Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jun 2010 Source: New York Times (NY) Page: BR11 of the Sunday Book Review section Copyright: 2010 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: David Carr Note: David Carr, the author of the memoir "The Night of the Gun," is a culture reporter at The Times and writes the paper's Media Equation column. CRACK AGENT PORTRAIT OF AN ADDICT AS A YOUNG MAN - A Memoir - By Bill Clegg, 222 pp. Little, Brown & Company. $23.99 Car crashes happen in different ways, but they all end the same, with the rest of us looking on in sympathy and prurience: I hope they're O.K., but I'd like to get a look if they're not. Rear-end collisions, multicar pileups and head-on highway nightmares - they all merit our drive-by attention. Then there's the single car rollover. A lone vehicle, propelled by physics and social conventions, is supposed to hew to its path when suddenly, through human intervention or lack of it, it tumbles in self-contained violence. Even before the wheels stop spinning in the air, we wonder about the driver's role. Did he fall asleep, take his eyes off the road, intentionally point his destiny toward the ditch? Unfortunately, the answers are rarely as remarkable as the spectacle itself. One thing, it generally follows, led to another. Things went wrong. And so it is with "Portrait of an Addict as a Young Man," a memoir by Bill Clegg, a young literary agent in New York who rose quickly in a crowded field and then almost as quickly yanked the wheel hard into the abyss of addiction. For gawkers, it will provide reliable thrills because the cliff Clegg went off was so high, the fall so steep. But at bottom, why the addict does what he does is necessarily reductive: because he is an addict. In the taxonomy of crack addiction, Clegg would be considered a binger. But describing his typical foray into smokable cocaine as a binge is a bit like describing God-zilla as a gecko. After dallying with drugs in college, and building a very successful practice with some bright literary lights, Clegg turned on a dime and stuffed tens of thousands of dollars, a nascent career and his most significant relationships into the end of a glass tube, then put a lighter to it. He did this over and over, until it was all gone, in many of the pricier hotels in Manhattan, in bathroom stalls, in porn stalls, and in and behind Dumpsters. If that sounds far-fetched, Clegg is equal to accounting, providing an endless tick-tock of the bags of crack, the rent boys, the A.T.M. withdrawals and hotel lobbies that served as a portal to the temporary crack dens he set up, with many, many bottles of room-service vodka to take the edge off. Addicts tend to dwell in the ecstasy of ignition, that moment when endorphins are first beckoned and the show begins, but in a more sober, retrospective light, the fact remains that addiction's primary aspect is boredom - the getting and using of the same substance over and over until death, jail or recovery intervenes. The chronic nature of any activity, even one involving powerful narcotics, renders it prosaic over time. As the author of my own memoir about crack addiction, I don't pretend to know how to avoid the numbing narrative aspects of drug use. But certainly a numerical autopsy is not sufficient. Even the most sweeping tale of debauchery - and Clegg lived through a doozy - has to find texture and resonance in other matters. As his book progresses, Clegg himself seems bored by even the most piquant episodes. After barely getting through an important business lunch at La Grenouille, he finds a running buddy simply by asking a guy on the street "if he parties." Trying to hail a cab, the ad hoc pair end up in the van of another stranger, who takes them to the hotel where Clegg is staying. Then it's on. "The afternoon and night play out. We don't have sex, though I want to. Rico comes at 10 with more, and it is all gone by 4 in the morning. My pal gets restless and disappears. He asks for $50 for a cab up to Harlem and I give him $40. Alone, I smoke down the few crumbs I'd hidden. Alone, I scrape the broken stem for the last resin and burn the pipe black as charcoal trying to suck the last drop of venom out of it. Alone, I look at the window and wonder if I am high enough up to die if I crawl through and jump into the air shaft. Fourth floor. Not even close." Clegg's trek from one fancy New York hotel to another, fleeing his apartment and his steady boyfriend so he can drown himself in self-seeking, is a persistent motif here, as is his wish that death will stop what he cannot. He is up against the math that cannot be solved - "just one more" is never enough - but his crisis arrives rather oddly when he becomes so disheveled and paranoid that he can no longer check into the Gansevoort Hotel or 60 Thompson, the W or the Maritime. He tries the Mercer and is turned away. "I have somehow, without seeing it happen, tripped over some boundary, from the place where one can't tell that I'm a crack addict to the place where it is sufficiently obvious to turn me away," he writes in what passes for a moment of clarity. Of course, there are many rungs on the ladder below failing to pass muster with the clerk at a fancy hotel, but for Clegg this qualifies as a kind of bottom. As might be expected, Clegg gradually loses weight living on vodka and crack; his belt is constantly in need of new holes, and serves as a metaphor for the noose around his neck. He also loses his mind, with a drug-induced paranoia that has him seeing plainclothes police officers - - "Penneys," as he calls them, because they seem to dress from the department store - everywhere he goes. It sounds like a horror movie, except that it's the kind of horror movie where something is always about to happen and never does. While Clegg's operatic madness is vividly rendered, it may or may not bear any resemblance to external reality. Active addiction crabs the senses to the point where important actual events - the blackout of 2003, his mother's breast cancer, the death of an associate - become less important than the prismatic account of copping and using. The attacks of Sept. 11 arrive in the middle of one particularly abject run, and Clegg's response is to get a haircut. Addicts, active or otherwise, are narcissistic as a matter of course, stuck on the holy music of the self to the exclusion of almost everything else. While egocentrism is baked into the genre of memoir, Clegg is singularly engaged in his own story. Other characters are remote or so minimally drawn that we get no sense of the collateral damage around him. Throughout the book, his family and friends seem to come swinging out of the trees to cajole him into serial treatments, but they too disappear in the puffs of smoke that always return. His boyfriend, Noah (the book sticks to first names and pseudonyms), an attentive, apparently talented filmmaker, is rendered as a simpering chump before he finally and resolutely walks away. By this time, Clegg is near the end of the line, strapped to a bed at Lenox Hill Hospital. What context the book attempts comes from an origins story, with Clegg recounting his childhood in the third person. As the interspersed chapters relate, there was an enormous amount of trauma around urinating - a condition that is difficult to untangle, but that the author seems to think determined a great deal of what happened afterward. The vengeful father, a staple of memoir, lands here with both feet, as does a mother who seemed unwilling or unable to protect her son. Still, it's not as if Clegg ginned up the elements of his life to fit some literary motif. "Portrait of an Addict as a Young Man," however pretentiously titled, rings true in brutal, blunt strokes. We can all take some measure of happiness that Clegg's durability and his talents have left him as a literary agent with big-name authors at a big-name agency. As millions of people who sit in church basements and meeting rooms hearing what it was like for other addicts and alcoholics understand, there is a certain, very practical value in everyone's story. When that story is pressed between the covers of a book, some in the culture at large can identify while others can resolve to never become that person. But the genre is built on far more carnal imperatives. People want to drive slowly by and see the blood and abasement. Once they get a good, hard look, they can thank their lucky stars they aren't the ones upside down in a ditch with the wheels spinning above them. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake