SIGN IN | REGISTER
November 19, 2012
spacer Subscribe
In Brief
spacer
Labels:
  • memoir
March 23, 2010

Backing Into Forward

By JULES FEIFFER
Reviewed by Douglas Wolk

Jules Feiffer's had a pretty remarkable career over the past 60 years or so. After becoming the pioneering cartoonist Will Eisner's assistant as a teenager, he drew a long-running, ferocious comic strip for the Village Voice (initially called "Sick, Sick, Sick," later just "Feiffer"), wrote a series of plays, novels and screenplays, and eventually settled into creating children's books. This lively, digressive memoir details his evolution from skinny, put-upon Bronx Jewish kid to skinny, put-upon, world-renowned satirist, by way of stints on the open road and in the Army; it's the equivalent of listening to a terrific raconteur's well-polished anecdotes.

 

Like his characters, Feiffer's got a superiority complex that keeps colliding with an inferiority complex, and a knack for turning neurotic self-examination into comedy: an agonizing stomachache he describes abruptly disappearing when he finally admits out loud that he hates his mother could have come straight out of one of his early cartoons. Even after he's achieved fame, he seems hardly able to believe that he's in the same circle as other bold-face names -- there's a hilarious bit about watching Marlene Dietrich and Kenneth Tynan discuss "Papa" Hemingway ("Apparently, I was the only one at the table who knew I was a fraud").

 

After Backing Into Forward gets past the early-years-of-bitter-struggle part of Feiffer's story, he's got fewer stories to relate. The process of writing his 1967 play "Little Murders" at Yaddo is more or less the climax of the book; the subsequent forty years of his career are relegated to the book's final fifty pages. But the fun part of Backing Into Forward is less the details of Feiffer's work, and his brushes with other notables, than his keen-edged, blood-speckled wit, which he turns on himself as often as on the cruel world around him.

  • « Back to Blog
  • « Newer Article
  • Older Article »
  • spacer Email
  • spacer Print
  • spacer Share
Article Options

Please sign in to add a comment on this article.

  • Post a Comment
Daybook
spacer

November 19: The labor activist and songwriter Joe Hill was executed on this day in 1915, having been found guilty of murder in a controversial, internationally reported trial. As Hill and his fellow Wobblies (International Workers…

more »
Previously in Daybook
  • Sylvia Beach and Company
  • The Beat Gen
  • Unlocking the Unabomber
In the Margin
spacer

Stephen Puleo has invested a vast amount of research into the events surrounding and including the moment on May 22, 1856, when Congressman Preston Brooks of South Carolina…

more »
Earlier Posts
  • The National Book Award Winners
  • "The Way We Choose to Cook Will Also Determine How We Live."
  • The Signal and the Noise
advertisement
Latest Articles
  • The Wisdom of Psychopaths
  • Blasphemy
  • Cow
  • Salad for Dinner
  • Tomo: Friendship Through Fiction
  • Contents May Have Shifted
  • Going Solo
  • Boy21
  • Freedom's Cap
  • The Disenchantments
The Long List
Books, CDs, DVDs to know about now
spacer
The Last Lion

Co-author and designated literary heir Paul Reid picks up the banner dropped by William Manchester at his death in 2004 and brings to an elegant and stirring conclusion the massive three-volume biography of Winston Churchill begun some thirty years prior. Encompassing both the pinnacle and nadir of Churchill's power, this book is a fitting capstone to two unprecedented lives -- those of subject and biographer.

spacer
Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm

Philip Pullman, author of The Golden Compass, retells fifty of his favorite stories by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm in this collection, which pairs classics like "Cinderella" and "Rumpelstiltskin," "Rapunzel" and "Hansel and Gretel" with brief personal commentaries by Pullman that explore the sources of the tales and their everlasting appeal.

spacer
The Richest Woman in America

Having already profiled Gertrude Bell, biographer Janet Wallach turns her attention to another exceptional woman of yesteryear, but one who was almost the polar opposite of the public-minded Bell. From humble origins, Hetty Green amassed a fortune, all on her own uncompromising terms. Yet she had a tender side, which Wallach balances with her fiscal savvy.

Archives
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • View Complete Archives
spacer
gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.