“Fun” doesn’t rank high in the lexicon of literary critics, yet fun is a precious virtue among writers of poetry and prose, and certainly more in demand among readers than, say, political sermonizing. Fun need not be childish or trivial. P.G. Wodehouse is fun. So are X.J. Kennedy and R.S. Gwynn. They offer easy pleasure and uncomplicated (though not insultingly shallow) amusement. They are never didactic. They are the opposite of whatever Noam Chomsky is. Only fatuous and oh-so-serious twits are immune to having, creating or sharing a bit of fun. As Ira Gershwin put it: “Funsters, punsters, / Charming son-of-a-gunsters—/ Minstrels on parade!”
Perhaps the most reliable of fun-givers is H.L. Mencken. Sure, he could be stupid about Jews and Germany, but for me he epitomizes at his best a distinctly American strain of intelligent irreverence. While looking for something else I happened on the review he wrote in 1930 of Fannie Merritt Farmer’s The Boston Cooking-School Cook-Book, originally published in 1896. By 1930, the first year of the Great Depression, more than 1.4 million copies had been sold. A well-thumbed, updated edition sits on our shelf. Mencken begins with an endorsement, praising the cookbook for its “clarity, comprehensiveness and common sense,” but warns that it was written by a woman for women: “What male with a normal respect for his pylorus, even in America, would actually eat a rasher of celery fritters?”
Pylorus, for the anatomically uninitiated, refers to “the opening between the distal end of the stomach and the intestine (duodenum), which is surrounded by a sphincter muscle.” Glad you asked? Mencken gets down to business:
“The other defect of the
book apparently flows out of the fact that it was hatched in Boston, where
lower middle class British notions of cookery still prevail. Thus it deals very
badly with the great dishes of more cultured regions. The récipé for terrapin à la Maryland,
with its use of flour, cream and eggs, would make a true Marylander howl, and
so would the récipé
for fried soft crabs—not soft-shell crabs, but simply soft crabs—, which
prescribes frying them like doughnuts in deep fat, with a coating of crumb
batter. This last is an obscenity almost beyond belief.”
The little Mencken-esque
touches: “hatched,” “more cultured regions,” the finicky use of accent marks,
the faux regional outrage. He's having fun. Baltimore’s native son goes on to prescribe the
proper method for preparing soft crabs à la Maryland. He piles on more
complaints, most rooted in the use of euphemisms and the attendant absence of
authenticity, but concludes:
“[T]here are merits to balance
these defects, and so I recommend it. If it were followed as widely as it seems
to be read American cookery would improve—not a great deal perhaps, but still some.
And in that field any improvement, however small, is a national boon.”
3 comments:
I'm currently reading Mencken's diary (it's my bedside book this year, the last thing I read before putting out the light - journals and diaries are ideal), and right now I'm in the the summer of 1944. It amazes me how little Mencken is interested in World War Two, which he dismisses as nothing more than a swindle perpetrated by the hated FDR. He has some truly appalling blind spots for a man of his intelligence, and yet there's always the great virtue of thinking things through for himself and not giving a good goddamn what anyone else thinks. How priceless someone with his fearless contrarianism would be today!
You're absolutely right, Thomas Parker. Mencken's opinions are fun to read because they are so often unpredictable. We don't know what he would say about the current insanity if he were alive today, but we can be pretty sure it wouldn't fall neatly into one or another of our political camps.
Hey, Thomas Parker, since you like to read diaries and journals before going to sleep, perhaps you'd like this book, if you're unaware of it:
"The Assassin's Cloak: An Anthology of the World's Greatest Diaries," edited by Irene and Alan Taylor; 2nd edition (Edinburgh: Canongate, 2020), 698 pages. First edition: 2000. It contains several diary excerpts (some quite lengthy) for every day of the year.
Don't let the "Edinburgh" fool you. It's easily available in the US. I got mine from Barnes & Noble.
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