|
|
![]() ![]() | |||
|
|
Also, big savings on the 1998 National Book Award winners! F E A T U R E
T A B L E+T A L K
What books will you be giving as gifts this year? Discuss your list in the Books area of Table Talk
B O O K C A S E
R E C E N T L Y
Jails, Hospitals & Hip-Hop and Some People I Will Bear Witness: A Diary of the Nazi Years, 1933-1941 Soft! Road-Side Dog Hunger - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SEARCH REVIEWS BY:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
T H E+G A R N E R
|
![]() |
------------UNCOLLECTING CHEEVER.
ANITA MILLER ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD NONFICTION 264 PAGES BY PETER KURTH | In the long and dispiriting tradition of literary cannibalism, few writers have had their bones picked over as thoroughly as the late John Cheever, the "sage of Ossining" and foremost chronicler of American suburban anxiety. Cheever died of cancer in 1982, four years after his selected "Stories" won him the Pulitzer Prize and gave him a measure of financial security for the first time in his life. Money was forever on Cheever's mind, from the day in 1930 when he sold his first short story to the New Republic for a whopping $87, to the moment he scrawled an "X" on his last will and testament and opened the gates to a decade of litigation over his literary legacy. That Cheever even had a legacy to litigate would probably have surprised him. "I don't anticipate that my work will be read," he declared late in his life. "I might be forgotten tomorrow; it wouldn't disconcert me in the least." Those it would disconcert, on the evidence of Anita Miller's "Uncollecting Cheever," are Cheever's widow, Mary, and his three children, especially the elder two, Susan and Benjamin. "Uncollecting Cheever" is the blow-by-blow account of the Cheevers' famous legal battle with Academy Chicago, a small Midwestern publishing house owned and run by Miller and her husband, Jordan, who in 1988 hoped to publish a volume of Cheever's previously uncollected short stories. The idea for the book came from Franklin Dennis, a New York book publicist who did work for the Millers and was also a neighbor of the Cheevers in Ossining. Mary Cheever at first agreed to the project, signing a contract and receiving half of a $1,500 token advance for what she later insisted she had envisioned as "a small edition for libraries, for students," and not a major commercial work. Only when Franklin Dennis had unearthed more than 60 Cheever stories from magazines and anthologies, and when paperback rights to the collection were sold for $225,500 in advance of publication, did the Cheevers -- and, for that matter, the Millers -- realize that they might have "a gold mine" on their hands. Mary Cheever tried to break the contract; the Millers responded with a lawsuit to enforce its terms; the Cheevers countered with a suit to protect their copyright, and one of the great literary court battles was born.
"Uncollecting Cheever" is unabashedly partisan in its retelling of the
case, which the Millers eventually lost before the Illinois Supreme Court.
The book moves sentence to sentence and page to page in exhaustive
declarative terms: "On May 20, Judge Goettel held his hearing into Mrs.
Cheever's complaint"; "On Wednesday afternoon, August 3, Paul phoned in
great excitement to tell us that Goettel's opinion had come down" --
pausing only for Miller's occasional wry aside and bitter commentary on the
power of big publishing houses, big agents and big lawyers against small
independent firms. It was "a ridiculous case," Miller concedes, but one
that had to be fought. Wandering through her account are the Cheevers
themselves, who seem deranged when not strictly mercenary and deceitful,
and a variety of literary and legal notables, among them Erica Jong (during
her tenure as president of the Authors Guild), killer agent Andrew Wylie
and intellectual property lawyer Martin Garbus, all of them taking the
Cheevers' part and thus coming in for their share of swipes and jabs. It's
hard not to sympathize with the Millers in their predicament, but
"Uncollecting Cheever" would have fared better had it been written by
someone not attached to the case.
Peter Kurth lives in Burlington, Vt. He is a regular contributor to Salon. The Winners are in! Read Salon's reviews of the 1998 National Book Award
winners: Slaves in the Family |
Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus
Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.