Professor
of English Michael Krasny, the host of KQED-FM's award-winning "Forum" program,
is known as a leading interviewer of literary luminaries,
his new book reveals that he didn't plan on this.
In "Off
Mike: A Memoir of Talk Radio and Literary Life," Krasny
takes readers back to a time when he was a student of literature and
hitchhiked across the country to meet Saul Bellow. He discusses his
struggle to become a novelist before he turned to a career as an educator
and
became -- quite by accident -- a radio host. Krasny
also includes accounts of his interviews with dozens of writers, including
SF State alumna Frances Mayes, as well as E.L. Doctorow, Joan Didion,
Michael Chabon, Alice Walker, Grace Paley, Edward Albee, Philip Roth
and Umberto Eco.
Krasny's memoir is now available in bookstores.
Following
is an excerpt from the book:
My
first interview, a baptism of fire, happened by fluke: in 1976, the
AudioVisual head at San Francisco State University asked if I might
be
interested in interviewing Gore Vidal on the campus's new-at-the-time
intracampus television network. I jumped at what seemed like a serendipitous
opportunity. It was an interview that would cast me nervous, deferential
neophyte and Vidal as sour, condescending, inebriated and mean.
Heading into the interview, I was sure -- both of us being literary
types with left-wing politics -- that we would become fast friends. I
wanted to do a professional job and ask good, thoughtful, intelligent
questions. I read as much as I could on Vidal and reread early works
of his like Myra Breckinridge and The City and the Pillar, as well as his newest novel at the time, Kalki. More impressed by Vidal's essays than
his fiction, I still felt certain that the two of us would have much to talk
about and would get on well.
When we met briefly before going to the television studio set to
begin the interview, Vidal seemed world weary, as if afflicted with terminal
weltschmerz, but more important, he smelled of liquor and his
voice was thick with booze. I noticed a copy next to him of James Atlas's
biography of Delmore Schwartz. I asked what he thought of the book,
hoping to initiate a bit of literary conversation before we went on the set.
What did he think about Schwartz, a gifted Jewish writer and lifetime
friend of Saul Bellow, the prototype for Bellow's novel Humboldt's Gift?
Vidal's response shocked me and felt like a blow. "Schwartz thought
he was better than we goyim," Vidal replied acidly. Then he added offhandedly, "The
Jews really think they run New York."
Was Vidal baiting me, sensing my Jewishness and trying to gore me
with it? How could one with such radical sympathies sound like such a
rank, bloody anti-Semite? He must not have meant what he said. How
could he? Well, I did know a few Jews who acted like they thought they
ran New York, and I shunted Vidal's remarks aside. I was on my maiden
voyage. I had a job to do.
--Excerpt
from "Off Mike: A Memoir of Talk Radio and Literary Life" by
Michael Krasny, (c) 2008 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford
Jr. University, by permission of the publisher, Stanford University Press.
--Adrianne Bee
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