Rescuing Lethem’s Legends

by
Jonathan Vatner
From the July/August 2019 issue of
Poets & Writers Magazine

In February novelist Jonathan Lethem joined Bill Henderson, founder of the Pushcart Press, to launch a series of reissues of Lethem’s favorite forgotten books, starting with Bad Guy, a 1982 absurdist psychodrama by Rosalyn Drexler. W. W. Norton, Pushcart’s distributor, has signed on to distribute the new series under the imprimatur Lethem’s Legends.

Jonathan Lethem (Credit: Amy Maloof)

Henderson and Lethem came up with the idea for Lethem’s Legends on the front porch of Henderson’s nine-by-twelve-foot bookstore in Sedgwick, Maine. Lethem, who summers in nearby Blue Hill, met Henderson at the local farmers market about fifteen years ago and occasionally visits what Henderson calls “the smallest bookstore in the world.” After hearing Lethem talk about his passion for rediscovering forgotten writers and books, Henderson proposed publishing a series of the author’s favorites. “It’s been my hope over many years to rescue books and rescue authors. That’s what we’ve done at Pushcart for almost fifty years,” Henderson says, referring to the annual Pushcart Prize anthology, which showcases the best writing published by small presses and journals during the previous year. Pushcart Press also occasionally publishes books that in-house editors loved but were rejected by their houses.

Lethem has long been a champion of titles that have fallen out of print. He points out that books by many of his favorite authors, from Philip K. Dick and Paula Fox to Melville, were at one time out of print. He adores the New York Review Books Classics series, which has republished hundreds of long-ignored gems and demonstrated that these books can still awaken the public imagination—and turn a profit. Lethem even coedited a title in the series, a 2012 book of selected stories by science fiction master Robert Sheckley. Still, the novelist sees plenty of room in the reprint market for “scruffy books that are even more lopsided and wonky or peculiar.”

Rosalyn Drexler’s Bad Guy fits that bill. The book revolves around a psychoanalyst who tries unconventional methods of curing her patient, a teenage rapist and murderer whose sociopathy has been fueled by television violence. Drexler boldly experiments with narrative and depicts sex and violence without apology or pussyfooting. “It’s emotionally sophisticated and savvy and street-smart,” Lethem says, “and in another way, it’s raw, antic, off-kilter, and unrefined.” 

Drexler, who is ninety-two and lives in New York City, is best known as an early contributor to the pop art movement. She has won Obies for her playwriting and an Emmy for cowriting Lily, a 1973 Lily Tomlin TV special. She once toured the United States as a professional wrestler named “Rosa Carlo, the Mexican Spitfire,” and wrote about the adventure in her 1972 novel, To Smithereens. Bad Guy is the seventh of her nine novels. 

Alhough Lethem’s wish list of potential reissues could easily fill Henderson’s tiny bookstore, the two are proceeding cautiously. If Bad Guy sells, readers can expect to see one or two of Lethem’s Legends released per year, beginning in 2020. “It’s going to be tough to bring back books in this current age when even new titles are getting obliterated by the cacophony,” Henderson says. “I call it the censorship of clutter. It’s hard for the average reader to find things that are truly valuable. That’s what we’re trying to do with Lethem’s Legends: bring back a few titles that deserve a second chance.”    

 

Jonathan Vatner is a fiction writer in Yonkers, New York. His novel, Carnegie Hill, is forthcoming from Thomas Dunne Books in August.