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Life lessons, the hard way'Word Virus: The William S. Burroughs Reader' Grove Press
Review by By Mark Luce
(SALON) -- More than a year after his death, the literary reputation of William S. Burroughs remains obscured by the image -- fedora, shapeless gray suits, weathered face and a voice that out-Tom Waitses Tom Waits -- that for more than 20 years has overshadowed his output. Like so many counterculture figures, Burroughs the writer has taken a back seat to Burroughs the icon, the grand old man of American letters featured in hipster movies, Nike and Gap ads and even a U2 video. "Word Virus: The William S. Burroughs Reader" finally brings the author's actual writing back to the forefront. In their selections, editors James Grauerholz and Ira Silverberg highlight the many faces of Burroughs: the narrative pioneer, the sardonic stand-up, the asexual Tiresias-like seer and, in what may be a surprise to many, the humanist. Stylistically, Burroughs is often lumped with the Beats, but even a cursory reading of "Word Virus" shows he was never a Beat in form or vision. Burroughs is a better writer than his storied companions, more intellectually nimble, skeptical, multifaceted and subtle. While Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg cruised self-promoting highways and smoky jazz clubs searching for the beatific, Burroughs was a homebody, traveling the globe only as a logistical concern, to escape the law, his own demons or the terrible grip of heroin. Burroughs' vision was more sinister than the Beats; he warned of the mechanisms of control, whether through language, drugs or the government. He ridiculed the sanctimonious while playing a straight-shooting tour guide to the post-atomic-bomb landscape of America. The first collected edition of his work, "Word Virus" traces Burroughs' career more or less chronologically. Primarily a fiction writer, Burroughs borrowed heavily from himself, and with the sections of "Word Virus" broken up by surprisingly balanced biographical commentary from Grauerholz, Burroughs' longtime assistant, the volume contains significant splashes of autobiography if only small amounts of nonfiction. And through the various excerpts and routines we come to see a different Burroughs, not necessarily kinder and gentler, but more complex, harder to pigeonhole as strictly misanthropic or misogynistic. Certainly those elements still exist in his writing, and Burroughs will never be too welcome in feminist literary circles. Some pieces here aren't deserving of any literary circle, such as the juvenilia of the previously unpublished (for good reason) manuscript "And the Hippos Were Buried in Their Tanks," and a few of the many bureaucratic satires/critiques, such as "The American Non-Dream" (from "The Job"), fall flat, victims of political schizophrenia and language overkill.
Mark Luce is a freelance writer in Lawrence, Kansas. News, Views, Issues, Interviews. It's all here. Get your fix with Salon Magazine's Newsreal. Other reviews:
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