2022
ISSUE
02
#ROWMANNOW
rowman now EXCERPTS
AND
INSIGHTS
FROM
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SEASON’S
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welcome
JANUARY TO JUNE 2022
“
Happy 2022, one and all.
space oddities P.12
After two years of nigh on unprecedented disruption, we are cautiously inching our way back to something approaching normality in the book trade. Bookshops have reopened, those pesky sales reps have recommenced their flying visits, London Book Fair has returned and it increasingly feels we can turn our attention to why we all love this industry: the books.
Rowman Now serves as an introduction to the breadth and quality of Rowman & Littlefield’s latest publishing from across our consumer imprints, including Globe Pequot imprints. Through selected extracts and author interviews, we’ll introduce seven of our best trade books publishing (pretty much) now. There’s something for everybody here, from a deep-dive into a Paul McCartney classic to a forensic analysis of General George Patton’s greatest gamble. There’s so much that we wanted to include in this guide, but sadly couldn’t. Visit issuu.com/rowmaninternational or scan the QR code below to read and download our Trade Highlights Catalogue, which features almost a hundred forthcoming titles.
take a sad song P.22
If you’ve any questions about the titles in this guide or comments on Rowman Now, please do get in touch. Tim Hardy thardy@rowman.com
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Contents
WWW.ROWMANINTERNATIONAL.COM
ISSUE
02
history 2
MARK TWAIN’S HAWAII: A Humorous Romp through History
4
John richard stephens interview
8
PATTON’S LAST GAMBLE: The Disastrous Raid on POW Camp Hammelburg in World War II
12
SPACE ODDITIES: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space
14
joe cuhaj interview
music 20
33 1/3 Revolutions per minute: A Critical Trip Through the Rock LP Era (1955-1999)
24
take a sad song...: the emotional currency of “hey jude”
28
under their thumb: How a Nice Boy from Brooklyn Got Mixed Up with the Rolling Stones (and Lived to Tell About It)
Popular culture 30
planet of the apes: a complete history
34
story mode: Video Games and the Interplay between Consoles and Culture
psychology 36
duped: Why Innocent People Confess – and Why We Believe Their Confessions
38
saul kassin ph.d interview
HISTORY
Below: Twain, photographed in 1907 Facing: Kihei, Hawaii
Introducing
MARK TWAIN’S HAWAII
Mark Twain’s Hawaii: A Humorous Romp
unaccustomed to. In place of the grand mud-
roofed rear additions or in bedroom windows,
through History (TwoDot, July 2022) combines
colored brown fronts of San Francisco, I saw
I saw luxurious banks and thickets of flowers,
Twain’s timeless wit and wisdom in his own
dwellings built of straw, adobes, and cream-
fresh as a meadow after a rain, and glowing with
writings on Hawaii with personal reminiscences
colored pebble-and-shell-conglomerated coral,
the richest dyes; in place of the dingy horrors
by others who met him at that time, and traces
cut into oblong blocks and laid in cement; also a
of San Francisco’s pleasure grove, the “Willows,”
his journey through the region just as he
great number of neat white cottages, with green
and the painful sharp-pointed shrubbery of
experienced it in 1866.
window-shutters; in place of front yards like
that funny caricature of nature which they
billiard-tables with iron fences around them, I
call “South Park,” I saw huge-bodied, wide-
In this extract, Twain reflects on his first
saw these homes surrounded by ample yards,
spreading forest trees, with strange names and
impressions of Honolulu.
about like Portsmouth Square [in Chinatown,
stranger appearance—trees that cast a shadow
_____________________________
San Francisco], thickly clad with green grass,
like a thunder-cloud, and were able to stand
and shaded by tall trees, through whose dense
alone without being tied to green poles; in place
The further I traveled through Honolulu
foliage the sun could scarcely penetrate; in
of those vile, tiresome, stupid, everlasting gold-
the better I liked it. Every step revealed a
place of the customary geranium, calla lily, etc.,
fish, wiggling around in glass globes, assuming
new contrast—disclosed something I was
languishing in dust and general debility on tin-
countless shades and degrees of distortion
2
through the magnifying and diminishing
bay, I saw on the one side a frame-work of
qualities of their transparent prison houses,
tall, precipitous mountains close at hand, clad
I saw cats—Tom-cats, Mary Ann cats, long-
in refreshing green, and cleft by deep, cool,
tailed cats, bob-tailed cats, blind cats, one-eyed
chasm-like valleys—and in front the grand
cats, wall-eyed cats, cross-eyed cats, gray cats,
sweep of the ocean; a brilliant, transparent
black cats, white cats, yellow cats, striped cats,
green near the shore, bound and bordered by a
spotted cats, tame cats, wild cats, singed cats,
long white line of foamy spray dashing against
individual cats, groups of cats, platoons of cats,
the reef, and further out the dead, blue water
companies of cats, regiments of cats, armies of
of the deep sea, flecked with “white caps,”
cats, multitudes of cats, millions of cats, and
and in the far horizon a single, lonely sail—a
all of them sleek, fat, lazy and sound asleep. I
mere accent-mark to emphasize a slumberous
looked on a multitude of people, some white, in
calm and a solitude that were without sound
white coats, vests, pantaloons, even white cloth
or limit. When the sun sunk down—the one
shoes, made snowy with chalk duly laid on
intruder from other realms and persistent in
every morning; women with comely features,
suggestions of them—it was tranced luxury to
fine black eyes, rounded forms, inclining to
sit in the perfumed air and forget that there
the voluptuous, clad in a single bright red or
was any world but these enchanted islands.
white garment that fell free and unconfined from shoulder to heel, long black hair falling
____________________________
loose, gypsy hats, encircled with wreaths of natural flowers of a brilliant carmine tint;
Stephens:
plenty of dark men in various costumes, and
Coming to Hawai‘i is like going from black
some with nothing on but a battered stove-pipe
and white to color. It’s like in the Wizard of Oz
hat tilted on the nose, and a very scant breech-
when the tornado abruptly relocates Dorothy’s
clout [rag]; certain smoke-dried children were
house and she opens her front door to see
clothed in nothing but sunshine—a very neat
the wonderful Land of Oz. You are suddenly
fitting and picturesque apparel indeed.
confronted with an endless summer filled
In place of roughs and rowdies staring and
with flowers in myriad hues, singing birds,
blackguarding on the corners, I saw long-
majestic rainbows (which are often double
Island
rainbows), the most flavorful fruit you’ve
maidens sitting on the ground in the shade of
ever tasted, languorous palm trees swaying
haired,
saddle-colored
Sandwich
corner houses, gazing indolently at whatever or
lazily in the tropical breezes along soft, sandy
whoever happened along; instead of wretched
beaches. Hawai‘i is the land of hula dancers,
cobble-stone pavements, I walked on a firm
luaus, volcanoes, tikis, and Mai Tais, but it’s so
foundation of coral, built up from the bottom
much more than that, as Mark Twain quickly
of the sea by the absurd but persevering insect
discovered.
of that name, with a light layer of lava and
Oddly, some people are immune to Hawai‘i’s
cinders overlying the coral, belched up out of
charms. I just don’t get it. It’s as though they
fathomless perdition long ago through the
are color-blind. But for most people, this exotic
seared and blackened crater that stands dead
paradise makes a lasting impression, so much
and harmless in the distance now; instead of
so that if you’re like me, you’ll think about it
cramped and crowded streetcars, I met dusky
every day you’re not here—wishing you were
native women sweeping by, free as the wind, on
back—as I did for years before I was finally
fleet horses and astride, with gaudy riding
able to move here. For the rest of his life, Mark
sashes
Twain was haunted by Hawai‘i and continually
streaming
like
banners
behind
them; instead of the combined stenches of
dreamt of returning here to live out his days in
Sacramento Street, Chinadom and Brannan
peaceful indolence. This was the start, when the
Street slaughter-houses, I breathed the balmy
scales fell from his eyes.
fragrance of jasmine, oleander, and the Pride
But while at heart Twain was a sentimentalist,
of India; in place of the hurry and bustle and
he also had the practical streak of a realist.
noisy confusion of San Francisco, I moved in the midst of a summer calm as tranquil as dawn in the Garden of Eden; in place of the Golden City’s skirting sand hills and the placid
3
“People who didn’t know twain often thought he was drunk.”
San Francisco. Twain always joked about how lazy he was, but my impression is that he just wanted to be free from the stress and pressures of society. Americans knew Hawai‘i was an exotic paradise. The US had business interests there and the missionaries in Hawai‘i regularly conducted fund raising tours in the states, so news from the islands regularly appeared in just about every newspaper. Twain’s first impressions of Hawai‘i were formed as a boy in Missouri when he was asked in Sunday school to donate pennies to help convert and educate the “savages”, despite the fact that they had already converted en masse and were actually more literate than many Americans. A year or two before he left for the islands in 1866, Twain became good friends with Charles Warren Stoddard, who was then a poet and later became a famous travel author.
John Richard Stephens, a resident of Hawaii, is
Stoddard had just returned from touring the
the author/editor of 23 books, including Wyatt
South Seas and was loaded with stories. Twain
Earp Speaks, Gold, Commanding the Storm and
knew other people who had gone there and
The Wildest Lives of the Wild West. John’s books
dreamed of going himself, but he turned down
have been recommended by the Preferred
his first chance because of commitments. He
Choice Book Club, the Quality Paperback Book
almost immediately regretted it and within two
Club, the Book of the Month Club and the Civil
months finagled a second chance.
War Trust. NOW: For his new project, Mark Twain’s Hawaii: A
Twain was still a relatively young man when
Humorous Romp through History (TwoDot,
he undertook the trip, around 10 years away
July 2022), Stephens traces Twain’s journey
from writing The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
through the island just as he experienced it in
Could you sum up his circumstances – and the
1866. In this exclusive interview, NOW spoke
direction his life seemed to be heading – in
to Stephens about the formative nature of the
1866?
author’s trip, the world’s impression of Hawaii and Twain’s views on the British.
Stephens: Twain left school after the fifth grade when
NOW:
his father died to become an unpaid printer’s
As you explain early in Mark Twain’s Hawaii,
assistant for local newspapers. When he was
Twain clearly held great desire to visit Hawai‘i
eighteen, he set out on his own working for
for a while prior to his maiden trip. Why do you
newspapers in New York City, Philadelphia,
think the islands particularly appealed to him?
Cincinnati, and St. Louis. Then he changed
in Hartford,
careers and became a riverboat pilot on the
Connecticut. By
Stephens:
Mississippi River.
Twain was enticed by the idea of carefree
Facing (left): The book’s cover Facing (right): Mark Twain House
Kenneth C. Zirkel - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://
living on peaceful, laid-back islands, escaping
When the Civil War halted trade on the river,
the drudgery of being a newspaper reporter in
he and his brother headed to what was then
4
commons.wikimedia. org/w/index. php?curid=21778275
the Nevada Territory where he soon became a minor reporter for newspapers there and in
Originally I intended to include everything
surrounded by rain forests, amazing sights,
San Francisco, but he kept landing himself in
he wrote concerning Hawai‘i, but I found that
weird food, scantily clad maidens, rainbows,
hot water with newspaper feuds, provocative
would have added an addition hundred pages to
tikis, skeletons, volcanoes with fiery lava,
humour, and attacks on police corruption and
the book, so I very carefully had to trim it. Still,
ancient gods, and long sandy beaches dotted
racism. After skipping through the frying pan a
I made sure I kept all of the best material and I
with swaying palm trees. Where else can you
couple of times – having to temporarily flee both
even devised ways to keep a few good best bits
read about Twain’s experiences at a nude beach?
Nevada and California – he felt it was a good
that aren’t quite related to the islands. I doubt
He even tried surfing. It’s a perfect recipe for a
time to go exploring.
that anyone will miss what I had to leave out. I
great book that will easily hold your interest.
also felt I needed to add background information On the other hand, he was building up a name
and explanations to provide a full understanding
NOW:
for himself as a humorous writer on the West
of the history and culture of Hawai‘i to
Finding and collating this quantity of Twain’s
Coast. His excursion to Hawai‘i to write a series
illuminate what Twain was experiencing and
material must have been a herculean challenge.
of 25 articles for the Sacramento Union allowed
sometimes didn’t comprehend. Hawaiian culture
Were there any sources that proved particularly
him to expand his talents as he experimented
is particularly fascinating.
tricky to hunt down?
reporting, and critical opinion pieces, although
NOW:
Stephens:
he couldn’t help throwing in some fiction, satire,
What do you think people who enjoy Twain’s
The accounts written by people who met him
and lots of humour. He developed a casual,
more popular work, but know little of his time
while he was traveling through the islands
intimate style that his readers found very
spent travelling in Hawai‘i, will gain from
originally appeared a long time ago in small
refreshing.
reading your book?
publications and privately printed books, many
NOW:
Stephens:
research is my specialty and over four decades
You mention in your introduction that you sadly
Twain was the quintessential American. He was
I’ve become quite good at it, having learned a
had to winnow down your Twain material to the
part Southerner, Midwesterner, Westerner, and
number of tricks for finding obscure things with
most relevant parts. Do you have any favourite
New Englander. And he was very funny. You take
little to go on. I’m also more persistent than a
Twain stories or anecdotes that you couldn’t
him halfway around the world and drop him in
bloodhound. It’s those candid accounts that
include?
the middle of a totally alien culture in a place
provide an unvarnished glimpse into Twain’s
Stephens:
that’s like heaven on earth, where he’s suddenly
personality and add a whole new dimension to
with travel writing, business journalism, society
of which were difficult to get a hold of, but
5
the book.
is why I felt it was important to include that in this book. This is my third book on Hawai‘i,
NOW:
so I’ve written bits about it before, but I’ve
Hawai‘i was, as you note in your book, a Kingdom
mostly researched it on my own just because I
at the time. Could you sum up the prevailing
personally find it very interesting. It was nice to
attitude of the time from Hawaiians to foreigners,
be able to incorporate more of it into this book. I
and Americans specifically?
think people will find it eye-opening.
Stephens:
NOW:
Native Hawaiian culture was, and to some extent
It is noticable throughout his time on the
still is, extremely generous. Twain relates how
islands that Twain seemed to be immediately
he witnessed a Hawaiian row his canoe over
liked by most he met, even amongst those who
treacherous and stormy seas to the boat he was
had not previously heard of him. What was it
on, just so the Hawaiian could give the Captain
about Twain the person, not the writer, that so
some chickens, refusing payment. When such
enraptured and intrigued people, do you think?
a giving culture was confronted by the Western taking culture, it was stressful and adjustments
Stephens:
had to be made, particularly as the taking culture
Twain was awkward, clumsy, and spoke very
began to dominate life on the islands.
slowly with an unusual drawl. People who didn’t know him often thought he was drunk. Yet he
The Hawaiians were acutely aware of how small
captured their attention with humorous stories
their kingdom was and they dreaded that it
and outlandish anecdotes. He was so funny that
could be taken away from them. A rogue British
people were immediately drawn to him. People
officer actually did take over the country for a few
were mesmerized by him.
months, but his superior restored it. Then the French invaded and threatened it. Finally a group
Franklin Austin, who was a boy when Twain
of businessmen, backed by US marines, overthrew
stayed at his ranch on Hawai‘i Island, which we
the monarchy and established a republic, with
usually call the Big Island, put it best when he
it eventually being absorbed into the United
wrote, “I cannot help remarking the strange,
States. Much like the Native Americans, just
apparently hypnotic influence this man’s
about everything was taken away from them
personality shed about him upon everyone,
by a handful of foreigners, but the country was
for sheer joy, happiness and gladness by
thoroughly Christian, so they didn’t fight back.
simply being in his presence.[…] even the tall, handsome athletic Kanaka, who had just guided
NOW:
him out of the canefields, with bright happy
Twain’s early correspondence is littered with
eyes, and who could not understand what he
falsehoods about Hawaiians. While Twain took
said, just laughed from sheer joy when he looked
care to correct these later on, presumably such
at him, and Kekau, the faithful and solemn, would
stereotypes and falsehoods were common at the
look at him, lingeringly, with his one bright eye
time. Is it fair to say that Hawaiians were widely
and, as was his nature, in his doglike way, would
dismissed as a primitive people in the 1860s? If so,
surely have cheerfully laid down his life for him
when did this general perception start to change?
if he had ever been in a fix. He seemed to have a personal and voiceless affinity for all things
greatest writers, described it best when he wrote, “Somehow, the love of the Islands, like the love of a woman, just happens. One cannot determine in advance to love a particular woman, nor can one so determine to love Hawai‘i. One sees, and one loves or does not love. With Hawai‘i it seems always to be love at first sight. Those for whom
natural and human.”
the Islands were made, or who were made for
1970s with the rise of the Hawaiian cultural
NOW:
moments of meeting, embrace, and are embraced.
movement. Things are considerably different
Mark Twain’s Hawaii reads like a love letter to
now, but most people still know very little about
Hawai‘i, via both yours and Twain’s writings. Does
the Hawaiians, their culture, or their history.
your love of Hawai‘i predate discovering Twain’s,
Of course throughout history there have always
or are the two linked?
Stephens:
the Islands, are swept off their feet in the first
I’d say it really didn’t begin to change until the
[…] Truly, Hawai‘i is a woman beautiful and vastly more persuasive and seductive than her sister sirens of the sea.” Before my first visit, everything I knew about
been people close to the Hawaiians who’ve known
the islands came from the media. I knew it was
it all along, but the general public tends to rely
Stephens:
on stereotypes. Even in Hawai‘i there are big gaps
It predates it, but there’s something universal
in people’s knowledge and understanding, which
going on here. Jack London, another of America’s
6
tropical and exotic, with lots of birds, flowers, and lush vegetation, but I also knew it would
Left: Twain photographed in 1908 via the Autochrome Lumiere process Facing: Queen Lili‘uokalani (1838-1917), the last reigning monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom
be expensive to go there. My girlfriend Elaine,
are always blowing, its summer seas flashing in
primarily known as a comedian. Newspapers
now my wife, had been there and wanted to
the sun, the pulsing of its surfbeat is in my ear;
routinely dredged up old one-liners of his and
return. When we landed on the island of Kaua‘i,
I can see its garlanded crags, its leaping cascades,
reprinted them. Even in the early 1900s they
I was completely bowled over. Everything was so
its plumy palms drowsing by the shore, its
were reprinting funny bits from his forty-year-
much greater than I could ever have imagined.
remote summits floating like islands above the
old articles and lectures on Hawai‘i. But even his
Afterward I thought about returning every day
cloud-rack; I can feel the spirit of its woodland
most serious books and articles contain ironic,
and we began planning to retire there. A few years
solitudes; I can hear the plash of its brooks, in
sardonic, and humorous flashes. That’s just who
later we were able to go to the Big Island. Elaine
my nostrils still lives the breath of flowers that
he was.
was practically crying when we had to leave, so
perished twenty years ago.” NOW:
we dropped everything, packed up, and after exploring the four main islands, we ended up on
During the construction of his mansion, he
As a Brit, I must ask: did Twain ever express any
Maui. That was in 2010. It was probably the best
wrote in a letter to Stoddard, “The house is full
feelings on Britain or the British? I ask this with a
decision we ever made. We absolutely love it here.
of carpenters and decorators; whereas, what we
hint of trepidation...
really need here, is an incendiary. If the house For me, Twain and Hawai‘i were separate, but I
would only burn down, we would pack up the
Stephens:
realized I could bring the two together. Some
cubs and fly to the isles of the blest[…]. What I
Twain was very popular in Britain, stemming
of what he wrote about the islands has been
have always longed for, was the privilege of living
from his Hawai‘i lectures in the early 1870s and
reprinted in other books, but I knew there was
forever away up on one of those mountains in the
he eventually began publishing his books in the
more. Also these books reprinted his articles
Sandwich Islands [Hawai‘i] overlooking the sea.”
UK months before they came out in the States. He built up quite a following. So Brits were able to
in the order they were published, but Twain skipped around and mixed things up. I decided
NOW:
read The Adventures of Tom Sawyer more than
to tear everything apart and reconstruct it to try
Late in the book, you convincingly relate Twain’s
six months before it was published in America.
to recreate his journey as he experienced it. I’ve
lectures to a modern stand-up comedy routine.
added dates and locations, so you can come to the
Do you think there’s value in modern readership
When he went to Hawai‘i in 1866, he was very
islands and follow his footsteps day to day to see
viewing Twain as a comedian, rather than simply
prejudiced against the British. British soldiers
where he was and what he was doing. It’s amazing
a writer?
had sacked the White House half-a-century
to stand on a spot where he once stood or walk
earlier and patriotic fervor in the US was still
where he walked while reading his description of
Stephens:
very anti-British, but Twain’s prejudices were
what he saw and encountered.
There’s definitely value in appreciating all of
completely reversed by the time he arrived in
his abilities. He was a great author, comedian,
London in 1873. He later wrote, “Travel is fatal
NOW:
satirist, critic, travel writer, opinion writer,
to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness,
Do you think Twain’s time in Hawai‘i changed
essayist, and public speaker. He wasn’t a very good
and many of our people need it sorely on these
him? How did he subsequently reflect on its
newspaper reporter, though. For him, catching
accounts.” He came to love Britain.
significance?
and maintaining people’s interest was much more important than accuracy. But his other
______________________________
Stephens:
talents more than make up for that deficiency.
Just as Jack London described, Twain was
All of those talents feature prominently in this
Mark Twain’s Hawaii: A Humorous Romp through
completely smitten with Hawai‘i and it haunted
book. There’s even the story behind his one great
History (Hardback, 9781633887848, £20.95) edited by
him the rest of his life. Years later in a dinner
news scoop. Now we remember him for his classic
John Richard Stephens publishes July 2022.
speech he reminisced, “For me its balmy airs
novels, but throughout most of his life he was
7
HISTORY
Patton’s last gamble
Eisenhower at his headquarters. “I have just pissed in the Rhine.” Then, when he got to the end of the bridge and started to set foot on German soil for the first time, he pretended to stumble, fell down on one knee, and grabbed some mud and dirt in each hand. Holding both hands up for everyone to see what they held, he proclaimed proudly, “Thus, William the Conqueror.” He was
The Disastrous Raid on POW Camp Hammelburg in World War II
recreating the gesture made by the Norman duke who, when he set foot on British soil in 1066 for the first time, said, “See, I have taken England with both hands.” Patton knew his history. Three months earlier, he had said, “I’ve studied military history all my life. Georgie Patton knows more about military history than any other person in the United States Army today. With due conceit—and I’ve got no end of that—I can say that’s true.” And he also knew how to make his own history.
Patton’s Last Gamble: The Disastrous Raid
He was once again at the height of his power
on POW Camp Hammelburg in World War II
and glory that month of March 1945. A week
(Stackpole Books, June 2022) recounts one of
before he crossed the Rhine, he had written in
George Patton’s greatest mistakes: creating a
his diary that he and his victorious Third Army
special task force to venture more than fifty
were “the eighth wonder of the world.” He was
miles behind enemy lines and liberate a POW
not exaggerating, at least not by much. He had
camp near Hammelburg, Germany. The camp
done the seemingly impossible time after time,
held some 1,500 American prisoners, including
becoming one of the most famous generals in
Patton’s son-in-law. Hampered by ambushes
American history.
and a lack of fuel and even maps, the raid was a
The year before, in August 1944, while driving
nigh on total disaster.
through a battlefield in France strewn with hundreds of bloated and blackened dead
In this adapted extract, author Duane Schultz
soldiers amidst fields of burned-out tanks, he
explains how this ultimately doomed mission
had turned to his aide and said, “Just look at that,
came to pass.
Codman. Could anything be more magnificent? . . . Compared to war, all other forms of human
____________________________
endeavor shrink to insignificance. God, how I love it.”
George Patton walked confidently across a
Three months before crossing the Rhine, on
hastily constructed pontoon bridge over the
December 26, he had broken through German
Rhine River leading from France to Germany,
lines to relieve the besieged American troops at
looking like the conquering hero he was. He
Bastogne in one of the most brilliant military
stopped halfway over, checked to make sure the
feats of the war. He had quickly shifted three
photographer was ready to record the historic
divisions of his Third Army 90 degrees to the
event, and then undid his fly. “Time out for a
north and sent them through roads covered
short halt,” he said to his aides. “I have been
with snow and ice in only forty-eight hours, to
looking forward to this for a long time.” Later
the astonishment of everyone.
that same day, he sent a message to General
Then, in March 1945, his tanks covered 65
8
Right: Patton atop a tank near Brolo, Sicily, in 1943
miles from their former front line in only two days, speeding along on a single highway from the German Siegfried line, in a column that was only about 25 feet wide, all the way to the Rhine. His flanks were entirely unprotected, but Patton did not concern himself with that. He happily let the Army Air Corps worry about his flanks, and they obliged, strafing and bombing every enemy target they could find, and doing an excellent job of it. The important thing for Patton was simply to keep moving relentlessly, as far and as fast as possible every day. And so his tanks and men stopped for nothing, not even, so it was claimed, for a retreating German parachute division, which they beat in a race to the river. And Patton’s force crossed the river with the loss of only twenty-eight men. But more important to Patton, he had beaten his hated British rival, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, who had been preparing for days to make a massive crossing of the Rhine farther north. So swift was Patton’s crossing and consolidation of a huge bridgehead on the other side that nobody at headquarters knew about it yet. The next morning, March 23, Patton telephoned his immediate commander, Gen. Omar Bradley, and shouted over the phone. “Brad,” he said, “don’t tell anyone, but I’m across.” “Well, I’ll be damned,” Bradley replied. “You mean, across the Rhine?” “Sure am,” Patton said. “I sneaked a division over last night. But there are so few Krauts around there they don’t know it yet. So don’t make any announcements. We’ll keep it a secret until we see how it goes.” The news did not stay a secret for long. A few hours later, Patton’s liaison officer at Bradley’s headquarters proudly told the press about Patton’s crossing of the Rhine. By then, it did not make any difference because the Germans had found out on their own, and the next day they sent 150 fighter planes to strafe and bomb Patton’s troops and the pontoon bridges they had built across the river. The German attack did little damage, however, and that evening Patton called Bradley again and screamed even louder over the phone in his curiously squeaky, highpitched voice. “Brad, for God’s sake, tell the world we’re across! We knocked down thirty-three Krauts [aircraft] today when they came after our pontoon bridges. I want the world to know Third Army
9
made it before Monty starts across.” “This operation is stupendous,” he wrote to his wife, Beatrice. Congratulations and praise poured in from Eisenhower, Patton’s fellow
Left: The book’s
generals, President Roosevelt, Secretary of
cover Facing: Patton with
War Henry Stimson, and Winston Churchill.
Henry Kent Hewitt,
Public opinion polls conducted back home in
off the coast of North Africa, 1942
the States showed that Patton was consistently rated as the most popular of all of Eisenhower’s generals. Even the enemy, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, said later that Patton was the best American general of them all. Newspapers and magazines devoted huge coverage to Patton—more than to any other
mean one thing—something bad was about to
general in the European theater, which irked
happen. Patton himself wrote to his wife on
both Eisenhower and Bradley. Two weeks after
March 23, ‘I am really scared by my good luck.’
he crossed the Rhine, Time magazine did a
He was right to be worried. Perhaps the most
cover story on Patton, reporting an alleged
controversial episode of Patton’s career was
incident involving Eisenhower. “When asked
about to unfold.”
where the fast-moving Patton was, Ike replied,
That was when he decided to take the biggest
‘Hell, I don’t know. I haven’t heard from him in
gamble of his career and put into effect what
three hours.’ ”
one army historian called “the most fascinating
On March 25, Palm Sunday, the day after Patton
yet enigmatic military escapade in the
pissed in the Rhine, his beloved 4th Armored
European theater during World War II.” It was a
Division raced ahead to the next natural
mission to a POW camp located 60 miles behind
barrier, the Main River. The first unit to reach
German lines in a tiny town few Americans had
the river, Combat Command B, was led by
ever heard of, called Hammelburg.
newly promoted, thirty-year-old Col. Creighton
If the mission to Hammelburg failed, and the
Abrams, who was one of Patton’s favorite
real reason behind it became known, he would
officers. His men found a railroad bridge still
end his illustrious army career in absolute
standing, though they could see bombs that
disgrace and shame. He would go down in
the Germans had strapped to the girders. It
history as one of the most reviled military
was ready to be blown up to stop the American
commanders of World War II for having
advance.
deliberately exposed his men to mortal danger
Men of the 10th Armored Infantry Battalion,
for what everyone would know was a highly
led by Lt. Col. Harold Cohen, made their way
personal and selfish reason on his part. Even if
cautiously out onto the bridge and, one by one,
the mission succeeded, he could still be vilified
disarmed the bombs. The battalion then
for risking several hundred lives to save one
went over the bridge and set up a defensive
man who might not even be at Hammelburg.
perimeter on the other side.
The consequences would be far worse than
Patton’s men were once again deeper into
what happened to him after the slapping
Germany than any other Allied unit, and both
incidents two years before in Sicily, which had
Abrams and Cohen, as well as a bad case of
almost cost him his command.
hemorrhoids, were about to play leading roles
He survived that embarrassing setback to his
in what happened next. It seemed that nothing
career and again became a national hero, but
could stop Gen. George Smith Patton Jr.
he knew he would not be so fortunate if word
“Patton was a hero,” historian Michael Keane
got out about the real purpose of his mission
writes, “to his men, to his superiors at SHAEF
to Hammelburg. The war in Europe was going
[Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary
to end in a matter of weeks, and he would not
Force], to the public, and to the press. In the
be needed anymore. His service, his career, his
experience of George Patton this could only
reputation, his role in history would all be in
10
“Caravaggio threatened to beat up painters who imitated his style. He did beat up a waiter, ostensibly for having served him a plate of overcooked artichokes.”
jeopardy. But that did not stop him.
Pass, Patton was frantic with worry and
The mission to Hammelburg would last only
The incidents in Sicily could be explained away,
personally sent a graves registration team to
forty hours over two nights and a day from start
his defenders argued, by the stress he was under
comb the dead in search of this one man at the
to finish, a blink of an eye in the many months
at the time leading his successful campaign
battle site. They did not find him. Patton himself
and years that World War II in Europe lasted. It
there. They could even be described as a one-
walked among the debris of the battle and picked
was only one of hundreds of decisions Patton
time overreaction on the spur of the moment.
up an ammunition clip from what was left of an
made during the war. Yet, it stood out enough for
His defenders said it was simply Patton being his
American tank; he sent it to the man’s two young
Patton’s biographer to describe it as “the most
usual impetuous self. Even one of the soldiers
children to serve as a memento of their father if
controversial military decision of his career, and
he slapped seemed to almost rally to Patton’s
he did not return.
one that many would argue ranked as his worst.”
defense when he said, “I think he was suffering a
Finally, several weeks later, the man’s name
Before it even began, Creighton Abrams and
little battle fatigue himself.”
appeared on a prisoner of war list of the
Harold Cohen, who had to plan the raid, both
The Hammelburg operation would, in sharp
Germans. John Knight Waters was Patton’s son-
called it a suicide mission. So did Capt. Abe
contrast, be recognized as a deliberately
in-law. Patton would later deny to everyone,
Baum, the man chosen to lead the rescue force
planned, conscious decision made for a highly
including Waters, that he knew Waters was at
to Hammelburg. Sgt. Nat Frankel, a tanker who
personal and selfish reason that had nothing to
Hammelburg, and, indeed, he did not know for
made it through the war in Patton’s 4th Armored
do with defeating the Germans and ending the
certain that he was there. Patton would also
Division, called the mission “stupid and selfish.”
war.
claim that the purpose of the mission had been
Patton’s gamble, as Bradley later wrote, “began
Patton was willing to take such a gamble to save
to rescue all of the POWs at Hammelburg, not
as a wild goose chase and ended as a tragedy.”
just one man. The man was a lieutenant colonel,
just one man.
Bradley called it “foolhardy” and said it was
a graduate of West Point who had been captured
Patton was so worried about public criticism
“doomed from the start.” He was right.
in North Africa two years earlier, in 1943, by
and possible censure for what he was about to
______________________________
Erwin Rommel’s famed Afrika Korps. He was a
do that he classified the mission as top secret,
Patton’s Last Gamble: The Disastrous Raid on POW
tanker and former cavalry officer like Patton.
meaning that nothing was to be said to the press
Camp Hammelburg in World War II (Paperback,
When he was listed as missing in action not far
and that his men were not to talk about it to
9780811770903, £16.95) by Duane Schultz publishes
from the major American defeat at Kasserine
anyone.
June 2022.
11
HISTORY
Introducing
SPACE ODDITIES
Space Oddities: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s
To say that mankind’s voyages into space would
reassembling them for test flights. Along with
Exploration of Space (Prometheus, August 2022)
not be possible were it not for test flights
Cambridge Research Laboratories, the Air Force
brings unknown, offbeat and obscure stories of
conducted with a multitude of animals is an
modified several of the rockets, increasing the
space to life. Author Joe Cuhaj also sheds light
understatement. But these unwitting heroes of
body length by sixty-five inches and configuring
on the human aspects of space travel that have
the space age—frightened and alone in a tight-
the warhead section so that it could be used to
remained industry secrets – until now.
fitting sealed capsule—often paid the ultimate
hurl scientific instrumentation and biological
price in the name of science and exploration.
specimens to the edge of space.
The most famous animal astronaut was the
Early test flights of the modified V-2 rockets,
Soviet Union’s dog Laika, but before Laika’s
complete with fruit flies onboard as their initial
Before a human could safely fly into space, a
ill-fated journey, the United States had already
payload, exploded only minutes after launch.
myriad of questions had to be answered: What
been sending animals to the edge of space. It all
Still, Project Blossom forged ahead as engineers
are the dangers of cosmic radiation? How will
began with Project Blossom.
prepared to begin experiments using rhesus
the body handle weightlessness? Can a human
As the German rocket scientists that surrendered
monkeys as their test subjects. Monkeys, they
handle the forces exerted on it during launch?
to the Americans at the end of World War II
believed, were docile and able to learn and
How can we find the answers to these questions
began settling into their new assignments
perform complex tasks. And, of course, they
without sacrificing human life?
in the deserts of Texas and New Mexico, the
were as close to a human subject as they could
The answer to the last question was simple for
team was reunited with the parts from their
get without actually flying a human.
engineers—launch animals into space.
captured V-2 rockets and began the process of
The capsules that were designed for the flights
_____________________________
12
were a snug fit to say the least—a cylindrical enclosure measuring three feet long and twelve
Facing: Buzz Aldrin on the Moon, photographed by Neil Armstrong Below: The book’s cover
inches in diameter, just big enough to secure a nine-pound monkey and cram scientific equipment around it in the nose cone. The anesthetized monkey was placed in a foam seat attached to a metal rack. A net suit then was placed around the monkey before he was strapped in. The entire unit—monkey and all—was slid into the small capsule, sealed inside, and the cabin pressurized. The pressurization of the capsule proved to be a thorn in engineer’s side. When fully pressurized, the walls of the capsule bowed out much like a balloon. Metal reinforcements were added to prevent this. The following test revealed numerous holes in the capsule, which allowed oxygen to shoot out like geysers. Technicians made the decision to re-weld all of the seams and, for good measure, added a healthy slathering of caulking around those welds. Consider it a high-tech duct tape fix. While the capsules were being readied, several test subjects were training at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida. During training, one of the monkeys escaped from his handler and was on the lam. Military police and base personnel scrambled to find the missing monkey, but he was elusive. Three weeks after his great escape, the project manager, First Lieutenant David Simons,
“general besmirchment of her clean kitchen.”
decided to press on with the launch.
received a message from the Tampa Police
With the monkeys back in their proper place
On the launch pad, the V-2 emitted a short-
Department stating that they had caught a
and all of the kinks in capsule design having
lived puff of white smoke from its tail section.
monkey and asking if it belonged to the officer.
been ironed out, another V-2 was prepared
Within seconds the engine ignited, sending
As Simons later described:
for launch and, for the first time, would have
a pool of orange flame radiating across the
“It seemed this monkey was tired of the Air
a monkey as a passenger. The launch occurred
ground around its base. The rocket’s engine
Force base and wandered off into town a
on June 11, 1948. Engineers strapped a rhesus
burst fully to life and the black-and-white
few miles away. It stuck its nose into a lady’s
monkey named Albert into his seat, attached
rocket shot off the launch pad, its flame cutting
kitchen one morning and began to snoop
sensors to his body, then loaded him into the
the desert sky like a knife.
around. The lady happened to be a meticulous
V-2. According to Simons, Albert’s capsule
At an altitude of thirty-eight and a half miles,
housekeeper, especially in the kitchen. Her
was so small that the monkey’s head had to be
the engine prematurely shut down. An engine
concept of neatness naturally did not include
“placed into a cramped, forward position with
valve had failed. The rocket began plunging
having a monkey crawling around among her
the neck acutely flexed.”
down. Upon reaching 25,000 feet, the nose cone
saucers and teacups. So, she made the mistake
After Albert was sealed in and the countdown
separated and continued its plummet toward
of trying to remove the monkey from her
clock started, the mission team settled in to
Earth. The parachutes deployed but couldn’t
cupboard by force. The monkey took exception
track Albert’s vital signs during the flight.
flare due to the thin atmosphere at that
to her attack. He started throwing teacups and
Not long after, the team discovered that they
altitude. By the time the nose cone reached the
saucers in her direction. She and the monkey
were not picking up any readings from Albert’s
thicker lower atmosphere and the parachutes
then began running around and around her
sensors. Engineers began troubleshooting
grasped enough air to unfurl, the impact ripped
kitchen, until it became rather the worse for
the issue and realized that there were only
the chutes apart, the nose cone carrying its tiny
wear!”
two possible answers: either the sensors were
passenger hit the desert floor, tumbling end
The incident was settled in court with the
defective or Albert had died. This late in the
over end. If Albert wasn’t dead at launch, he
woman winning several hundred dollars for
countdown, the engineers did not want to open
surely died on impact.
emotional damages, broken dishes, and the
the capsule and check on its passenger and
13
“There are so many stories that didn’t fit into the pages of Space Oddities.”
eloquently about your earliest memory of witnessing space travel on television. Is this a project you’d been planning – consciously or otherwise – for a long time? Cuhaj: I guess you could say it has been in the planning stages for many years. I just didn’t know it. I would read or hear many of these stories over the years and tuck them away in the back of my mind. It wasn’t until I had finished writing another book on the history of the town and area I currently live in – Mobile, Alabama – that I realized just how much I love history and writing about it. When writing that book which became Hidden
History of Mobile, I found myself gravitating to obscure stories found in the city’s early newspapers that have been long since forgotten. Joe Cuhaj grew up in New Jersey as a space
Tales about everyday life here in the Port City
fanatic. He would skip school to watch every
– the struggles and humorous anecdotes that
launch and recovery from the late Mercury
made the city what it is. The book went from
missions to the final Skylab mission all while
a stodgy old history book with “this happened
building and flying model rockets. Cuhaj, a
on this date”, to retelling those lost tales, the
Navy veteran and former radio broadcaster, is
human side of city’s history that has been lost
now an author and freelance writer.
for years.
In his new project, Space Oddities: Forgotten
That got me thinking about those odd and
Stories of Mankind’s Exploration of Space
obscure space stories I had heard and my love
(Prometheus,
author
of the space program. I told a couple of the
demystifies nigh on every element of the
stories to some friends in casual conversation
increasingly forgotten space race. In this
just to see what their reaction would be, and it
exclusive interview, NOW spoke to Cuhaj about
was what I had hoped for: “There should be a
the human side of space travel, the possibility
book about that!”
August
2022),
the
of Apollo 11’s failure and wake-up call songs. And now there is. NOW: Could you sum up Space Oddities in one
NOW:
sentence?
You note at the start of the book that you’re not ‘your standard rocketry nerd’, instead being
Cuhaj:
drawn to the ‘stories behind the story’. You
Space Oddities tells the unknown, offbeat, and
seem, in your writing, more interested in the
obscure stories of spaceflight, bringing the
human side of the space race. Why do you think
human side of man’s greatest adventure to life.
this is?
NOW:
Cuhaj:
At the start of Space Oddities, you write
When I was a kid, I used to love getting up at
14
Below: Buzz Aldrin and Jim Lovell arrive on the aircraft carrier USS Wasp after the Gemini 12 mission
2am and pull out my dad’s portable radio that had
astronauts and engineers. A lot of material was
the lunar samples brought back by the Apollo
shortwave bands on it. I would tune in to radio
pulled from video interviews preserved by NASA,
missions. There was a real fear that there
stations from around the world. Every station
C-SPAN, and the Library of Congress. I can’t tell
could be organisms in the samples that could
would start the broadcast with the news, but for
you how many times I will be watching television
contaminate and endanger life on Earth. Special
most stations, that was sheer propaganda, but
or flipping through our cable provider’s guide on
precautions and facilities were established to
after that, they would air shows focusing on the
the TV and hear or see something that would
quarantine the astronauts and samples and
country’s history and culture. That fascinated
grab my attention. It could be a simple word, a
protect the planet.
me – hearing first-hand how people lived, their
phrase, but it was always something that related
beliefs, their history from various parts of the
to what I was writing about. I would jot it down
After Apollo 11, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins
world.
then off I would go to research it, heading
had issues with NASA’s plan to keep the Earth
down the rabbit hole to find books (I built quite
safe. According to the astronauts, lunar dust
That side of life fascinates me. There are so
a library), videos, audio, a treasure trove of
would cling to everything so dusting off the
many people who contribute to our life that
sources to build the story upon.
moon walkers before entering the command module for the return trip home was virtually
go unseen, their stories untold. They all have a story to tell. We all know the headlines, but what
NOW:
impossible so one would think that it would get
– and who - went into making that moment?
There are some hilarious anecdotes and stories
into the capsule. After splashdown, when Navy
in the book. Do you have any favourites? Are
SEALS opened the capsule, presumably those
NOW:
there any that narrowly missed the cut or
organisms would escape into the atmosphere.
The level of detail you profile oft-forgotten
couldn’t be included for other reasons? The astronauts would then don special
space race figures in is remarkable. How difficult did it prove to research the score of individuals
Cuhaj:
protective suits with respirators before hopping
you’ve written about? Presumably, you had to
Oh, yes. There are many more stories that
into a life raft. Before getting on board the
consult numerous archives and sources.
just didn’t fit into the pages of Space Oddities.
helicopter that would transport them to the
In fact, I am currently completing a 10-part
recovery ship, the SEALS would take rags and
Cuhaj:
podcast series to tell a few of these stories that,
disinfectant and scrub the astronauts down. The
It was remarkably easier than you might think.
if I finally finish producing them, will debut
rags would then be tied to a weight and tossed
The NASA history department is incredible,
March 14th. More details to come.
into the ocean. Now the moon organisms would contaminate the ocean.
documenting every little detail of every mission ever flown, preserving interviews with
One that stands out deals with the handling of
15
Later when scientists were examining the
tragic death. There was no plan by the Soviets to
samples, one researcher ground up a piece of
bring her back alive. A horrible death that could
moon rock and was injecting the material into
have been prevented.
eggs. Don’t ask me why. I’m a writer not a scientist. Anyway, the hypodermic needle with the material
NOW:
the researcher was using slipped off the egg
John F. Kennedy’s longstanding offer of a joint
puncturing her glove and injecting her with the
space venture with the USSR is very surprising to
material. She was the first person vaccinated with
a modern reader. Do you think there was ever any
lunar dust. After quarantining, it was determined
realistic chance that could happen?
that the material had no effect on humans. Cuhaj: NOW:
I don’t believe so. The Cold War was getting
I particularly enjoyed the sections raising serious
chillier. The Soviets believed that they were ahead
ethical questions concerned with the space race.
in the space race and that their technology was
Where do you stand on the recruiting of German
far more advanced than the U.S. While there were
rocket scientists to lead American rocket efforts
some narrow agreements reached, I do not believe
after WWII?
that an actual joint manned mission was possible in the 1960s.
Cuhaj: That is a complicated question, about as
NOW:
complicated as the man who led the scientists,
Your book touches on an interesting point: that
Werhner von Braun. We are all grateful that his
congress had substantially slashed the Apollo
team launched the west’s first satellite, put our
missions’ funding even before the first moon
first man in space, and landed us on the moon
landing. What factors contributed to this, do you
giving the U.S. unprecedented technological
think?
prestige and which resulted in many benefits through spinoffs for all of us. He also supported
Cuhaj:
the effort to desegregate NASA facilities.
You must remember the time we were living in,
But then there is that war record. Their dream
what was happening across the country at the
was to always use rockets to explore space and
time: civil rights battles were being waged; the war
eventually send a man into space but developing
in Vietnam was raging on; poverty was ravaging
rockets for the NAZI’s and building them with
the country. Those in Congress had enormous
slave labor from POW camps with a blind eye.
pressure on them to address these issues. As
That’s where it gets complicated. I can see where
it was becoming clear that the U.S. would reach
it was a means to the end for the rocket scientists,
President Kennedy’s goal of landing a man on
but at what cost?
the moon, even before the first landing occurred,
Again, a very complicated
these Earthbound issues had to be conquered and
question.
re-directing funding was the answer. NOW: Laika, the first animal to orbit the earth, receives
At the same time, though, it seemed like the
her due in the book. However, the chapter also
politicians could not see beyond the immediate.
covers myriad other animals who achieved
Space exploration, with its promise and hope for a
aviation firsts. Why do you think Laika captured
better life here on Earth, seemed to escape them.
the world’s imagination so much, to the degree
To me, it almost looked like they had the attitude
that she’s still widely remembered today?
of, “ok, we land on the moon. That’s the end of it.”
Cuhaj:
It’s good to see they eventually came back around.
While it was an incredible feat to send a live animal into space and orbit the Earth, I think
NOW:
Laika is mainly remembered today because of her
Your writing is effective at humanising those who
16
Top to bottom:
participated in space missions. Do you have a favourite of
A replica of Sputnik 1
the individuals profiled in the book?
John F. Kennedy inspects the Mercury capsule, 1962 Romanian stamp from 1959 with Laika (the caption reads “Laika, first traveller into cosmos”)
Cuhaj:
Facing: Astronaut John Glenn wearing his space suit
Thank you for that. There isn’t any one favorite from the
before the flight of Project Mercury, 1963
book overall. There are too many. For astronauts, Wally Schirra stands out. After writing the book I had a newfound respect for him. I knew everyone called him a “jokester”, but I didn’t know how deep his sense of humour went until I started digging deeper. He was quite a funny guy but when it came to a mission, he was dead serious. In the first flight of the Apollo capsule after the Apollo 1 fire, he made sure that the entire flight of Apollo 7 was by the book. There would be no deviations from the flight plan even when Mission Control tried to add new items to their checklist. Another name that comes to mind after writing Space
Oddities is former NASA administrator Thomas Paine. His meeting with civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy just before the launch of Apollo 11 and his words with the reverend were heartfelt and sincere and really touched me. NOW: The “In the Event of Moon Disaster” document in the Nixon archives is incredibly detailed, making the thought of Apollo 11’s failure very palpable. What do you think the mission’s legacy would be today had Armstrong and Aldrin died on the moon’s surface? Cuhaj: The U.S. came back from the tragic Apollo 1 fire to eventually land the first men on the moon, but I don’t know how you come back from something like that. I imagine that eventually, years later, we would probably regroup yet again and make a successful landing and return. We are like that – tenacious, but it would take quite a while before NASA and the public could move forward. Imagine looking up at the moon every night, knowing that two men from Earth will be there for ever more. It’s a chilling vision. NOW: If you were an astronaut flying a mission, what would your preferred wake-up call song be, and who would perform it? Cuhaj: Good question. My first thought was about my old band that
17
started in high school and still get together every
hope that all necessary precautions are taken to
few years and record a song or two just for fun.
prevent a tragic accident which could set getting
I could see my bandmates writing a special song
civilians regularly into space back years.
for the occasion. They’ve done that in the past and surprised me. I would love that.
NOW:
But thinking about a true wake-up song, it would
If you could be involved in any space mission,
have to be the classic Beatles’ song, Penny Lane.
which would you pick and why? What role would
That song always reminds me of a small town in
you want to fulfil?
northern New Jersey where I grew up. The main street through town had the same vibe to it as the
Cuhaj:
song conveys. I had great times there growing up.
Personally, I’m not as interested in going to the
Now, if you could get Paul McCartney to perform
moon and Mars as I am in orbiting the Earth. I
it for me…
have heard so many astronauts return from their first flight into space talk about the awe-inspiring
NOW:
view of the planet far below and the realization
Where do you stand on the recent trend of
of how fragile it really is that I would love to
billionaires launching their own space race? I’m
experience that feeling. Just look at the reaction
sure there’d be more than few outlandish stories
actor William Shatner had to his short 15-minute
to mine for a future book...
flight on the New Shepard spacecraft in 2021.
Cuhaj:
I’d be happy with spending some time on the
I have mixed feelings about billionaires in space.
International Space Station as a journalist or
On the one hand, I see it as a publicity stunt. Jeff
writer to document life aboard the ISS from the
Bezos is sending celebrities into space to get media
perspective of an average person. When I was
attention. While I think it’s great that one of the
in radio, I applied for NASA’s Journalist in Space
Mercury 13, Wally Funk, finally had a chance to
program during the space shuttle years but never
fly, “Captain Kirk” (William Shatner) finally made
heard back. Maybe one day.
it to space, and the daughter of the first American astronaut Laura Shepard Churchley, followed in
______________________________
her father’s footsteps, it’s a dangerous business that has very little, if any, regulations and isn’t
Space Oddities: Forgotten Stories of Mankind’s
something to play around with.
Exploration of Space (Paperback, 9781633887848, £16.95) by Joe Cuhaj publishes August 2022.
On the other hand, isn’t that how the airline industry began? Once the airplane first took wing, inventors built upon the technology one step at a time. To make that happen, they needed public support. The more outlandish a test flight was, the better chance that the media would cover it and if it was successful, the chances of gaining financial backing increased. To get more exposure, celebrities would take a seat on these flights and the aircraft company would gain even more exposure and more backers. Millionaires would buy seats on flights helping to ensure money was coming in to fund further research. I guess we’ll have to see how it plays out and
18
Above: Space Shuttle Columbia in 1996
2022
Outdoor Pursuits Catalogue
Available to read and download now on Issuu issuu.com/rowmaninternational 19
MUSIC
33 1/3 Revolutions Per Minute
33
1/3
Left: The book’s cover Below: Mick Jagger, 1965. The first Rolling Stones single was released in 1963 Facing: Joan Baez and Bob Dylan perform at 1963’s March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
Revolutions Per Minute: A Critical Trip
Through the Rock LP Era (1955-1999) (Backbeat, September 2022) is a history of the rock LP era told though critiques of a very personal selection of nearly 700 albums. It follows rock and roll from its earliest days in the 1950s to the explosion of the British Invasion, soul, folk rock, and psychedelia in the 1960s, on through the classic rock and punk albums of the 1970s, new wave classics of the 1980s, and alternative rock discs of the 1990s. In this extract, author Mike Segretto explains how popular music changed forever in 1963. ____________________________ Albums weren’t a huge concern in the rock and
as the arrival of the very first Beatles album.
that reached the shores of Liverpool and
roll world of 1963. Until that point, Elvis Presley
Moving forward, we shall pay special attention
snagged even more when they hooked up with
and Ricky Nelson were the only rock and rollers
to this band, and if you don’t already know why,
manager Brian Epstein, who also managed the
to have number one albums in the United
then this book may actually have some value
record department of his father’s music shop,
States. The single continued to be the preferred
after all.
NEMS, where the boys discovered songs by the
medium, and it would remain in that position
But it wasn’t just the Beatles pushing rock and
likes of Barrett Strong and the Donays that
until 1967, the first year a group of electric-
roll forward, up the hill, and to the cliff’s edge
would fill out their own LPs. Down in Dartford,
guitar pickers had the number one album of the
of art. Not everyone of their countrypeople the
Mick Jagger had the brain wave of placing mail
year (though More of the Monkees was the one
Beatles dragged along with them would play an
orders with Chess Records, and he and Keith
album the Monkees released that year on which
integral role in the evolution of the rock and
Richards totally geeked out when Richards
they didn’t do much guitar picking).
roll album (sorry, Gerry and the Pacemakers;
spotted Jagger toting his latest acquisitions
There had been great rock and roll LPs
forgive me, Freddie and the Dreamers; sincerest
by Chuck Berry and Muddy Waters, which
before 1963, though most were more like
apologies, Herman’s Hermits), but the ones who
reignited a childhood friendship and led them
singles compilations fattened with filler than
would—naturally, I’m thinking of fellow A-list
to form their own band. Pete Townshend had
thoughtfully conceived statements. However,
British invaders such as the Rolling Stones,
his own bout of drooling after his American
in 1963, artists such as Phil Spector, Sam Cooke,
and the Who—would impact the art in ways the
roommate at art school, Tom Wright, was
Roy Orbison, and Bob Dylan set the changeover
Beatles did not always think to do first. The guys
deported for pot possession and left behind his
in motion with truly fine LPs conceived to be
in these groups were not only among rock and
enviable collection of blues and jazz discs.
just that.
roll’s biggest superstars but also its highest-
Rock and roll may have straight up ceased to
Yet no element of 1963 was as alchemically
profile record geeks. The Beatles snapped up all
be if it wasn’t for these geeks. Following a
integral to zooming the rock LP into the future
the latest and most obscure American records
period when many of the first wave of rockers
20
were out of commission—jailed, drafted, or
neighbors. Americans tended to stereotype
lack of melanin also explains why his utterly
fiddling with born-again salvation— America
England as a tiny, quaint burg of manners and
lifeless renditions of “Ain’t That a Shame” and
had Roy Orbison, Del Shannon, Dion, and the
repression. Yet no white American rockers
“Tutti Frutti” outsold Fats Domino’s and Little
Beach Boys but few other new rockers of depth.
of the period captured the spontaneity,
Richard’s vital originals. The Beatles were great
Chuck Berry eventually managed a respectable
excitement, and commitment of their R&B
songwriters and studio innovators, but they too
return with “Nadine,” “No Particular Place to
countrypeople with the authenticity of the
got their start performing the songs of Chuck
Go,” and “You Never Can Tell” in 1963. Back
new wave of singers emerging in the United
Berry, Little Richard, Smokey Robinson, Ray
from the army, Elvis still produced tremendous
Kingdom. Although none of them had anything
Charles, the Shirelles, and many other artists
work on occasion, such as “His Latest Flame” or
on, say, Otis Redding or Wilson Pickett, they
they outsold by vast quantities. When a quintet
“Little Sister,” but his spark was largely gone.
were still capable of delivering their own
of white kids from London called the Rolling
The charts were dominated by old-fashioned
impressive brand of fierce R&B.
Stones began recording in 1963, they ransacked
crooners and vapid teen idols: Shelley Fabares,
However, with that white appropriation of
the art of black artists even more fervently than
Connie Francis, Bobby Rydell, Bobby Vinton,
the sounds that black artists originated came
Elvis had. In 1965, Billboard revived its “Hot
Neil Sedaka, Tommy Roe, Steve Lawrence, and
one of rock and roll’s more troubling shifts.
R&B” chart after fourteen months of dormancy
Bobby Vee. By far the most vital American
A form of music that grew naturally out of
during which rhythm and blues records were
music of the period was coming from the soul
black rhythm and blues started to become
so popular with white rock and roll fans that
and R&B artists enjoying their initial successes
predominantly white. A lot of commentators
the magazine deemed a segregated chart
on new labels like Tamla/Motown and Stax or
lay the blame on Elvis Presley, who fashioned
redundant.
with wunderkind producer Phil Spector and his
his act by appropriating the sounds and
Black singles would continue to place on the
fabulous roster of artists, particularly Darlene
dance moves of black artists and who became
magazine’s central “Hot 100” chart, but the
Love and the Ronettes.
a superstar not because he was a better
perceived need for a separate chart suggested
In Great Britain, young musicians were
artist than Chuck Berry or Little Richard but
that there was no longer a place for black
listening intently to their more soulful
because of the way he looked. Pat Boone’s
musicians
21
in
“mainstream”
guitar-based
rock and roll. When African American rock guitarists such as Jimi Hendrix, Prince, and Vernon Reid broke into the increasingly white rock world in the coming years, the industry often treated them as novelties, interlopers, or nonentities. Prince’s lightning licks rarely electrified rock radio stations during his 1980s heyday. Living Colour, who could run rings around every single white hard-rock band of their day, had a hell of a time getting signed because of their race and their willingness to deal with issues of race in their songs. Even some of those who worshipped Hendrix had no compunction about describing him in freakish terms. In a 1968 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, guitarist Mike Bloomfield celebrated Hendrix as a “super spade” and stated that Hendrix deliberately built the threat of rape into the image he’d constructed. The mind boggles; the gag reflexes kick in.
1963, it was just a matter of time.
Understandably, most black musicians turned their backs on that pivotal form of music they
The Beach Boys: Surfin’ USA
created to fashion new forms, such as soul,
The common misconceptions of those skeptical
reggae, disco, and hip-hop. White musicians
of the artistic value of the Beach Boys’ music
would infiltrate all of these forms with some
and the cult it inspired is that the group didn’t
success but failed to take them over as they
show signs of progress until Pet Sounds, and
took over guitar-based rock and roll. As
in the words of Rolling Stone magazine’s Dave
popular as, say, Vanilla Ice or Michael Bolton
Marsh, “Brian Wilson became a Major Artist by
were during their respective fifteen minutes
making music no one outside his own coterie
of fame, no self-respecting music writer would
ever heard” (Marsh was talking about SMiLE).
have ever spoken of them in the same breath as,
This is wholly untrue, and evidence of Wilson’s
say, Snoop Dogg or Sam Cooke. The same could
“Major Artistry” (those are Marsh’s smugly
not be said of, say, the Rolling Stones and Chuck
mocking caps, by the way) is apparent as early
Berry.
as the Beach Boys’ second album, Surfin’ USA.
As new forms of guitar-based rock and roll
For those who don’t think the hit title song
emerged—from heavy metal to punk to
is enough to qualify Wilson as an important
grunge—there was rarely any place for black
artist, there’s “Lonely Sea.” In this one largely
musicians at all.
forgotten ballad is all of the harmonic
Meanwhile, artists such as England’s Rolling
inventiveness and heartfelt pathos that would
Stones would be praised for the “authenticity”
help make Pet Sounds a formidable classic.
of their Chicago-influenced blues and R&B
Unlike Pet Sounds, the arrangement is as
recordings and chastised when experimenting
sparse as could be. Some lightly brushed drums,
with more English idioms on controversial
barely-there bass, and a gently picked, heavily
albums such as Between the Buttons and Their
tremeloed guitar are the only decorations
Satanic Majesties Request. The mind continues
that backdrop Brian’s chilling lead vocal and
to boggle.
the guys’ gossamer harmonies. Gentle vocal
Despite the overwhelming whiteness washing
tracks such as “Farmer’s Daughter” and “Lana”
over rock and roll, 1963’s best albums were
are also excellent, but Surfin’ USA as a whole
still pretty varied. Live albums, proto–concept
suffers from too many pure surf instrumentals,
albums, holiday albums, and the usual singles
and with all due respect to the velvet-voiced
collections all shared space on the shelves. The
Carl Wilson, he was no Dick Dale.
rock LP era had not arrived as a significant artistic and commercial force yet, but as of
22
Above: The Beach Boys on Zuma Beach, 1967 Facing: EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios), where Please
Please Me was recorded
The Beatles: Please Please Me The Beach Boys were innovative, but no band reshaped pop music as radically and peerlessly as the Beatles did. A scruffy quartet from the port town of Liverpool, England, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr got their education from the American soul and C&W records imported into town and honed their skills with marathon performances at home and in Hamburg, Germany. Lennon and McCartney developed a fruitful songwriting partnership with each other and a tremendously creative recordmaking relationship with producer George Martin, who signed them to Parlophone, the branch of EMI Records he ran. Their personal politics of universal love embodied by songs such as “The Word” and “All You Need Is Love” would help shape the current generation’s attitudes and set it in stark relief against their parents’ hawkishness and acceptance of the status quo. So would their personal style of long hair and flamboyant clothing, which blurred established gender roles and made that older generation more than a little uncomfortable. Most importantly for our purposes, the Beatles developed the rock and roll album into a genuine work of art with nearly each of their successive releases (unconsciously at first and then with more acute self-awareness mid-
that year went to number one.
incidental music for the play of the same name.
career). As we shall also see, the disrespectful
Elsewhere, their songwriting genius is already
It may not be exciting, but it does underscore
treatment their albums received in the crucial
budding with the brisk title track with its
the breadth of the band’s eclectic interests and
American market forced the Beatles to revise
coy sexuality and tension-building “come
abilities.
their contract with the American label, Capitol
ons,” Lennon’s first brushes with self-pity
Please Please Me did not change the album
Records, as a veritable Rock and Roll Bill of
(“Misery”) and introspection (“There’s a Place”),
overnight, and its impact in America was
Rights allowing them the control over their LPs
and McCartney’s opening salvo of filthy rock
watered down when Vee-Jay Records lopped
that officially decreed the medium’s artistic
and roll (“I Saw Her Standing There”) and the
off the Capitol single “Love Me Do”/“P.S. I Love
legitimacy.
traditional craftsmanship that would make
You” and released the LP as Introducing . .
Perhaps their first album in the United
it not ridiculous to speak of him in the same
. The Beatles in early 1964. By that point, the
Kingdom, Please Please Me, no longer sounds
breath as Cole Porter or Hoagy Carmichael
Beatles had already taken command of England
as if it is heralding in the most important
(“P.S. I Love You”).
and released their second album there, but
artists of the rock album era, but it must
Rock and roll artists always filled out their
that is more a matter of history than artistry.
have been pretty revelatory in 1963. Their
LPs with covers in those days, but few did
In retrospect, Please Please Me is still a great
combination of pumping Chuck Berry riffs,
it with the imagination of the Beatles. By
album by the greatest album group, and it’s
girl-group harmonies, and a peculiarly English
adapting girl-group and R&B hits such as
hard not to look back on its release as the
use of melody and chord structure was totally
“Boys,” “Chains,” “Baby It’s You,” and “Twist and
dawning of a new era.
original.
Shout” to their four-British-guys-with-guitars
____________________________
Not all of the material is fantastic. “Love Me
format, they made recordings completely
Do” lacks dynamics or an interesting lyric
unlike the originals. Their performances are
33 1/3 Revolutions per Minute: A Critical Trip
or melody. Harmonically, it is as primitive
as committed on the covers as they are on John
Through the Rock LP Era (1955-1999) (Paperback,
as a nursery rhyme, and it most likely went
and Paul’s songs. The Beatles also toy with non-
9781493064595, £31.00) by Mike Segretto publishes
to number one in the United States in 1964
rock material by tackling Bobby Scott and Ric
September 2022.
because nearly everything the Beatles released
Marlow’s “A Taste of Honey,” which began life as
23
MUSIC
Below: The 7-inch single of “Hey Jude”, backed with “Revolution” on the B-side Facing: Sir Paul McCartney performing at the White House, USA, in 2010
Take a sad song... The Emotional Currency of Hey Jude Take A Sad Song: The Emotional Currency of
You have found her . . . now go and get her . . .
Hey Jude (Backbeat, July 2022) dives deeply into the song’s origins, recording, visual
After a winter with his band in India studying
presentation and eventual influence, while also
Transcendental Meditation with the Maharishi
discovering what makes “Hey Jude” a classic
Mahesh Yogi, McCartney has reassessed his
musical expression of personal comfort and
pursuit of fame as a false elixir to his search for
societal unity.
truth in music, drugs, spirituality, and love. He’s especially moved by the Maharishi’s expression,
______________________________
“The heart always goes to the warmer place.” This single maxim seems to underscore his
“I just dive right in and hope for the best. And it
need for the embrace of a loving woman—which
seems to work.”—Paul McCartney, Conversations
leads him to Linda, whom he finds relatable and
with Paul McCartney
comforting, unlike his fiancée, the erudite and driven actress and model, Jane Asher. Beatles
June 1968, sometime around his twenty-sixth
biographer Philip Norman wrote in his 1981
birthday, Paul McCartney is experiencing a rare
Shout!: The Beatles in Their Generation that Linda
convergence of invincibility, romanticism, and
“idolized and pampered him in precisely the way
nostalgia. He’s emerged as arguably the significant
in which Jane had always refused to do. Gripping
figure in the Beatles, the most influential band
his arm, she would gaze at him with awe. She
in the world. As such, he is a spokesman for
would say in his hearing what an honor it would
his generation in rhetoric, comportment, and
be to bear his children.”
creativity. An accomplished, celebrated, and chart-
The career-driven Asher, not yet ready to settle
topping songwriter for his band and others, he is
down into family life, prompts Paul to end their
immersed in London’s art community, helping to
five-year relationship to marry Linda nine months
finance and launch both the Indica Bookshop and
later. The couple will have three children and
Art Gallery as well as an underground newspaper,
be together for twenty-nine years until Linda
the International Times. The Beatles, having spent
succumbs to breast cancer in 1998 at age fifty-six.
the past six years dramatically transforming the
McCartney is talented, famous, successful, and
pop world, recently incorporated their brand
newly in love, a man completely in control of
into Apple Corps with hopes of launching an
his destiny. Much of his success is due to his
egalitarian mixture of music, fashion, film, and
songwriting partnership with bandmate and
technology.
friend of eleven years, John Lennon, who is
Perhaps most important of all, having just
coincidentally leaving his wife of six years,
returned from a trip to the United States to act
Cynthia, to pursue what will soon become a very
as point man for Apple, one of the planet’s most
public affair with thirty- five-year-old Japanese
eligible bachelors consummates a tryst with a
avant-garde artist, Yoko Ono. McCartney’s
twenty-six-year-old
photographer
relationship with Lennon has been simultaneously
named Linda Eastman, whom he had first met
prolific and complicated since their early teens
the previous year. Linda will become the great
and is partly the impetus for the trip he’ll take out
love of his life, and he seems to know it almost
to John’s home in Weybridge this sunny summer
immediately.
day to visit the tattered remnants of his partner’s
American
24
The movement you need is on your shoulder . . .
personal life. No one has endured Lennon’s radical
as he did all the youngsters in his life, including
personality shifts between affection and derision
Ruth, the eight-year-old stepsister from his
more intensely than Paul and Cynthia. McCartney
father’s second marriage, and Linda’s five-year-
Paul had always known how to instinctively
sees in Cynthia the fragility of his cherished
old daughter Heather from a previous marriage.
tap into the muse, whether dreaming his most
rapport with John and, in turn, his band.
Thus, Paul thinks nothing of taking the hour’s
popular song “Yesterday” or drawing from
Cynthia is an indelible link to their younger days
drive from his London home in St. John’s Wood
juvenile memories in the chart-topping “Penny
in Liverpool when it was all out in front of them—
on Cavendish Street to visit Lennon’s abandoned
Lane.” During a previous chauffeured trip, Paul
the adorable, blonde art student who managed
family to “try to cheer them up.”
made small talk with the driver about his busy
to quell his mate’s outwardly rebellious fury
Ostracized from the impenetrable Beatles’ inner
schedule, to which the gentleman sighed that
while he and John were just beginning to unlock
circle for fear contact might upset the always
he’d been working “eight days a week.” It would
the secrets of the beloved music that had given
volatile Lennon, Cynthia and Julian are holed
become the title for the Beatles’ seventh #1 hit.
them purpose and direction. When she became
up in their twenty-seven-room mock-Tudor
Other Beatles classics like “Help,” “Day Tripper,”
pregnant, John did what he felt was right and,
mansion called the Kenwood Estate, the Lennons’
“Drive My Car,” “Norwegian Wood,” “In My Life,”
just before her twenty-third birthday, when he
place of residence since July 1964. The sprawling
“Paperback Writer,” “Eleanor Rigby,” and many
was only twenty-one, he married her.
acreage and suburban refinery exemplifies the
others were begun or finished by the songwriting
Around the same time, Paul was engaged to a
spectacular largesse of the Beatles. During the
duo there.
young woman who also became pregnant and,
band’s halcyon days, Paul and John, as they did
During this particular drive out, Paul might
like John, he believed the honorable thing to do
in their childhood homes in Liverpool, composed
well remember the time when Julian, then only
was to marry her, but fate intervened when she
some of the most beloved and inventive music
four, had shown his dad a drawing he’d made for
had a miscarriage.
of the era in a tiny music room in the attic. Each
school—a fanciful rendering of his schoolmate
trip to Weybridge held the seduction of creativity,
Lucy floating in a sky filled with stars that a
as music always percolated inside McCartney,
teacher had thought looked like diamonds and
incessantly pondering a melody or clever lyrical
entitled, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.” John
aside to share with John when he arrived.
couldn’t wait to show Paul. The two immediately
Don’t carry the world upon your shoulders . . . McCartney had always felt a connection to Cynthia and John’s son, whom he joyfully coddled
took it as a song title and went to work.
25
Below left: McCartney on the set of the Swedish television show Drop-In, 1963 Below right: The book’s cover
“He seeks out political, social and philosophical thinkers, accomplished composers and literary Beat heroes.” However, while Kenwood housed many fond
While George and Ringo ease into suburban life,
term relationships in the dust: Lennon’s six-year
memories for McCartney, for the now-absent
John is envious of his songwriting partner, who has
marriage, which has spanned the struggle and
Lennon, the mansion had come to represent
thrown himself into the international art aesthetic,
rise of the most famous band in the world, and
an upper-middle-class trap, the antithesis of
expanding his innovative and intellectual pursuits
McCartney’s five-year, extremely public, affair with
his humble origins which had inspired his art.
throughout mid-sixties London. McCartney gorges
Asher. And as Paul’s car whirs toward Weybridge,
Subjugated by domesticity and the rigors of
on the electronic musical experiments of Italian
he knows that as much as the two men move
remaining at the top of the pop charts, he was mired
composer Luciano Berio, also studying and later
differently through life’s changes, there is still
in depression, gaining weight, and experimenting
purchasing the surrealist paintings of French artist
an impenetrable, almost mystical bond between
with mind-altering drugs, while Paul and Jane were
René Magritte. He seeks out political, social, and
them that has created some of the most gripping,
the “it” couple of Swinging London, frequenting
philosophical thinkers like Nobel laureate Bertrand
influential, and wildly popular music ever, much
underground clubs, art galleries, and theater
Russell, accomplished composers like playwright
of it filled with themes of longing for true love in
premieres. These contrary, personal lives are best
Lionel Bart, and literary Beat heroes Allen Ginsberg
an infinite search for spiritual connection. That is
expressed in one of the Beatles’ sonic masterworks
and William Burroughs. He is the first of the Beatles
precisely why Paul could see in Julian where he had
that closes their revolutionary Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
to
once been: alone, frightened, and in need of a song.
Hearts Club Band album in the summer of 1967. “A
Stockhausen, introducing his type of experimental
Day in the Life” features Lennon’s dreamy verses
electronic music into the band’s scope.
regurgitating newspaper headlines, war movies,
But now, through his love for Yoko, John will soon
and suburban mundanity in a drugged-out haze,
gain his own entry into the realm of the avant-
Take a Sad Song...: The Emotional Currency of Hey
briefly interrupted by McCartney’s peppy ramble
garde, with renewed creativity and a passion for
Jude (Hardback, 9781493062379, £21.95) by James
into town to be part of the bustle.
the underground. Both men are leaving long-
Campion publishes July 2022.
discover
German
26
composer
Karlheinz
_____________________________
Available to read and download now on Issuu issuu.com/rowmaninternational
New Books Highlights Catalogue
27
MUSIC
Below: Twain, photographed in 1907 Facing (above): Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts at Turku Airport, Finland in 1965 Facing (below):The cover of Issue 19 of
Beggar’s Banquet
Introducing
under their thumb
“I’d like to welcome President Clinton,” Mick
backstage. I’d tell Keith and Ronnie to break a leg,
fall down, now do ya? I had no idea what it meant,
Jagger tells the VIP crowd. “And I see she’s brought
and then I’d visit them after the show. But that’s
but it was impossible to ignore.
her husband.”
not happening tonight. I finagled my way into the
My sister said it was the Rolling Stones. She
The Rolling Stones are at New York’s Beacon
crowd, and the Stones don’t know I’m here.
showed me their album cover, and they looked
Theatre, and Martin Scorsese’s shooting it for
For me, there’s never been a world without the
pretty tough. Like they could definitely beat up the
a documentary. It’s October 29, 2006, and, after
Stones. They came into existence two months
Monkees. Until recently, my sister had listened
decades of drug busts, paternity suits, funerals,
before I did. But I didn’t hear them until I turned
only to “Build Me Up Buttercup” and “I Think I
divorces, rehabs, and chemotherapy, the Stones
ten. To that point, if you didn’t have a Saturday
Love You.” But somehow, in the summer of ’72, she
can still put out. I mean, damn, these guys are
morning TV show, I didn’t know you. The
switched her allegiance from Keith Partridge to
good. But as my eyes and ears fixate on them at
Monkees, The Beatles, and Jackson 5 were the
Keith Richards. She ditched her ‘45s and bought
the Beacon, my mind wanders to another time
only bands I could name. Life changed in 1972,
some Stones albums. One was shaped like a stop
and place.
when an announcement came from my sister’s
sign. Another had a zipper on it. She pointed to
My eyes see Mick onstage, but my mind sees him
bedroom: Everything seems to be ready . . . Are
the blond- haired guy and said he was dead. She
in his house, blotting the orange juice I spilled
you ready? . . . Sorry for the delay. . . .
said the Stones had been busted for drugs, evicted
on his rug. My ears hear Keith Richards plucking
Is everybody ready?
from hotels, and had played at concerts where
“I’m Free,” but my mind hears him offering me
What followed were the strangest words and
people got murdered. I thought my head would
bourbon on his terrace. And Ronnie Wood? I’m
most violent sounds I’d ever heard: I was born in a
explode. The chaotic stories, violent music, and
peeling potatoes with him in his kitchen. I used
crossfire hurricane! And I howled at my ma in the
wild album covers overwhelmed me. But I craved
to pal around with these guys. And if this were
driving rain! Followed by: I think I bust a button
more.
ten or twenty years ago, I’d have begun my night
on my trousers. . . . You don’t want my trousers to
I borrowed the albums and studied them. They
28
contained words I wasn’t allowed to repeat.
I relied on Creem, Rolling Stone, and ’NEW
And while I didn’t understand a phrase like “I
to keep up on the tour. The Stones were a big
laid a divorcée in New York City,” I was certain
story that year, so a lot of outlets jumped on the
it sounded cool and that I wanted to do it. To
bandwagon.
me, the Stones were the most rebellious people
But most of them—local newspapers, local news
on earth, so I instantly became obsessed with
shows—screwed up. They’d miss the Stones’
them.
sarcasm or, worse, get their facts wrong. I
As luck would have it, my sister grew tired of
can’t tell you how many times I’d read that the
the Stones and offered me her albums for a
Stones opened with “Johnny B. Goode” when it
buck apiece. I suddenly had a Stones collection.
was really “Let It Rock.” All I could think was,
When their next album came out, I got sticker
“That guy saw the Stones at the Palladium and
shock. Goats Head Soup cost me $3.48 at
I didn’t?”
Alexander’s Department Store.
The Album Tracks episode is what pushed
The band came to Madison Square Garden in
me over the edge. Album Tracks was a TV
1975, but Mom wouldn’t let me take the subway
show hosted by two DJs from WNBC named
giving you anything TV Guide didn’t, but at
from Brooklyn to Manhattan. I was only 12. I
Lee Masters and Bob Pittman. They featured
least I was accurate.
followed the tour by listening to WNEW and by
a report on the Stones’ ill- fated Altamont
In 1978, there wasn’t a Kinko’s on every corner
scouring the pages of Rolling Stone and Creem.
concert. They said the Stones were performing
and no one had a PC. If youwanted to lay out
I envied the DJs and writers who covered the
“Sympathy for the Devil” when a kid got
a page, you had to do it the hard way: scissors
Stones and desperately wanted their job.
murdered in the crowd, and that the Stones
and glue. “Cut and paste” literally meant to cut
At school, I had no one to share my enthusiasm
have been too scared to perform the song since.
and paste. Typos weren’t deleted, they were
with. The kids in my seventh-grade class were
First of all, if they had watched Gimme Shelter,
covered up by Wite- Out or by powdery stuff
into the Carpenters. My teachers complained
they’d know the kid got stabbed during “Under
called Ko- Rec- Type, which didn’t always work.
about my ratty Stones T- shirts, my dirty long
My Thumb,” not “Sympathy.” Second, if they
A simple page could take you a day. But it meant
hair (patterned after Mick’s), and my semi-
cared the least bit about the Stones, they’d know
that ’zine publishers were extremely passionate
obscene belt buckle (bearing the Stones’ tongue
that “Sympathy” was played plenty of times
people, dedicated to our subjects. We were in it
logo). I was attending yeshiva, the Jewish
after Altamont. I’ve got the bootlegs to prove
for love, not money. I dubbed my ’zine Beggars
version of parochial school, so there was a dress
it. If these guys don’t know the most dramatic
Banquet because I wanted it to be—bear with
code. I broke it every day, but I was a straight- A
scene in Gimme Shelter, I thought, then maybe
me on this—“a banquet of Stones information
student, so they didn’t expel me.
they shouldn’t be rock journalists. (Pittman
that even a beggar could afford.”
When the Stones released their Some Girls
later founded MTV. Masters became president
Back then, copy shops were primarily found on
album in June 1978, I was 15 years old, attending
of the E! channel.) I wrote them a courteous
college campuses. If you didn’t live near one,
public high school. Over the summer, I wore
letter, but got a dismissive response. They said
you had to go to a bank or library. That’s who
that record out. It was as vital as anything
their facts came from a “rock encyclopedia” and
had the copy machines. For 10 cents, you put
from CBGB’s and confirmed the Stones’ take-
that they were sticking to their story.
your library book or bank statement on the
noprisoners attitude. It dripped with sarcasm
I realized I could do a better job than most
glass and, about thirty seconds later, a horrible-
and pissed off Jesse Jackson, women’s groups,
grownups at covering the Stones. And so,
looking copy oozed out. I tried the machine at
and even Lucille Ball.
in September 1978, armed with a borrowed
the Flatlands Avenue bank, but the results
typewriter, I pecked away at the first issue
were illegible. That’s when I remembered my
of my fanzine. It was the week of my 16th
high school’s mimeo room. I knew a student
birthday, and the start of my junior year in
volunteer who had the keys. He snuck me in
high school. Fanzines—or ’zines, for short—
after hours, and we mimeographed a hundred
have been around a long time. But the modern
copies of my three- page issue. All on the Board
version sprouted from the do- it- yourself
of Ed’s dime. When I left school that night with
punk- rock zeitgeist of the late Seventies. ’Zines
my published ’zine, I had no idea what to do
took pride in how crappy they looked, and
next. My hundred copies looked like crap, but
most were handwritten, not typed. Mine was a
at least they smelled great.
combination of both.
____________________________
I had no idea where to print, much less who would read, my little creation, but I didn’t care.
Under Their Thumb: How a Nice Boy from
My primary goal was to report the facts. In my
Brooklyn Got Mixed Up with the Rolling
debut issue, I wrote about Keith’s upcoming
Stones (and Lived to Tell About It) (Paperback,
drug trial and about the band’s upcoming
9781493065080, £22.95) by Bill German publishes
appearance on Saturday Night Live. I wasn’t
August 2022.
29
POPULAR
CULTURE
planet of the apes
who didn’t necessarily visit the cinema much at all. The book’s adaptation to the big screen five years later was certainly a cut above science fiction movies, which, up until that celebrated Charlton Heston vehicle and the same year’s
2001: A Space Odyssey, had tended to be rather schlocky. Even so, its audience was a very different demographic to Boulle’s. The generation who saw its famous ending (the remnants of the Statue of Liberty waist deep in sand) when it still had its shock-factor intact
The Complete History
(i.e., because knowledge of it hadn’t leaked out) were pretty much the same people who attended the four sequels that followed over the next five years. However, by the time a Planet of
the Apes TV series began appearing on screens in 1974, much of its viewership comprised a new cohort who were completely unaware that
Planet of the Apes: The Complete History
it had any kind of precedent. In fact, some of
(Applause, February 2022) explores every aspect
the kids of the era only became cognisant that
of this phenomenon—from books to films,
their favourite telly programme was not a
comic books to television shows, and video
wholly original idea when they purchased the
games to merchandise—providing an overview
contemporaneous Planet of the Apes Marvel
that is truly definitive. Author Sean Egan
comic and found to their bewilderment that
argues that the series has always been marked
the TV show’s starring trio – human astronauts
by thoughtfulness, exploring serious themes
Burke and Virdon and chimpanzee ally Galen
alien to most big budget films.
– were nowhere to be seen: the publication contained adaptations of the movies. What we
In this exclusive article, Egan explains how
now call reboots have occurred in the franchise
and why he set out to write a comprehensive
in 2001 with Tim Burton’s film and from 2011-17
snapshot of the iconic franchise.
with the motion-picture trilogy (Rise of/Dawn
____________________________
Peter Chernin: the parents of the young people
of/War for the Planet of the Apes) produced by who consisted of much of those films’ audiences Everybody knows Planet of the Apes – or thinks
had been the child TV viewers of yore.
they do. But Planet of the Apes is an intellectual
All of this means that a complete history takes
property-cum-franchise that has now been
in a lot of artistic talent and vision. It was
around for six decades and different age-
fascinating to research and write about how
groups have very different first experiences of
so many different people have brought their
it.
individual and idiosyncratic approaches to the
Frenchman Pierre (Bridge on the River Kwai)
Apes concept. Writing a book in the middle of a
Boulle kicked it all off with his 1963 novel
pandemic, though, posed challenges.
La Planète des Singes, setting the stage for
It adversely affected to some degree the
endless permutations of the conceit of humans
procurement of interviews, which are always
who wind up in conflict with preternaturally
an important feature of a work of this kind.
intelligent simians. This inaugural take was
Some people on my interview wish-list declined
quite a highfalutin’ affair that was as much
to participate on the understandable grounds
philosophy and satire as science fiction. As
that they wanted to focus on their families at
such, it would have been read largely by people
this unsettled time. However, I was privileged
30
Facing: Prosthetic makeup design for Roddy McDowell in Planet of the Apes TV series (1974)
to be able to obtain original quotes from several
the case that regular makeup Oscars didn’t then
on a world brutally ruled over by evolved beasts.
key figures in the franchise’s history. Among
exist. However, Burman says, “John was dead
In this new telling, the time is today and the
them were: Linda Harrison, who played the
serious because he knew the scope of this film
simians are ordinary apes whose intelligence is
mute beauty Nova in the first two Planet of the
and he knew if he could pull this off successfully
boosted by an experimental drug. Wyatt points
Apes films and was married to Darryl F. Zanuck,
it would be hard for the Academy to ignore.” It
out, “Real apes don’t actually have the same
the Twentieth Century-Fox executive who gave
was even harder for the Academy to ignore the
anatomy as human beings. Their arms are way
the first film the green light; Tom Burman, part
entreaties of a Fox bigwig. “He got him a special
longer, their torsos are much shorter, all of those
of the team responsible for the revolutionary
Academy Award,” Linda Harrison told me of
things. So there was no way we could actually
prosthetics that made the original Planet of
Zanuck. “Dick did that. He was on the board of
do a Planet of the Apes in the original mould.”
the Apes film quintet so visually stunning; and
the Academy Awards and when Dick believes
Instead, Wyatt and his team were responsible
Rupert Wyatt, director of Rise of the Planet
in somebody, he makes things happen. He had
for bringing to the franchise stunningly lifelike
of the Apes, the first instalment of the latest,
that authority.” Zanuck’s intervention to secure
Computer-Generated Imagery. Wyatt only knew
mega-successful Apes series.
Chambers an Honorary Award for Outstanding
in post-production what the simians cooked up
When working on the ‘68 Apes movie, Tom
Makeup Achievement raises issues of propriety,
by New Zealand special-effects company Weta
Burman answered to John Chambers, a “genius”
not least because, the previous year, lobbying
Digital would look like on screen. He recalled to
(Harrison’s word) who by the time of Planet of
by Fox had managed to get the studio’s badly
me of the first evidence Weta provided him of
the Apes had already devised an iconic prosthetic
received flop Doctor Dolittle an eyebrow-raising
their intentions when it came to transforming
in the form of Mr. Spock’s ears. Burman told me
nomination for Best Picture. However, few would
actor Andy Serkis into central character Caesar:
of Chambers, “He came in and picked up the
dispute Harrison’s observation of Chambers and
“It was Caesar behind the bars in the ape
script. That was on a Friday. On Monday, as I
Planet of the Apes, “It was groundbreaking and
sanctuary watching one of the handlers walk
was walking out of the makeup department, I
without Johnny it couldn’t have been made.”
past his cage. It literally looked like they’d taken
see John drive up and get out of his car, waving
With the Chernin trilogy, a whole new approach
Andy’s eyes physically out of his skull and put
for me to come to him. He said, ‘It’s you and
was required. The idea of using actors in
them into a shot and made him into an ape. It
me, Tommy.’ He held up the script, and I saw
prosthetics foundered on the fact that apes in
was unbelievable. It was the thing that made
the title: Planet of the Apes. Then he said, ‘I’m
this narrative are not the simians of previous
everybody just take a breath and realize that we
going to win the Academy Award.’” Some might
projects, wherein humans had been catapulted
actually had the possibility of making a really
have assumed Chambers to be joking, it being
through time and/or space to find themselves
strong film.”
31
There have been Planet of the Apes chronologies before, some of them very good. I like to think that this book offers something new in terms of completeness, and not just because it unusually covers the property right from the beginning to present day. I considered it vital that a proper examination of the Apes phenomenon should fully explore some things that normally get relegated to passing mention. For instance, the Planet of the Apes merchandise craze that raged in the middle of the 1970s was the very first time that people bought in huge number toys, utilities and souvenirs simply because they were plastered with imagery related to their favourite media property of the moment. Those who assume that it was Star Wars that turned ancillary product from a side issue into a phenomenon have simply not taken into account the simian tsunami that preceded it by several seasons. As merchandise has now become a key part of the financing and marketing of motion pictures, it seemed only right to devote an entire chapter and more to the subject. Comics is a key branch of the Planet of the Apes tree that also merits protracted attention, in this case because the notion of ‘expanded universe’ – as seen subsequently in the thousand-and-one novels and comics tied in to other media properties – was partly created by the stories that appeared in Marvel’s publication, where the adaptations of the original movies sat alongside new and hugely imaginative tales set in the Apes universe devised by Doug Moench, one of the Seventies’ most original comics scriptwriting talents. (I also had the pleasure of interviewing Doug.) Additionally covered to a far greater degree than usual is the subject of novelisations. The book-of-the-film is a market that barely exists anymore, but in a world prior to video recorders – let alone streaming – people who wanted to re-experience the Sixties and Seventies Planet of the Apes films could only do so via prose adaptations. Ditto for the two Seventies TV shows. (There was a 1975 animated series,
Return to the Planet of the Apes, which veered Above (top): Planet of the Apes Magazine, Volume 1
between thoughtful and buffoonish). Some of
Above (bottom): Charlton Heston, star of Planet of
these books are surprisingly good, numbering
the Apes (1968), at a Civil Rights March in 1963
acclaimed SF writers among their authors.
Facing (left): The book’s cover Facing (right): The lead cast of the Planet of the Apes television series: James Naughton as Burke and Ron Harper as Virdon
32
Planet of the Apes is such a long-running and wide-ranging phenomenon that the potential audience for a book about it is correspondingly large. Not only does it encompass several different generations, but it includes cineastes, science fiction fans, comics readers, the nostalgic and the curious. Happily, the book has already received significant UK print coverage, garnering four-star reviews in Total Film (leading movie magazine) and SFX (a glossy sci-fi monthly devoured by the types who flock to Marvel superhero films). It was also named Book of the Month in Yours Retro (nostalgiathemed offshoot of women’s magazine Yours). Reviews and ratings on Goodreads and Amazon have so far been largely positive. The Planet of the Apes saga continues: a new film is in preparation as we speak. No doubt, this and other projects will necessitate an update of my book in future years, but that goes with the territory when it comes to relentlessly successful and expanding franchises. For the time being, Planet of the Apes: The Complete
History hopefully serves as a comprehensive snapshot of what is and what has been in Apes-land, and will satisfy the thirst for more knowledge on the part of those people who have experienced its many and varied iterations. ____________________________ Planet of the Apes: The Complete History (Paperback, 9781493057252, £20.95) by Sean Egan publishes February 2022.
33
POPULAR
CULTURE
STORY MODE
to do to survive and prosper materially, and the truly impractical life of the mind is the place where this recreation takes place when people are unsuited to or uninterested in physical play. And so the poetry, novels, and games that occupy the mind and shock the
Video Games and the Interplay between Consoles and Culture
productive conscience proliferate even as they are attacked by their cultural and moral critics. These attacks have roots that are millennia old. In his Republic, written around 325 BC, the Greek philosopher Plato recounts a dialogue involving his teacher Socrates in which Socrates explains why poetry needs to be heavily censored in any perfect state. Plato and Socrates are, as is typical, on the same page about this, and much of current cultural critique takes its inspiration from these two ancient philosophers, particularly concerning “imitation.” For both philosophers, imitation is a philosophical problem because it cannot fully
Video games are now and have always
replicate the model it means to reproduce. Even
been on the cultural defensive. From their
if I take an ideal chair as a model for my attempt
introduction in the home through the Atari
to build a chair as an untrained carpenter,
2600, they have been viewed as a waste of time
for instance, the latter will not live up to the
or a frivolity. Further back, they served as the
former—neither in function nor appearance.
fun counterpart to the real computational
Similarly, Plato and his teacher tell us, the poet
revolution—Deep Blue, the famous early
or author’s imitations of reality cannot live
supercomputer that took on chess grandmaster
up to the model of truth. Since a young mind
Garry Kasparov, may have been playing a game,
“takes the impression that one wishes to stamp
but the match counted for industrial, political,
upon it,” any sort of lie that could influence
and, most importantly, economic stakes; your
those young minds away from truth should not
average game of Pong did not. The intelligence
be told.
that could be marshaled by supercomputers
In the typical nature of a Socratic dialogue, the
promised advances in automation, calculation,
question-and answer cadence regarding truth
and efficiency, after all. In comparison, the
and representation leads us down the road very
gaming that invaded the home and arcade
quickly to “a censorship over our storytellers.”
marketplace might have had profit-making
And if this all sounds a bit antiquated to you,
potential for its creators, but it was ultimately
maybe Socrates’s reasoning will sound a bit
considered a pastime in the tradition of whist
more contemporary. He argues that stories
or charades—unremarkable at best, actively
should be sanitized and free of satire or
distracting and trivializing at worst.
ambiguity because “the young are not able to
But there’s more to the story than productivity
distinguish what is and what is not allegory.”
and profit when it comes to cultural and social
This line of thinking—that children won’t or
impact. Indeed, the consistent presence of
can’t distinguish between fantasy and reality—
cultural objects that are in and of themselves
is what drives almost all reactive critique
unproductive has been a fact of life throughout
against media, from Fredric Wertham’s screed
recorded
need
against comic books in The Seduction of the
recreation to balance the daily work they have
Innocent to Jack Thompson’s decades-long
history.
Human
beings
34
Above: The book’s cover Facing (top): The Super Nintendo Entertainment System sold almost 50 million units globally Facing (bottom): Dedicated Pong consoles made their way to various countries, like this Russian console named Турнир
laser focused on efficiency and production, and the embarrassment over the frivolity of leisure hasn’t entirely disappeared. As a result, gaming is typically seen as frivolous and inessential, and although it certainly is unproductive in a real sense, there is no reason to abandon gaming as a toxic dead end without exploring both its history and its potential as a cultural medium uniquely receptive to its audience. If we are to imagine alternative political worlds from a progressive and, yes, leftist perspective, the simultaneity of reception, critique, and revision that is taking place in gaming today provides the best place to think beyond the seemingly impossibly firm limits of our political and cultural present. Because imitation doesn’t always erode the model from which it draws, it also can surpass it as well. I try to prove this point by considering the ways that famous gaming series have changed over time as they initially make their claims, are taken in by a mass of fans who interpret those claims in their own ways, and are finally reimagined, the later entries in the series doing their own form of imitative reproduction of the earlier. This feedback process of productioncampaign against video games. Most recently,
accompanies the Platonic concerns does not
Thompson could have been paraphrasing Plato
mean that right-wing or traditionalist politics
and Socrates when in 2018 he said of a recent
are straying away from video games; to the
mass shooting, “What happens in the case of
contrary, video games as a genre are becoming
heavy users of video games is that when they
more and more reactionary as time goes on,
have the virtual reality taken from them, they
representing or misrepresenting reality in
will set out to make it real reality.
service of paranoia and power as opposed to
So we see our cultural critics from 325 BC
progressivism or distancing. This is important,
and AD 2018 both insisting that the reality we
too, because although we’ve given a lot of
live in can and will be tainted by the imitated
time to how imitation is viewed by its critics,
realities we consume and also that only morally
imitation is also the only way to imagine better
and factually true media can instruct us and
or different realities. That these realities
aid our journeys as productive citizens. Video
could be imagined in both a progressive and a
games and television, even more than novels,
reactionary sense is something that hasn’t been
poems, films, or plays, fall directly into this
given enough attention by people who want to
critique: dangerous fluff that by virtue of their
understand the cultural potential of games:
ubiquitous, everyday presence in our lives
the future of video games isn’t necessarily
hides the nature of the world from us more
the homogeneity of reactionary patriotism
effectively than any previous entertainment
and fear. There are paths that we have yet to
technology.
imagine the medium taking.
This distrust has not, of course, curbed their
Story Mode aims to try to imagine those paths
popularity, and video games enjoy increasing
yet traveled and provide a progressive audience
relevance in our current moment as Twitch
a reason to care about a medium that is so often
streaming, e-sports celebrities like Ninja and
given over to angry young white men in popular
FaZe Clan, and the rise of digital downloads
media. Though we’ve come a long way from
make video games more popular and more
puritanical valuations of “hard work” as a
accessible than ever. But the moral panic that
virtue in and of itself, self-care culture is still
35
reception-reproduction is one that I think is unique to serialized media, and the length of time that some of these properties cover makes video games in particular of great interest to this analysis. The Final Fantasy series, one of our objects here, is thirty-three years old and counting; the genre of the battle royale shooter, our youngest and most diverse group of games by far, is at its youngest, seven years old already. A lot of time has passed between the earliest games in this book and the most recent, and that has allowed these series to change, often in dramatic ways, from their original projects. How we view their politics and aesthetics— which are, to my mind, political in and of themselves—is changing, and how we might work to influence them in the future is what the book strives to answer. ______________________________
Story Mode: Seattle, Video Games and the Interplay
between
Consoles
and
Culture
(Hardback, 9781633886803, £20.95) by Trevor Strunk publishes January 2022.
PSYCHOLOGY
Introducing
duped
Duped: Why Innocent People Confess – and Why
“Professor Kassin, I’m a producer for ABC News.
to interpret. “It’s the Central Park jogger,” she
We Believe Their Confessions (Prometheus, July
We’re working on a story about an old case
said.
2022) reveals how innocent men, women, and
and wonder if you’d be willing to look at some
Seldom in life am I rendered speechless. This
children, intensely stressed and befuddled by
videotaped confessions for us.” Intrigued, I
was one of those times. I was disoriented. Taking
lawful weapons of psychological interrogation,
asked what case they were investigating. “I can’t
stock, I said nothing. I just kept hearing the echo
are induced into confession, no matter how
tell you,” she said.
in my head: Central Park jogger.
horrific the crime. Starting in the 1980s, author
Scrambling to transition from summer to fall,
On the night of April 19, 1989, a twenty-eight
Dr. Saul Kassin pioneered the scientific study
and too busy to play games, I explained that I
year-old investment banker named Trisha Meili,
of interrogations and confessions. Since then,
had no time to make a blank-check commitment
a Wellesley graduate with two master’s degrees
he has been on the forefront of research and
to a new project. I repeated my question: “What’s
who worked on Wall Street, was intercepted
advocacy for those wrongfully convicted by
the case?”
while jogging, violently beaten, dragged through
police-induced false confessions.
Pushing back, she explained that they were
grass into a ravine, raped, tied up with her own
_____________________________
working on an exclusive story about a highly
shirt, and left for dead in a puddle of mud inside
visible crime from the past and did not want
Central Park, Manhattan’s rambling green
It was a September morning in 2002. I was
word of it to get out. “Can you keep this
wilderness. Her skull was fractured; her brain
preparing for a new semester of psych classes
confidential?” she asked.
was swollen; her left eye was crushed; she had
at Williams College, in western Massachusetts,
Sure, I said, no problem. “What case?” The
lost several pints of blood. When she emerged
when the phone on my desk rang.
producer paused—the kind of pause that’s hard
from a coma one week later, she had no memory
36
Left: Police in Montpellier, France
of what had happened.
Below: The book’s cover
Coming at a time when crack cocaine had become epidemic, violent crime rates were soaring, and racial tensions were peaking, this incident marked an “enough is enough” moment in the city’s history. Local papers were ablaze with headlines like “Nightmare in Central Park!” Amid the uproar, NYPD detectives solved the crime, or so it seemed. Within seventy-two hours, they announced that five teenagers, ages fourteen to sixteen, of black and Hispanic descent, had confessed. Each boy implicated himself and the others; their stories were detailed; four of the confessions were on videotape for everyone to see. Case closed. I had followed this story closely at the time. Hell, I am a native New Yorker, born and raised in Brooklyn, then in a beach town in Queens. Like everyone else, I grew up riding the subway into the Bronx for Yankees baseball and into Manhattan for everything else. For me, Central Park was a rectangular green oasis to escape the city grid for demonstrations, festivals, rock concerts, and the best hot pretzels in town. I had left the city for graduate school at the University of Connecticut in 1974. But in the
five detailed confessions, four on tape, taken
hypothesis. Reinvestigating the case, however,
ensuing years, I went on to get my PhD in social
in Manhattan in the Central Park Precinct,
the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office
psychology and develop a particular interest
recorded by an assistant district attorney, at a
questioned Reyes and discovered that he could
in the interrogation tactics that police use to
time when the whole world was watching.
recount accurate yet previously unknown facts
get confessions—sometimes, shockingly—from
Based
about the assault.
innocent people. Four years before the jogger
uncorroborated by any other evidence, and in
Reyes was able to explain, for example, why
case broke, Larry Wrightsman and I wrote an
fact contradicted by DNA testing of the rape kit,
the jogger had no keys to her locked apartment
article critical of these tactics and the hazard
which excluded all five boys, Antron McCray,
when she was found. Reyes said he took her
of false confessions. In fact, we proposed a
Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond
keys, as he did with his other victims, so he
taxonomy that distinguished between three
Santana, and Korey Wise were tried in 1990,
could break into her apartment. Failing to get
different types of false confessions.
convicted, and sent to prison. This horrific case
her address, he tossed the keys into bushes
This was who I was—New Yorker, research
was all but settled—not only as a matter of law
nearby.
psychologist, and falseconfession expert—
but for the city’s peace of mind.
He also said he was able to sneak up on her
when the ABC news producer rendered me
All that began to unravel for me in the fall of
because she was wearing headphones and
speechless on the phone. Even after I regained
2002 when ABC disrupted my sense of balance
listening to music. Having suffered traumatic
my mental footing, all I could say was, “The
with word that this case was coming back
head injuries, the jogger was amnesic for the
Central Park jogger case, really? What about
into the news. What happened at that time,
entire episode, so in 1989 no one knew to ask
it?”
thirteen years later, that no one saw coming,
about this. After Reyes, the DA interviewed her,
I’m not sure anyone on the planet is more
was that Matias Reyes, a serial offender known
and she confirmed that she used to listen to
inherently critical than I am of police-induced
as the “East Side Rapist,” stepped forward
music through headphones when she ran.
confessions. I am hardly naive. And I will
from prison. Serving a life sentence for three
Then there was the DNA, the evidence that
admit that this case gnawed at me at the time.
rapes and a murder committed after and near
clinched it: the semen samples originally
Something wasn’t right. Then again, I thought,
the jogger attack, Reyes contacted the DA’s
recovered from Meili’s body, clothing, and
this was not a single isolated admission of
office out of the blue to assert that he was the
socks— which had excluded the boys as
guilt allegedly taken in some back alley by
Central Park jogger rapist and that he’d acted
donors—unequivocally belonged to Reyes. The
some small-town sheriff in the middle of
alone. Some suggested that Reyes was just
only semen found on Meili was his.
nowhere when no one was watching. This was
clamoring for attention—not an unreasonable
solely
on
these
37
confessions,
why would an innocent person confess to a crime?
Duped: Why Innocent People Confess – and Why
myths and misconceptions: (1) “I’d never confess to
“stay in their lane,” cite evidence, not allegation,
We Believe Their Confessions (Prometheus, July
a crime I did not commit” – yes you would, and (2)
and most of all, admit that they don’t know what
2022) reveals how innocent people are induced
“I’d know a false confession is I saw one” – no you
they don’t know.
into false confession.
wouldn’t. NOW:
In this exclusive interview, author Saul Kassin
NOW:
You also explain early in the book that false
PhD explains why this shockingly common
In your introduction, you mention that the ‘Netflix
confessions are a universal phenomenon. Are there
phenomenon continues to be a problem across
true crime’ trope of blending fact and fiction makes
are any nations or regions where you’ve found that
the planet - and could happen to you.
you uneasy. What issues do you feel this trend
false confessions are more common, however? If so,
raises?
why do you think this is?
Kassin:
Kassin:
We live in a time where people get to choose the
There is a long history—in China, for example,
Kassin:
reality that aligns with their beliefs. For this reason,
and other totalitarian regimes, of forcing false
As embedded in its subtitle, Duped is about two
it is important for scientey6and policy makers to
confessions on camera for political purposes.
NOW: Could you sum up Duped in a couple of sentences?
38
Setting aside these kinds of cases, it is clear that
Below: Yusef Salaam of the Central Park Five in 2009, seven years after his conviction
whenever and wherever criminal justice records
was vacated. Credit: By Thomas Good - Next Left Notes (Own work by uploader), CC BY-SA
have been kept, false confessions are documented (prominent examples include but are not limited
3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6826839 Left (facing): A nineteenth century English courtroom in Nottingham, United Kingdom, now preserved as a museum
to the US, England, Canada, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Slovakia, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, China, and Japan). As to why false confessions are universal, I’m tempted to offer up the simplest explanation: Human nature. NOW: Your book is rigorous and far-reaching but also easy-to-read and understand. Was approachability important to you as you put Duped together? Kassin: Alongside
accuracy,
approachability
was
everything to me. I’ve published in technical scientific journals on this subject for over forty years (my first ever publication with the word “confession” in the title was in 1980). Thanks to DNA exonerations and psychological research, we know so much more now that it’s high time we raise public awareness so that people can protect
Kassin:
theorizing and collecting and analyzing data in
themselves and their loved ones.
Believe it or not, the enforcement community,
the lab than getting involved in other people’s
like the rest of us, does not think like one
lives.
NOW:
homogeneous group. In fact, some of the most
You mention a certain indifference to false
effective advocates for reform in the UK are, and
Then I started to work on those cases I write
confessions amongst some you’ve spoken to, borne
always been, police investigators. They get it –
about. And I talked to innocent people who had
out of a misguided belief that false confessions are
and they’ve developed approaches that are more
confessed, and I brought them into the classroom
only extracted from certain people. Why do you
effective, without the same risks.
to meet with my students, and I met their friends and families, and before I knew it their
feel that such a belief pervades across the planet? That said, the situation is far different in the US,
heart wrenching stories were inspiring research
Kassin:
where I have sparred my whole adult life with
ideas I would not have generated on my own. I
People can understand how a child or intellectually
police interrogators—and especially those who
don’t overstate this when I say that some of my
impaired adult might be induced to confess to a
train them. Their argument used to be, “false
best theorizing and research was born of their
crime they did not commit. People also understand
confessions don’t happen.” Now their arguments
tragedies.
that they could be
are more nuanced, more defensive.
coerced through beatings
NOW:
or threats of harm and punishment. What the average smart person does not understand is the
NOW:
The degree to which American police officers are
psychological whiplash produced by a modern day
The plights of those you profile in Duped are heart-
allowed to openly lie to force false confessions
and how they too, smart adults, can be duped into
breaking and mind-boggling in equal measure. Is
(for example insisting that somebody failed a
a false confession.
it this human side to false confessions – and the
polygraph) is genuinely shocking. Do you think
tragic chaos that they create – that has motivated
there’s any realistic hope of such tactics being
you to keep researching them for so long?
made illegal in the US over the coming years? This
NOW:
is a great question. The average American HAS NO
You’ve been actively researching and questioning false confessions for several decades. Have you
Kassin:
IDEA that police are allowed to flat out lie to them
run into any active resistance or hostility from
This question makes me smile. When I was in
about evidence—claiming, for example, to have
law enforcement individuals or organisations in
graduate school, I rejected the option to gain
their fingerprints, DNA, or surveillance footage
that time?
clinical experience. I was more comfortable
from the crime scene. It’s what makes this form
39
of trickery so devastating. I mean SO DEVASTATING
of what I don’t know and how my perceptions, like
It is now being used in other countries, including
that it not only can lead innocent people to confess
everyone else’s, can be tainted by strong beliefs,
Australia, New Zealand, Norway, and parts of Canada.
but it can brainwash them into questioning their
police too often are trained to believe that they
In the U.S., slowly but surely, PEACE is starting to
own innocence and creating false memories.
have superhuman abilities—for example, that they
break the ice.
can tell when someone is lying—something they The US Supreme Court rules in 1969 that this tactic
cannot do any better than the rest of us. And that in
NOW:
is permissible. That was over fifty years ago—before
a nutshell is where the problems begin.
You close your book by reflecting on your newfound
thousands of wrongful convictions were discovered,
‘bottom up’ approach – that of raising public
before the science of false confessions was in place.
NOW:
awareness over influencing policy from the top. Do
Yet the Court has not revisited the issue. The good
Your book suggests reforms which could reduce the
you have any other plans for 2022 – or perhaps even
news is, state legislatures are finally starting to get
prevalence of false confessions, including the PEACE
further ahead - to help spread awareness of forced
it. In 2021, the states of Illinois and Oregon – for the
system used in UK policing. Could you summarise
false confessions?
first time – banned this type of police deception in
what the system is and why it has been so effective,
cases involving juveniles. Now similar legislation is
please? Why do you think some are resistant to the
Kassin:
working its way through other states. In February,
system in the US?
In an article for the American Psychologist, I wrote
for example, I will testify in Colorado on this point.
to my colleagues in psychology: “It is short-sighted
Stay tuned. Finally, FINALLY, there is movement to
Kassin:
to spend years addressing a problem of concern,
outlaw this dangerous tactic.
In the 1990s, after some alarming high-profile false
getting funded, designing experiments, analyzing
confessions, police officers in England and Wales
data, and publishing in journals, only to stop short of
NOW:
teamed up with research psychologists and other
serving as a spokesperson when it matters most. If
A recurring theme running through the cases you
academics to develop interview techniques that were
psychologists do not speak up, that void will be filled
cover is that of police intimidation and manipulation.
non-coercive, ethical, and transparent. All sessions
by others less informed.”
Do you believe that, generally, individual police
had to be recorded; the sessions were no longer
officers are to blame for this misuse of power, or is it
called “interrogations.”
more of a structural problem?
This book is now my best effort to date at raising public awareness. Although I used to approach the
The main objective is build a rapport and allow that
news media selectively and with caution, I’ve come
Kassin:
suspect to give their account of events uninterrupted,
to see now that the effects can be transformative.
This is the unanswerable million-dollar question.
before presenting evidence of inconsistencies or
In January 2021 I wrote an op-ed article for the NY
I am not a mind reader so I cannot crawl into the
contradictions. The goal is to gather information
Times on why police should be banned from lying
brains and hearts of detectives who bully and con
about the crime and solve it, not necessarily by
about evidence. With that article as a guiding light,
innocent people into confessions—and then don’t
confession. In the words of one former police officer
two states have already passed legislation and others
turn back no matter what new evidence comes
I know who trains in PEACE methods, “You’d be
now consider it.
forward.
amazed at how much people will tell you when you
My default, always, is to give the individual police
are nice to them.”
Now as a result of this book, I am better armed and
officers the benefit of the doubt and to blame their
more motivated than ever to speak out.
training. Like the rest of us, they are human. Yet
While it started in England and Wales, PEACE was
while my training in psych makes me acutely aware
soon adopted in Scotland and Northern Ireland.
40
NOW: Are there any cases you’ve contributed to (whether included in the book or not) over the course of your career that you’re particularly proud of? Kassin: In 1985, my colleague Larry Wrightsman and I proposed a taxonomy of three types of false confessions. The third type we drew from the 1976 case of Peter Reilly, described in the book. As a result of a deep dive into his case, we proposed that sometimes innocents not only confess but come to believe in their own culpability, a form of brainwashing. Scientific research on false memories followed and other similar cases became apparent. I am proud of having extracted this important concept, which I later tested in the lab, from Peter’s case. Years later, he visited my class; we now talk regularly. In 2002, thirteen years after the infamous Central Park jogger case, new evidence revealed the actual rapist (discussed in Chapter 1). Yet NYC newspapers had not reframed the narrative. For all the attention the boys got at conviction, the city’s news media did not seem convinced now of these men were innocent. I published my first article for the NY Times titled “False Confessions and the Jogger Case” a few weeks before they were exonerated. I’ve spent twenty years since that time explaining this case to lay people who were fixated on their original convictions. This case has such historic and symbolic value in the US, for so many reasons, that I am pleased with the role I have played in helping to raise public awareness. I’ve intervened in other cases as well, some of which are discussed in the book (e.g., Anthony Wright, Juan Rivera, Marty Tankleff, Joe Buffey, Huwe Burton). What I am proudest of in these cases is that I have studied not only why innocent people confess but then why their confessions are so persuasive. This work has added a necessary layer to the
Above: The full-page advertisement was taken out by Donald Trump in the May 1, 1989,
conversation, enabling prosecutors, judges, lawyers,
issue of the Daily News, calling for the death penalty in response to the Central
etc. to understand how it is that they too were duped. ________________________________
Park Five case Facing: Dr. Kassin in 2020 Scan the QR Code below to read Dr. Kassin’s New York Times article, ‘It’s Time for Police to Stop Lying to Suspects’.
Duped: Why Innocent People Confess – and Why We Believe Their Confessions (Hardback, 9781633888081, £22.95) by Saul Kassin PhD publishes July 2022.
41
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