Michael Davidow's Blog: The Henry Bell Project - Posts Tagged "wine"

In Vino Veritas

“Right. Was it Chianti wine?”
“What?”
“Chianti wine.”
“Beats me, buddy.”
“Some prefer Montepulciano,” the grand jury man advised.


Did you ever make a mistake, then have to correct yourself? Only a few days ago, I advised the entire planet that Bell drank scotch. Someone saw that, and accused me (hmm) of trying too hard to prove that my hero is (well…) grittier than (ahem) Don Draper (whoever he is). So for the record: yes, Bell does drink scotch. But he also drinks wine.

He is actually hung over from too much wine, when he meets Chan Peterson on Sixth Avenue. He and Paula drink something “cheap” and “Italian” when he returns from California. Peterson finishes a bottle for him, at the old Brasserie (I shouldn’t call it that, because it still exists) (but it isn’t like they save me a table, these days). And he is certainly interested when Bertie Kahn tells him about the “dago restaurant in Rutland” where Pooch probably gets his stock while staying in Vermont.

As for what Bell prefers: though he does not seem particular, our best indication is “claret.”

So, for those of you kind enough to care about these things, please show your support for Henry (and grit in general) by buying (and drinking) a red, with tall shoulders.

And your author promises to get serious again in another posting, soon.
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Published on April 07, 2013 18:42 Tags: chianti, claret, don-draper, henry-bell, montepulciano, wine

Read 'em and Weep

Three kind of people seem to read this blog: those interested in fashion, those interested in wine, and those interested in spirituality. That’s a nice mix (especially since SPLIT THIRTY is about politics and advertising). I wish we could all get together.

Anyway, I truly appreciate when anybody reads my writing, so here is a quick entry for you very few folks.

I wrote a book; I’m trying to sell that book; that’s my only reason for being here. But I know that blogs are supposed to be entertaining and informative, more than anything else. So in hopes of being those things, for once, let me recommend another book for you to read, as well (or three, to be precise): Siegfried Sassoon’s “Sherston” trilogy, consisting of Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Memoirs of an Infantry Officer, and Sherston’s Progress.

These books chronicle the youth and war experiences of George Sherston, the lightly fictionalized alter ego of Sassoon himself. They range from his wealthy upbringing in the English countryside, to the horror of his experiences in the First World War, to his rather exhausted return home. But more importantly: they include a little episode in which he describes how happy a new pair of riding boots made him; they describe the length and breadth of his struggle with the unreality of war; and they include, finally and unforgettably, a hilarious dinner party scene in which a group of intoxicated English officers chase a piece of aspic around the table.

These books used to be pretty well-known. They aren’t, anymore. They should be.

So read some Sassoon. Then read SPLIT THIRTY.

P.S. For the necessary SPLIT THIRTY allusion in this entry: suffice it to say that Henry Bell quotes this author; not his novels, but his poetry. Here is the full text of the poem involved. It’s cruel, and it’s called “The Kiss.”

To these I turn, in these I trust– / Brother Lead and Sister Steel. / To his blind power I make appeal, / I guard her beauty clean from rust.

He spins and burns and loves the air, / And splits a skull to win my praise; / But up the nobly marching days / She glitters, cold and fair.

Sweet sister, grant your soldier this: / That in good fury he may feel / The body where he sets his heel / Quail from your downward darting kiss.
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Published on April 30, 2013 17:42 Tags: fashion, kiss, sherston, siegfried-sassoon, wine

On the Rocks

“I don’t know. We’ll have to get the lawyers involved.” “Peterson, huh? Anything to do with this?” “Maybe a little,” Bell admitted. “When you get down to brass tacks. Everything’s connected, isn’t it? According to the poets.”

(The following longish piece is an advance copy of next month’s column in the New Hampshire Bar News.)

Summer is the season for Watergate anniversaries. It was June 1972, when low-level Republican Party operatives were arrested while burglarizing the Democratic Party’s national headquarters in Washington, D.C.; it was July 1973, when a Nixon aide admitted that the White House kept audiotapes of Oval Office conversations; and it was August 1974, when President Nixon resigned. In fact, you could probably pick any day of the year, this year, and mark the 40th anniversary of one political bombshell or another.

This story has provided inspiration for many types of artistic expression, too; books, films, and arguably, even an opera — Nixon in China, written by John Adams in 1987. But the most famous work stemming from this episode remains one of the earliest: an account of this scandal’s birth, called All the President’s Men, written in 1974 by the two journalists who broke this news in the Washington Post.

Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward take a pretty plain approach to what happened. There is little art, less reflection, and a fair amount of self-righteousness in this factual account of their own heroism. And the movie made from it by Alan Pakula and Robert Redford, in 1976, suffers from the same qualities. It makes for hard viewing today. (In fact, if you want a better movie about the exhaustion and the paranoia that marked the early 1970’s, try Pakula’s own Parallax View from 1974.)

Their story has aged poorly because Woodward and Bernstein got something wrong, as well. The sense of the moment in which they were writing (and that moment stretched for years) was that Watergate had changed things; that it was an important and crucial episode in our national narrative. Before Watergate, there was corruption in high places, cynicism amongst our rulers, and rot in the framework. After Watergate, the sun poured in. Darkness was vanquished. The righteous had won; and it was time for them to tell everybody so.

Yet it is all but impossible to look at the sweep of time since 1974 and maintain that conviction. Back then, the great journalist Teddy White was excoriated for having missed “the big story” when he downplayed the Watergate scandal in his Making of the President, 1972, but in retrospect, he was right for having stressed Nixon’s powerful victory instead, and what that portended. Because politically speaking, the conservative surge that began with the election of Richard Nixon in 1968 has only continued to grow in strength. Not Gerald Ford but Ronald Reagan rose to become the GOP’s standard bearer, and the Bush dynasty propelled it even further rightwards, ever closer to the Tea Party of today. While to complement this, all along, the Democrats have collapsed towards the center (Carter, Clinton, Obama), in vain hopes of overcoming their party’s demise in the south.

Perhaps for that reason, more recent versions of the Watergate story see it in terms of personalities, rather than of politics. Oliver Stone’s Nixon, filmed in 1995, was criticized for portraying the president as an alcoholic and implicating him (quite vaguely) in the assassination of John Kennedy, so it’s hard to see the sympathy of this movie’s image of him; yet Stone tried valiantly to showcase Nixon’s humanity, too. He advanced the case for Nixon’s intelligence and the quality of his general leadership, and he mourned how those things were squandered.

Likewise, Ron Howard’s Frost/Nixon of 2008 looked at Watergate through the lens of Nixon’s attempt to rehabilitate himself, afterwards. Taking the fact of his downfall for granted, Howard found poignancy in Nixon’s battle to maintain a proper public image.

There’s even a Kirsten Dunst comedy called Dick, from 1999, that treats the whole thing as grist for the humor mill.

This evolution in treatment seems fitting, because on its own terms, Watergate was little more than a complex legal problem. It tested our country’s machinery– its courts, its Congress, its executive offices– and those pieces responded appropriately. They moved on heavy hinges that had long been thought rusted shut. Levers swung, results accrued, unlawful actions were ferreted out, and those responsible were punished. Then the country moved on.

Those of us in the court system see something similar, every day. We fight today’s battles with little hope that tomorrow’s will be any different, but never questioning the worth of fighting each battle as it comes.

The ultimate lessons of Watergate were therefore personal ones, for the people concerned. And because there was so much at stake– because men had reached the pinnacles of their professions, only to lose everything, for the most basic of personal reasons– people remain drawn to it. Watergate has become a fairy tale. We use it to entertain each other.

(Sorry about that. I thought I’d get some extra mileage with those words. But as I’ve missed writing about two of my favorite standby subjects — wine and women’s fashion — here’s an added coda that has nothing to do with the above. So consider this a portmanteau entry — or for those of you who prefer Dr. Doolittle to Reverend Dodgson, a push-me-pull-you affair.

(SPLIT THIRTY takes place wholly in autumn; it hardly refers to summertime at all. If it did, though, it surely would have placed Paula into at least one frock by the late great Lilly Pulitzer; and it would have given her this to drink, too: two parts orange juice, one part red wine (any red, any red at all), and two or three ice cubes.

(For god’s sake, don’t actually measure those amounts. And please, don’t be a snob about wine and ice cubes, either. Wine is to drink, clothes are to wear, and life is too short to not have fun with both. In fact, in honor of Ms. Pulitzer herself, feel free to spill the whole thing down your front.)
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Published on May 28, 2013 07:59 Tags: bernstein, lilly-pulitzer, richard-nixon, watergate, wine, woodward