At
the Cliff, it’s hard to separate perspective from wishful thinking, but is
there no way left to go but down? The President is optimistic, but then again
he usually is.
Where
we are now recalls a three-pound doorstop from my brief career as a book
publisher in the early 1970s when I oversaw “Smiling Through the Apocalypse: Esquire’s History of the Sixties,”
edited by my departed friend Harold Hayes, who had fostered the New Journalism
during that turbulent decade.
To
dramatize how American society was breaking down and reconstituting itself,
Hayes recruited novelists as reporters (Norman Mailer, Gore Vidal) and turned journalists
into narrative writers (Tom Wolfe, William F. Buckley, Gay Talese, Nora Ephron).
In that
period, one of the magazine’s wry categories of comment about the absurdities
of public life was headed Wretched Excess, and it comes to mind now as I savor
this century’s quirky equivalent of attempting to dive under the media surface of
events and bring up buried treasure of insight, the Jon Swift Memorial Roundup 2012 (The Best Posts of the Year, Chosen by the Bloggers Themselves).
As we
no-name scribblers plumb the year of Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan and Rick Santorum,
of Superstorm Sandy and the Sandy Hook school gun horror, of Generals’ sex
scandals and their underlings’ new freedom of sexual orientation, of ferment
everywhere in the culture, we may not match the literary quality of those
iconic artists, but our intentions are comparable.
The
passion and whole-heartedness of those bloggers will reward your attention and perhaps
revive some hope for the future.
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