, the
family patriarch, who suffered a stroke in 1961 that left him
largely unable to communicate with those around him except through
gestures and glares. Here is a mind that an inventive biographer
can invade with impunity, since no first-person refutations
are possible. Sure enough, McGinniss uses the elder Kennedy
to insinuate a conspiracy theory of J.F.K.'s assassination.
First the setup: "He knew that years earlier he'd made promises
he hadn't kept. And that quite possibly, Jack had paid for these
unkept promises with his life." Then the payoff: "The old man
seemed beyond knowing, beyond caring. How much guilt was buried
in his grief--how aware he was of the extent to which he'd
been responsible for Jack's fate--no one would ever know.''
At this moment, McGinniss's excerpt makes a rare brush against
something verifiable: no one would ever know.
</p>
<p> In his free-floating impressions of authorial omniscience, McGinniss
has, consciously or not, challenged most of the existing rules
governing the writing of authentic biographies. And he has done
so at a time when those rules were already teetering. Bottom-feeding
biographies have existed as long as people have been able to
write or run a printing press. But the slippery slope leading
to the current McGinniss mess may have begun with Truman Capote's
In Cold Blood (1966). In calling his work about the 1959 murder
of a family in Kansas a "nonfiction novel," Capote intentionally
blurred the distinction between his years of research and reporting
and his stylish, assured shaping of his raw materials. Capote's
reputation--and the runaway success of In Cold Blood--left
a vivid message for wannabe best-selling biographers: Real
life is best presented with a heavy admixture of art.
</p>
<p> That was dangerous advice for those who could not report or
write as well as Capote. At the same time, other pressures raised
the stakes determining which biographies would have a chance
to be read and succeed. Under the relentless eye of television,
celebrity began to outweigh genuine accomplishments, and signs
of weakness or depravity came to be expected in accounts even
of exemplary people. Reviewing a biography of the author Jean
Stafford in 1988, Joyce Carol Oates applied the medical term
pathography to life stories that "mercilessly expose their subjects"
and "relentlessly catalog their most private, vulnerable and
least illuminating moments."
</p>
<p> And things have careered downhill since then. In the past few
years, a steady succession of high-profile books about people
living and dead have raised loud questions of propriety and
taste: Kitty Kelley on Nancy Reagan, Anthony Summers on J. Edgar
Hoover, numerous journalists on Princess Diana, Janet Malcolm
on Jeffrey Masson, and now Joe McGinniss on Ted Kennedy. In
May, historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., whose many books include
an account of J.F.K.'s Administration and a biography of Robert
Kennedy, suggested in the New Republic that "something horrid
has recently befallen the craft of biography." The Last Brother
confirms his impression. How McGinniss has written about Teddy,
says Schlesinger, is akin to "True Confessions. Soap opera."
He goes on: "There's a certain arrogance on the part of people
who assume that they really know what people are thinking if
there's no evidence for it."
</p>
<p> On the other hand, Princeton professor James M. McPherson, author
of the best-selling Civil War history Battle Cry of Freedom,
thinks that the current flap over McGinniss's excerpt--which
he has not read--could be a good thing. "I suspect, if anything,
standards may be getting higher because there's more critical
attention to biographies, more attempts to undercut or expose
them."
</p>
<p> That is a cheering assumption. But amid all the clamor, Simon
& Schuster has pushed the publication date of The Last Brother
up from October to August. An excerpt in Vanity Fair will hit
newsstands in mid-August. A four-hour NBC mini-series is going
into production and has been tentatively scheduled for the
ratings-crucial sweeps period next February. Critical censure
will not obstruct the commercial phenomenon that The Last Brother
is becoming. It would be interesting to know--but it is impossible
to know for sure--the private thoughts of Joe Mc Ginniss
and the responsible people at Simon & Schuster. Someday, perhaps,
an eager biographer will make them up.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>