E.L. Doctorow used to tell a story about a journalism class he took as a high school student in the Bronx. As he told NPR back in 2003, he wrote a profile of a doorman at Carnegie Hall who was beloved by all the performers there. His teacher, apparently, loved the story so much, she wanted to publish the story in the school paper — so she told Doctorow to get a photo of the man.
There was just one problem.
"I hadn't expected that kind of enthusiasm," Doctorow recalled, "and I said, well, 'Not exactly, there is no Carl.' I made him up."
Doctorow, who died of complications from lung cancer Tuesday at the age of 84, was never meant to be the kind of guy who cared much for the old journalistic pillars of who, what, when, where, why and how. But he did love mixing some facts into his fiction. Known best for his historical novels, like Ragtime and Billy Bathgate, Doctorow often mingled fictional characters with figures from history books, in vivid and playful ways.
"It's interesting how perceptive Doctorow was about the thin line and blurred line that divides factual writing and fictional writing," says Liesl Schillinger, a book critic for The New York Times.
Schillinger fondly recalls the time she interviewed Doctorow when she was an undergraduate. He was generous with his time and patient with her sometimes naïve questions. And she still remembers what he said that day about writing.
"One thing he told me so long ago was that novelists have always had to persuade their readers that what they were reading was not fiction by kind of 'urgent truth,' so that the reader could break down the distinction between fiction and nonfiction in his own mind," she says. "But as a writer, he was always aware of what he was doing to manipulate the nonfiction to make it delight and captivate the attention of the reader."
Doctorow used fiction to explore history — from Gen. Sherman's March to the Sea during the Civil War, in The March, to the tumult at the turn of the 20th century, in Ragtime, and the Cold War story of the Rosenbergs, in The Book of Daniel. Laid back to back, his books covered more than a century of American history.
But he insisted he never planned it that way.
"Historical novel is, it seems to me, a misnomer," Doctorow told NPR in an interview last year. "I think really of myself as a national novelist; I am an American novelist writing about my country."
"Everything that he wrote was really about a vision of America as it could be," says novelist Mary Gordon, who calls Doctorow an idealist.
Gordon, who worked with Doctorow on free speech issues in the PEN American Center, says he was not afraid to speak out on subjects that were important to him.
"What was wonderful about him is that he was gentle and he was humorous and he wore his constant passion for justice very lightly. He was never in your face, but his principles were always at the fore and they were always crystal clear."
Doctorow was honored often in his lifetime, winning awards ranging from the National Humanities Medal to the National Book Award. But his former editor, Jason Epstein, says he will remember Doctorow simply as a gentleman and a friend.
"I loved Edgar Doctorow. There's no other way to put it," Epstein says. Doctorow's the last of a generation of writers, he says, and the loss is immeasurable.
"His death leaves a huge emptiness. I can't explain it any other way," he says. "He was a very rare and wonderful, wonderful man. He was the kindest man you'd ever hope to meet. Humorous, affectionate — and a good tennis player."
Transcript
MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:
The novelist E.L. Doctorow brought the past to life in a vivid and playful way. In his well-loved novels, including "Ragtime" and "Billy Bathgate," Doctorow mixed historical figures with fictional characters to create his own vision of America. Doctorow died yesterday in New York of complications from lung cancer. He was 84. NPR's Lynn Neary has this appreciation.
LYNN NEARY, BYLINE: E.L. Doctorow used to tell a story about a journalism class he took as a high school student in the Bronx. He told NPR in 2003 how he wrote a profile of a doorman at Carnegie Hall who was loved by all the performers there. His teacher wanted to publish his story in the school paper and told Doctorow to get a photo of the man.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
E.L. DOCTOROW: Well, I hadn't expected that kind of enthusiasm from my teacher. And I said, well, I don't think you can do that. And she said, why not? I said well, he's very shy. And the teacher said, what do you mean he's shy? He talked to you, didn't he? And I said well, not exactly. There is no Carl. I made him up.
NEARY: Doctorow was never meant to be a who, what, when and where kind of guy, but he loved mixing some facts into his fiction.
LIESL SCHILLINGER: It's interesting how perceptive Doctorow was about the thin line and blurred line that divides factual writing and fiction writing.
NEARY: Liesl Schillinger is a book critic for The New York Times. She fondly recalls when she interviewed Doctorow as an undergraduate. He was generous with his time and patient with her sometimes naive questions. And she still remembers what he said that day about writing.
SCHILLINGER: One thing he told me so long ago was that novelists have always had to persuade the readers that what they were reading was not fiction but a kind of urgent truth so that the reader could break down the distinction between fiction and nonfiction in his own mind. But as the writer, he was always aware of what he was doing to manipulate the nonfiction to make it delight and captivate the attention of the reader.
NEARY: Doctorow used fiction to explore history from Gen. Sherman's Civil War march through Georgia in "The March" to the tumult of the turn of the 20th century in "Ragtime" to the Cold War story of the Rosenbergs in "The Book Of Daniel." Laid back to back, his books covered more than a century of American history. But he insisted he never planned it that way. And in an NPR interview last year, Doctorow said he did not write historical novels.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)
DOCTOROW: Historical novel is, it seems to me, a misnomer. And I think really of myself as a national novelist. I say I'm an American novelist writing about my country.
NEARY: Doctorow was an idealist about America, says novelist Mary Gordon.
MARY GORDON: Everything that he wrote was really about a vision of America as it could be.
NEARY: Gordon, who worked with Doctorow on free-speech issues in the PEN American organization, says he was not afraid to speak out on subjects that were important to him.
GORDON: What was wonderful about him is that he was gentle and he was humorous. And he wore his constant passion for justice very lightly. He was never in your face, but his principles were always at the fore, and they were always crystal clear.
NEARY: Doctorow was honored with many awards in his lifetime, from the National Humanities Medal to the National Book Award. But his former editor, Jason Epstein, says he will remember him as a gentleman and a friend.
JASON EPSTEIN: I loved Edgar Doctorow. There's no other way to put it.
NEARY: Doctorow, says Epstein, was one of the last of a generation of writers whose loss is immeasurable.
EPSTEIN: His death leaves a huge emptiness. I can't explain it from any other way. There's something missing in my life that had been there before. And now it's gone, and it won't come back. He was a very rare and wonderful, wonderful man. He was the kindest man you'd ever hope to meet, humorous, affectionate and a good tennis player.
NEARY: Jason Epstein speaking about his friend, the writer E.L. Doctorow, who died yesterday of complications from lung cancer. Lynn Neary, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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