Excellent essay by Christopher Buckley on the eternal question about writers and writing, on drinking and booze and writing and inspiration. From the NY Times Sunday June 30, 2013 edition.
From the essay:
In his memoir, “Hitch-22,” Buckley's friend Christopher Hitchens made a solid case
for liquidity.
“Alcohol makes other people less tedious and food less
bland, and can help provide what the Greeks called entheos, or the
slight buzz of inspiration when reading or writing.”
Booze as Muse
By CHRISTOPHER BUCKLEY
MY first real job in journalism was as a junior editor at Esquire, a
magazine with a venerable literary pedigree. I imagined myself having
three-martini lunches with Tom Wolfe, and explaining to “Tom” (surely we
would be on a first-name basis by the third martini) that his latest
25,000-word article was not bad, exactly, but needed another run through
the typewriter before we could even think of publishing it.
This absurd, callow reverie was summarily dashed by my first assignment.
I was told to call up someone famous — “anyone famous” — and get his or
her favorite Bloody Mary recipe for the summer issue. I called an old
girlfriend who had married a certifiably famous movie director.
“He only drinks Scotch neat,” she said. “But we’ll just make something
up.” The ghost of Esquire’s founder, Arnold Gingrich, winced over my
shoulder as she and I went to work devising her famous husband’s
fictional Bloody Mary. It ended up consisting of 20 or so ingredients,
15 of which contained toxic levels of capsaicin. For months after it was
published, I lived in fear that we’d be sued for immolating some poor
reader’s esophagus.
I think back on my first shameful venture in “legitimate journalism”
every time I come across the latest improbable recipe for some new
cocktail. I don’t mean to imply that their creators are as spurious as I
was; they’re fun to read, and the more improbable the better.
Kingsley Amis, author of the indispensable “Everyday Drinking,” referred
to the genre as “dipsography, the alcoholic equivalent of pornography.”
Dipsography is continuing ed of the highest order. How satisfying and
knowing it is to drop savvy remarks like “Did you winterize your
margarita this year?”
At the same time, it’s best not to overdo the dipsography, at the risk
of getting yourself a rep as a “cocktail bore,” “beer bore,” “aquavit
bore,” etc.
Who among us has not been held captive by a wine, single malt or vodka
bore? Thanks to the recent proliferation of boutique vodkas, it is now
possible, indeed likely, to have your eyes as frosted as a Grey Goose
bottle while someone holds forth at Homeric length on potato versus
grain versus molasses versus organic wheat versus Australian sugar cane.
My eyes glazed over just typing that sentence.
Booze — for present purposes, let us include in this category wine,
beer, eau de vie, moonshine, the blushful Hippocrene and all varieties
of intoxicating liquid refreshment — is a compelling subject. And
dipsography has evolved pari passu with the progress of the Internet.
Surfing a large wave of ethyl alcohol recently, I came ashore on the Web
site of the Museum of the American Cocktail. The home page noted that
it was World Cocktail Week. Beneath that was a notice: “There are no
seminars or events scheduled at the current time. Please check back
later.” Had I possessed hacking skills, I’d have been tempted to insert a
“ — hic — ” somewhere in the last sentence.
For classic literary dipsography — and counter-dipsography — log off
from the Internet and turn to the bookshelf. Roald Dahl’s short story
“Taste” is the ultimate takedown of the wine bore. A rather sinister
dinner guest proposes to his host a contest: if he identifies the wine
the host is pouring, he wins the hand of the host’s daughter. If he
fails, then the host gets both his houses.
I won’t ruin it for you; it’s white-knuckle reading all the way to the
finish. When Alfred A. Knopf read the story in The New Yorker in 1951,
he signed Dahl to write a collection, and a brilliant career was born.
Come to think of it, surely the magazine’s most celebrated cartoon
remains James Thurber’s: “It’s a naïve domestic Burgundy without any
breeding, but I think you’ll be amused by its presumption.”
Benjamin Disraeli is not principally known as a maker of bons mots, but
in his 1845 novel “Sybil,” he gives us Mr. Mountchesney’s unimprovable
remark: “I rather like bad wine. One gets so bored with good wine.”
Continuing on the prime ministerial theme, Amis’s “Everyday Drinking”
provides the recipe for Queen Victoria’s Tipple: 1/2 tumbler red wine
and — brace yourself — Scotch.
“I have it on the authority of Colm Brogan,” he writes, “that the Great
Queen was ‘violently opposed to teetotalism, consenting to have one
cleric promoted to a deanery only if he promised to stop advocating the
pernicious heresy.’ ”
Elsewhere, the “Muse of Booze,” as Christopher Hitchens calls Mr. Amis
in his introduction to the reissue of “Everyday Drinking,” gives us
recipes for Paul Fussell’s Milk Punch (“to be drunk immediately on
rising, in lieu of eating breakfast”) and Evelyn Waugh’s Noonday Reviver
(“1 hefty shot gin, 1 bottle Guinness, ginger beer ... I should think
two doses is the limit”).
Amis was author of probably the most immortal hangover scene in all
literature. (The one suffered by Tom Wolfe’s louche British journalist
Peter Fallow in “Bonfire of the Vanities” is up there.) Amis demurely
refrains from mention of his own masterpiece moment in “Lucky Jim,”
though one of his cocktail recipes is named after the title. He does
however give us three “infallible” hangover cures, adding “though I have
not tried any of the three.” The first two are: “Go down the mine on
the early-morning shift at the coal-face” and “Go up for half an hour in
an open aeroplane, needless to say with a non-hungover person at the
controls.”
I mentioned Christopher Hitchens a moment ago. It seems fitting that he
should provide our nightcap. He and I once had a weekday lunch that
began at 1 p.m. and ended at 11:30 p.m. I spent the next three weeks
begging to be euthanized; he went home and wrote a dissertation on
Orwell. Christopher himself was a muse of booze, though dipsography and
fancy cocktails were not his thing. Christopher was a straightforward
whiskey and martini man. In his memoir, “Hitch-22,” he made a solid case
for liquidity.
“Alcohol makes other people less tedious,” he writes, “and food less
bland, and can help provide what the Greeks called entheos, or the
slight buzz of inspiration when reading or writing.”
Tempted as I am, I won’t close by saying, “I’ll drink to that,” because I
just found this recipe for a kumquat and clove gin and tonic, and I’m
thinking it might be more fun to drink to that.
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