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- BOOKS, Page 65Hard-Boiled but Semi-ToughBy R.Z. Sheppard
-
-
- HARP
- by John Gregory Dunne
- Simon & Schuster; 235 pages; $18.95
-
- Confession is a religious ritual and a literary device, a point
- that John Gregory Dunne has illustrated a number of times during
- his career as a U.S. journalist and novelist. For example, Vegas
- (1974) was an unflattering, candid account of a bad time in the
- author's life, an on-the-road book that played personal problems
- against the city that passes for Sodom, U.S.A.
-
- In a field that includes his wife Joan Didion, Dunne has held
- his own as an observer of public and private wastelands. But he has
- found a more authentic voice in fiction (True Confessions; Dutch
- Shea, Jr.; The Red White and Blue). His characters are barbed,
- cynical and funny. Their attitudes and remarks reveal gifts for
- malice, resentment and mordant sentimentality, which Dunne
- associates with his immigrant heritage. As he writes in Harp, a
- memoir that takes its title from the slang for a son or daughter
- of the Old Sod, "Nothing lifts the heart of the Irish caroler more
- than the small vice, the tiny lapse, the exposed vanity, the
- recherche taste."
-
- Outside the ventriloquism of fiction, Dunne, 57, sounds like
- a Harp from one of his own novels. Yet he seems to have had some
- trouble getting comfortable with his natural delivery. The problem
- lies in the dirty secret of class consciousness. "It took me nearly
- a quarter of a century to realize that here was the tension that
- gave me a subject," he notes, after admitting that while growing
- up Irish Catholic in West Hartford, Conn., he yearned to be an
- Episcopalian and a member of Wasp society.
-
- It wasn't that Dunne lacked status. His grandfather was a
- grocer who built himself up to community pillar, and his father was
- a respected surgeon. Dunne went to Princeton University and
- perfected talking through his nose, the better to honk down the
- lower orders. But once a Harp always a Harp, a lesson driven home
- by another old institution, the U.S. Army. German whores, barracks
- mates with tattoos, the general cynicism toward military routine,
- all validated his own outlook. Truth be told -- and Dunne tells it
- -- he is fascinated by life on the wild side.
-
- Much of the author's experience is the vicarious quest for
- material and a hard-boiled persona. He becomes knowledgeable about
- firearms by reading about them; he familiarizes himself with the
- latest in sex toys by researching them at a Frankfurt porno shop.
- But his education in cardiology is firsthand. "In the seventh year
- of the Reagan kakistocracy, the medical dyes shooting through my
- arterial freeways were forced to make a detour around a major
- obstruction," he writes with calculated self-mockery.
-
- This brush with mortality in middle age provides Harp with a
- certain amount of momentum. The deaths of family members lead to
- a search for his ancestral roots in Ireland and an application for
- an Irish passport. His motives are mixed: "The fact is I wanted an
- Irish passport for the simple reason that I was eligible for one.
- Trying to get one would both add structure to my journey and force
- me into that examination of my Irish background that I had always
- so rigorously rejected."
-
- Dunne is not naturally introspective, which may be bad news for
- the self-help set but is good news for readers who like snappy
- prose, to say nothing of snappishness. Dunne takes particular
- pleasure in knocking a great American unknockable from his
- hometown. Katharine Hepburn, he harps, "has always seemed to me all
- cheekbones and opinions, and none of the opinions has ever struck
- me as terribly original or terribly interesting, dependent as they
- are on a rather parochial Hartford definition of quality, as
- reinterpreted by five decades' worth of Studio unit publicists."
- Writing well, or at least trying to, is the best revenge.