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Entertainment | 10/31/2008 10:10 pm

Margo Howard and Roger Ebert Say to Erica Jong: Take a Vow of Silence, You’re no Norman Mailer

By Margo Howard and Roger Ebert

Editor’s Note: A longtime journalist, Margo Howard went into the family business (her mother was the fabled Ann Landers) in the 1990s as Dear Prudence. Her broad experience and understanding of human nature provide answers for the troubled — and entertainment for everyone else. Click here to read her column on Yahoo! Howard’s friend famed-film-critic Roger Ebert joined the opining for this column.

Dear, passé, clueless Erica Jong has shot off her mouth in Italy – apparently thinking she was talking only to Italians. She sounded absolutely nuts. Among the things she said to the Italian daily, Corriere della Sera:

1. If Obama loses, it will result in a second American Civil War. (!) 

2. Her friends, Ken Follett and Susan Cheever "are extremely worried." As if the discomfiture of these two worthies were not enough, she relates that "Naomi Wolf calls me every day." This would be the same Naomi Wolf who advised Gore to dress in earth tones … which, as we know, didn’t help a whole lot. And the afore-mentioned people are not the only fellow-sufferers. Jane Fonda e-mailed Jong that she cried all night and that the stress of it all was giving her back spasms. Her distress was so acute, Jong relates, that Fonda had no choice but to visit an acupuncturist and get an RX for Valium.

3. And getting back to the second American civil war, Jong opines, "Blood will run in the streets, believe me. And it’s not a coincidence that President Bush recalled soldiers from Iraq for Dick Cheney to lead against American citizens in the streets."

4. And I think the following is the most egocentric remark I have heard since I have been middle-aged. It has to do with her soi-disant fellow writers at the top ranks of American letters who are not doing anything to help Obama. "Tom Wolfe and John Updike are men of the right and Philip Roth is at this point a hermit who leads a monastic life in Connecticut, far from everything and everybody."

But all is not lost. She says she is still trooping the flag, and of course there is also Michael Chabon. The two of them she believes, have "taken the place of Susan Sontag and Norman Mailer respectively," because, she said, they have the same political sensibilities, "but a better sense of humor."

Forgive me, but I knew Norman Mailer … and you know the rest. As for appointing herself Susan Sontag, well, my advice to her would be to borrow some of Ms. Fonda’s Valium and take a nap, not to mention a vow of silence.

by Roger Ebert ebert_2.jpg

What is the matter with Erica Jong? Has she lost her mind? She’s raving like a right-wing nut about a "second civil war" if Obama loses. Where did she say this? In an interview with an Italian newspaper, possibly because no American newspaper gives a fart in a windstorm what she thinks about the election. So now the Italians have been warned.

A story in the New York Observer makes her sound scripted by the Onion. How will this Jong quote play with the paranoids on the right:
"Yesterday, Jane Fonda sent me an email to tell me that she cried all night and can’t cure her ailing back for all the stress that has reduced her to a bundle of nerves. My back is also suffering from spasms, so much so that I had to see an acupuncturist and get prescriptions for Valium."

Ohmigod! Spasms! Aimed like an arrow into Sarah Palin’s next speech.

But Jong will bravely fight at the barricades, despite her aching back. There are no other writers to do so. She goes on:
"Tom Wolfe and John Updike are men of the right and Philip Roth is at this point a hermit who leads a monastic life in Connecticut, far from everything and everybody."

Dire, although at least the monk is a great novelist, and keeps on writing. But wait, there is hope. The Observer reports: "Luckily, she said, there are her and Michael Chabon, who, she says, have ‘taken the place of Susan Sontag and Norman Mailer respectively’."

Nobody has taken their places. Nobody is ever gonna. Erica Jong is not even high on the "nobody’s gonna" list. If Susan Sontag had read that, she would have hurled. I loved Chabon’s New York Review convention coverage and his fiction. Erica Jong is known mostly for Fear of Flying. Now she should write Fear of Thinking.

Maybe the McCainists are correct, and the coasts are overpopulated with elitist feminist flywheels. We here in Illinois elected Senator Obama in such a landslide (70% - 27%) that the GOP saw it coming and had to hire a guy from out of state to run against him. We voted out of conviction, not as a cure for psychosomatic spasms.

555 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Marjorie C.
My Alias: Do you have the slightest idea what Marina is going on about, because I have a problem keeping up with her. What the heck is circular thinking? And what’s with everybody being paranoid? Can’t we just have an opinion without being analyzed to death?
By Marjorie C. on 11/01/2008 1:42 pm
Marina B.
Don’t worry your pretty little head about it, Marjorie. Too much thinking will just give you a headache. :-)
By Marina B. on 11/01/2008 1:53 pm
Marjorie C.
Marina, There ya go !! Am I paranoid or unparanoid. Sexist or racist. Will my headache be a migraine or a semi-migraine. Do I need wine or valium? My goodness, we do like to pretend to be so all knowing.
By Marjorie C. on 11/01/2008 2:05 pm
Buh- Bye
moi aussi
By Buh- Bye on 11/01/2008 2:27 pm
Marina B.
LOL!! I don’t know any of the answers to your questions. I guess the real underlying question is: Do you know?
By Marina B. on 11/01/2008 3:05 pm
beth willis
I’ll always listen to you, Marjorie. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 11/01/2008 2:22 pm
Ky McQueen
It is sheer desperation of the Republicans…they are throwing everything and the kitchen sink.
By Ky McQueen on 11/01/2008 11:11 am
S B
LOL. Love your posts Margo.
By S B on 11/01/2008 11:42 am
Margo Howard
Many thanks.
By Margo Howard on 11/01/2008 11:49 am
lawrie taylor
Yes, I agree with Margo and Roger. Erica Jong, who I admire as a writer and a person, has made some off-the-wall remarks. However, it will be very frightening for me, personally, and I am sure for the people who in good faith vote Democratic, if McCain-Palin are elected. The GOP ticket has appealed to the lowest common denominator to get the Red State votes, pandering to fear, using racism, mudslinging and lies, abetted by Fox News and other unfair and unbalanced media sources. If the GOP wins the White House we will see very clearly the divisions between Red State and Blue State America, an America divided, not united. Those who are hurting now in America, people who have lost or may lose their homes and their jobs, and their health insurance, if they had it at all, should expect nothing from yet another Republican administration. With the assault on the Constitution for the past eight years perpetrated by the Bush-Cheney executive branch, troops in the streets will not be necessary. The GOP is destroying the values the USA is founded on and McCain Palin will be more of the same, only worse.
By lawrie taylor on 11/01/2008 11:55 am
Wine Warrior
I think Jane and Jong might have watched the “Hey Sarah Palin” song too many times. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DIc8jdra0o Expert Palintologist attribute the “blood in the streets” hysteria to the clashing gawd-awful materials backdropping the singers said above vid.
By Wine Warrior on 11/01/2008 12:22 pm
Elizabeth Bennett
Sarah Palin is making us all musical! I like this one too: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bh9BmNuqeiQ
By Elizabeth Bennett on 11/01/2008 1:31 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
This perhaps is not analogous, but found it an interesting example of perhaps misconsrused rhetoric. Below is a segment of a piece by Andrew Gumbel: “I recently interviewed Gore Vidal, one of the last old-school aristocrats left in this country, and asked him how he felt about the state of the American republic — the subject that has fired his political radicalism and a large portion of his literary output over the past half-century. Vidal, now 83 and in indifferent health, bemoaned the lack of a transcendent figure to match the political skills of a Franklin Roosevelt or the oratory of a General MacArthur. When I asked him about Barack Obama, with his formidable rhetoric and cool temperament, he gave me a look of pure contempt and uttered perhaps the most reactionary single comment of this election season. “Slaves have a hard time making poetry,” he said, relishing the shock factor, “unless it’s got a beat.” Vidal, like many of his generation and social standing, clearly cannot fathom how the son of a single mother from Kansas and a Kenyan father could presume to occupy the Oval Office. And while he expressed his distaste with an extraordinary degree of frankness, not to mention racial venom, he is far from the only one. Now I happen to be well acquainted with Vidal’s writings and a racist, he isn’t. What he can be, especially in his old age is a curmudgeon of the first standing, and sticking a finger to almost everything and everybody. And this comment was made to shake up poor Mr. Gumbel who failed to grasp the irony. Vidal has just written a scathing take on McCain (I’ll see if I can find the link) and praised Obama in some other interview. Anyway, just thought I’d throw this in–––no tongue in cheek intended nor is my sense of humor visible.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 11/01/2008 12:43 pm
rocky rocky
What a character! Was worth the read, Phyllis. Thank you.
By rocky rocky on 11/02/2008 2:12 pm