Current:Home > Invest'Still Pictures' offers one more glimpse of writer Janet Malcolm -TrueNorth Capital Hub
'Still Pictures' offers one more glimpse of writer Janet Malcolm
View
Date:2025-04-11 15:25:16
New Yorker writer Janet Malcolm, who died in 2021 at age 87, was a journalist who interrogated her own methods and motives as assiduously as she questioned her subjects. She continued this practice right through her last book.
Still Pictures, her posthumously published quasi-memoir, is a series of recollections triggered by old snapshots. Among the issues Malcolm explores are the vagaries of memory and the challenges of writing about oneself impartially.
During the course of her career, Malcolm's focus turned from photography to psychoanalysis, journalism, and biography. After Jeffrey Masson, the subject of her 1984 book, The Freud Archives, sued her for libel in a case that dragged on for 10 years, she became interested in the law, and especially in the relationship between journalists and their subjects.
Malcolm is perhaps best known for this acerbic declaration: "Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensible."
Malcolm was also distrustful of biography, and even more wary of autobiography. The inherent conflict between journalistic objectivity and narcissism gave her pause. In a 2010 essay about autobiography for The New York Review of Books, she wrote of memory's "autism" and "its passion for the tedious." She concluded: "Memory is not a journalist's tool. Memory glimmers and hints, but shows nothing sharply or clearly." Essentially, she said, "If an autobiography is to be even minimally readable," the memoirist must step in and do what a journalist mustn't: Invent.
There is nothing tedious about Still Pictures, Malcolm's elegant workaround to the beefs with autobiography. By revisiting old photographs of people and events that shaped her life, she comes at memoir indirectly, through others' stories.
Often, Malcolm's recall is hazy; details and facts elude her. Frustratingly, the people who might bring clarity (including her parents) are long gone. Boxes of letters and cast-off snapshots labeled "Old Not Good Photos" come in handy, yet even with their aid, she hits roadblocks. Malcolm comments memorably: "The past is a country that issues no visas. We can only enter it illegally."
Born in Prague in 1934, Jana Wienerovna emigrated from Czechoslovakia to New York City with her younger sister and their parents, a psychiatrist and a lawyer, in 1939. Her family, she writes with typical sting, was "among the small number of Jews who escaped the fate of the rest by sheer dumb luck as a few random insects escape a poison spray."
By poring through old snapshots — many of fellow homesick Czech refugees and émigrés who became part of her parents' circle — Malcolm constructs a picture of the family's early years in America. What also emerges is an oblique view of the transformation of Jana Wienerovna into the Americanized, no-longer-Jewish Jan Winn and, finally, Janet Malcolm.
Still Pictures proceeds more or less chronologically, beginning with some scene-setting in the Old Country, including a black-and-white photo of the family leaving Prague on a train in July 1939. They were headed for Hamburg and one of the last civilian ocean liners to leave Europe before the war, a passage they had bought with bribes that cleaned out their funds.
There are portraits of her father, a brilliant diagnostician and "the gentlest of men." More challenging for her to write about is her warm and exuberant but increasingly temperamental, depressed, and needy mother — and her regrets and shame at having been so cold and withholding with her. In trying to understand what they went through, she compares her parents' relatively rich cultural life in Prague with their stolidly middle class existence in New York.
There are sketches of refugees, widows, and Auschwitz survivors that recall Johanna Kaplan's portraits of tattooed camp survivors lining Broadway's benches in Loss of Memory is Only Temporary. One family friend was in permanent mourning for her husband, two children and their spouses, and a grandson murdered at Auschwitz. "She never smiled. She was gentle and kindly and indifferent. I cannot say any more," Malcolm writes movingly.
Along the way, Malcolm, who was quick as a child to label people uninteresting, explores the fact that interesting things can happen to even dull people.
Later, she touches on the libel trial that deeply affected her and her writing, and on her "messy" extramarital affair and eventual second marriage with her New Yorker editor, Gardner Botsford. Her description of their illicit lunchtime trysts in a midtown Manhattan apartment uncannily recalls Harold Pinter's Betrayal. But she stops short of explaining why she bought fancy Italian plates to furnish their lovenest. "I would rather flunk a writing test than expose the pathetic secrets of my heart. The prerogative of cowardly withholding is precious to the most apparently self-revealing of writers. I apologetically exercise it here," she writes.
The book's chapters are brief, a form well-suited to someone terminally ill and all too aware of time running out. (In fact, Malcolm was unable to complete a planned final chapter.) She writes, "We are each of us an endangered species. When we die, our species disappears with us. Nobody like us will ever exist again."
Fortunately, she left us with this evocative and distinctive final book — an unusually succinct and thought-provoking personal memoir that manages to capture so much of what made Janet Malcolm so unfailingly interesting.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Small twin
- Adidas apologizes to Bella Hadid following backlash over shoe ad linked to 1972 Munich Olympics
- Police investigate death of Autumn Oxley, Virginia woman featured on ’16 and Pregnant’
- BETA GLOBAL FINANCE: The Radiant Path of the Cryptocurrency Market
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Mega Millions winning numbers for July 23 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $279 million
- Terrell Davis' lawyer releases video of United plane handcuffing incident, announces plans to sue airline
- SBC fired policy exec after he praised Biden's decision, then quickly backtracked
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Abortion rights supporters report having enough signatures to qualify for Montana ballot
Ranking
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Old Navy Jeans Blowout: Grab Jeans Starting at Under $14 & Snag Up to 69% Off Styles for a Limited Time
- Whale surfaces, capsizes fishing boat off New Hampshire coast
- The Secret Service budget has swelled to more than $3 billion. Here's where the money goes.
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Kamala Harris' economic policies may largely mirror Biden's, from taxes to immigration
- 2024 hurricane season breaks an unusual record, thanks to hot water
- Rays SS Taylor Walls says gesture wasn’t meant as Trump endorsement and he likely won’t do it again
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
IOC awards 2034 Winter Games to Salt Lake City. Utah last hosted the Olympics in 2002
Famed guitarist Slash announces death of stepdaughter in heartfelt post: 'Sweet soul'
Ethiopia mudslides death toll nears 230 as desperate search continues in southern Gofa region
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
What is Crowdstrike? What to know about company linked to global IT outage
Fire Once Helped Sequoias Reproduce. Now, it’s Killing the Groves.
New owner nears purchase of Red Lobster after chain announced bankruptcy and closures