HOMER & LANGLEY
By E. L. Doctorow
The Collyer brothers, Homer and Langley, were famous recluses
who lived in a stately brownstone on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan in the first half
of the twentieth century. More than just your common garden variety eccentrics,
they bestowed the family name both on their shared mental disorder ("Collyer
brothers syndrome" being the inability to throw anything out) as well as
the firetrap they turned their house into (a "Collyer mansion" is any
home overpacked with junk). Being reclusive, there isn't a whole lot known for
certain about them. What we do know suggests they were a pair of sad freaks,
living a miserable, lonely life in their boarded-up, booby-trapped mansion, surrounded,
quite literally, by tons of garbage. Homer was crippled and blind in his final
years, leaving Langley to forage meals from the scraps of rotten food tossed in
dumpsters. They died within days of each other - Langley crushed under bales of
newspapers, his wheelchair-bound brother starving to death shortly thereafter.
One can understand the fascination such a story would have for
E. L. Doctorow, an author obsessed in his own way with American history, and in
particular that of his native New York City. What is puzzling is why Doctorow
took such a dark, grotesque tale and then tidied it up to the extent he has.
The basic facts of the story have been changed in a number of
minor ways, most of them having to do with chronology. For example, while the
real Homer was four years older than Langley and went blind in his 50s, Doctorow
makes him two years younger and has him lose his sight as an adolescent. More
provocatively, the time frame is stretched far beyond not only the historical
record but even what seems possible. Both brothers died in 1947, but here they
seem to be going strong at least up until the 1980s.
This twisting and bending of historical time is intentional,
since Homer and Langley are emphatically the kind of people for whom time has no
meaning. Langley, the more philosophical brother, counts and files news stories
as part of a plan to create a universal, eternal, "Platonic" newspaper
- one that "could be read forevermore as sufficient to any day
thereof." Since history merely consists of the same things happening over
and over, we only need one such newspaper to give us "the Universal Forms
of which any particular detail would only be an example." For Homer, time
comes to seem "a drift, a shifting of sand." Unable to remember when
the events of his life happened, or in what order, he is forced to conclude that
either his mind is turning in on itself or that he has finally established
"the prophecy of Langley's timeless newspaper."
Such a premise might have been turned into a transgressive bit
of magic history, especially in these hands, but for some reason Doctorow
chooses to play it safe. Instead of being misanthropic, paranoid
recluses, the brothers are genial libertarians in the American grain, standing
up for all kinds of virtuous causes and practically keeping an open house on
Fifth Avenue. They run a jazz club and dance parties during Prohibition. When
World War Two breaks out they take in a persecuted Japanese-American couple. In
the 1960s they run a hostel for hippies, enjoying all the weed and free love.
Why Doctorow stripped Homer and Langley of all the givens that
might have made them interesting as characters in order to turn them into a
rather bland pair of good-natured oddfellows is hard to fathom. As social
commentary the book only offers historical fiction's comfortable gaze through
the rear-view mirror at a twentieth century whose winners and losers, angels and
demons, have all been determined. It seems that the main lesson - the Universal
Form that is expressed through a series of particular events - has to do with
the effects at home of American imperialism. And there's no denying this is is
an important theme, especially today. One only wonders why Doctorow chose the
story of the historically quarantined Collyer brothers - a story he had to
transform so much as to make it nearly unrecognizable - to be its vehicle.
Notes:
Review first published online June 7, 2010.
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