It's almost 20 years now since renowned English figure sculptor and death mask creator Nick Reynolds (1962-) - the son of a Great Train Robber who provides harmonica on The Sopranos opening theme tune Woke Up This Morning - indelibly linked journalist and writer Will Self with manual portable typewriters. Reynolds produced Self (A Portrait of Will Self), placing a sculpture of the writer's head on top of an Olivetti Studio 42 typewriter. Oddly enough, however, it was not until 2004 that Self abandoned modern technology to start writing fiction on his late mother's US-bought pistachio Olivetti Lettera 22 portable.
This is not a death mask; Self is, at the age of 53, still very much alive and kicking - and he continues to extol the virtues of portable typewriters, while revealing further sound reasons for his return to manual typing.
These began to emerge in print with an item titled "End of the Typewriter", which Self typed in the week following the decision by Brother to stop production of electronic "wedge" typewriters in Wrexham in November 2012. Self's article appeared in the London Times Life section.
"It saddens me that Brother has packed up shop," Self wrote, "but the last typewriter to roll
off its very truncated production line was an electric model. I did enjoy the
strange ultrasonic hum of my mother’s Brother electric in the 1970s, but while I
may have begun typing at around this time, when I first began to seriously
produce fiction on a typewriter it was on a manual — my by-then late mother’s
own Olivetti Lettera 22, which she brought with her from the US when she
emigrated in the late 1950s. [Self's mother was Elaine Adams (née Rosenbloom), from Queens, New York City, who worked
as a publisher's assistant; she died of lung cancer at Easter 1988, a week short of her 67th birthday. In 1959 Adams married Peter Self, later a town planning professor at the Australian National University; he died in Canberra in 1999, aged 80.]
"I switched to working on a manual typewriter in
2004 (all my previous books had been composed either on an Amstrad word
processor or more sophisticated computers), because I could see which way the
electronic wind was blowing: dial-up Internet connections were being replaced by
wireless broadband, and it was becoming possible to find yourself seriously
distracted by the to and fro between email, web surfing, buying reindeer-hide
oven gloves you really didn’t need — or possibly even looking at films of people
doing obscene things with reindeer-hide oven gloves.
"The polymorphous perversity
of the burgeoning web world, as a creator of fictions, seriously worried me - I
could see it becoming the most monstrous displacement activity of all time."
At the time this article was published, Self told an interviewer, "I’ve gone back to using a typewriter for the first draft. It forces
you to think. Instead of going, 'She wore a red dress. Wait, that’s banal, I’ll
make it purple or green ...' you think, 'Right, what colour was her dress?' It
brings order back into your mind." He also rephrased his own story, crediting the typewriter with thwarting procrastination. "My move into typewriters exactly coincided
with broadband," he says. "If you work on a computer you could be watching porn
or buying some reindeer oven gloves or whatever. Disable the Internet, that’s my
advice [to budding writers]."
Now Self has gone a little deeper into the appeal typewriters hold for him, raising the questions in the headline above in his Diary in the London Review of Books earlier in the month.
Self wrote (American readers may not know that a "perv" is slang for an erotic glance or look):
When I was a child I perved over my mother’s typewriters; first, her
beautiful olive green Olivetti Lettera 22 with American keys, then later her IBM
golfball electric which seemed to explode into kinesis if you touched it. I
picked up an ancient Underwood of my own in a junk shop and used it to hammer
out comedic plays. By the time I wanted to write less childish things, my mother
had died, and since she’d been a relatively early adopter I’d inherited her
primitive Amstrad PCW 9512 word processor. I wrote my first five books (and
plenty of journalism) on that machine and thought it perfectly adequate to the
task, but then in the mid-1990s its printer packed up. I invested in a proper PC
that could connect to the Internet with a loud noise of whistling timpani,
suggestive of Alberich forging the ring of the Nibelung. I didn’t find this too
much of a distraction, because I only used the Internet to file my journalistic
copy.
In general I thought computers unlovely things, their functionalist
design yet more evidence of the worrying convergence between the British built
environment of the period and all the actual - as opposed to virtual - desktops
it aspired to encapsulate. As for the computer screen that is nowadays ever
before us, I can recall perfectly the primitive holotype with its horse-trough
depth and greenish luminescence; surely its lineal descendants’ capacity to
display almost infinite imagery has resulted in this unintended consequence: a
leeching of aesthetic interest or engagement; the duff skeuomorphic icons
denoting folders and programs have encroached, rendering all local space planar.
‘And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together; and every
mountain and island were moved out of their places.’ Sometimes, if I worked for
too long without a break, when I turned away from the screen the blinking cursor
would go with me, and hover, heralding, above an ashtray or a mug. Naturally I
desired computers - who didn’t? Shinier ones, smaller ones, slimmer ones, more
powerful ones; the problem was I didn’t really know what to do with their myriad
emergent capabilities. So, during this period I reserved my perving for
notebooks and propelling pencils, Post-it notes and file cards.
Then, in 2004, I was invited to contribute to a project in Liverpool:
the artists Neville Gabie and Leo Fitzmaurice had persuaded Liverpool Housing
Action Trust, the body responsible for dynamiting the city’s council high-rises
and rehousing their tenants, to let them have a number of flats in a 22-storey
block in Kensington, up the road from Lime Street Station. The idea was that
various artists, writers and so on would take up occupancy for a period of
months. I was allocated a flat on the 21st floor with astonishing views across
the Mersey and all the way to Snowdonia, 70 miles distant. I didn’t have
any firm ideas on what I was going to write about in my strange new atelier, but
I knew I wanted to mediate living in the building, since the remaining tenants –
perhaps a hundred or so, in a street-in-the-sky that had once housed five times
that number - were being encouraged to get involved. For some time an urge had
been growing in me to write on a manual typewriter. I didn’t know why exactly
but it felt a strangely inappropriate lust, possibly a form of gerontophilia. I
disinterred my mother’s old Olivetti, dusted it off, and resolved to type my
daily word count, Blu-Tack the sheets to the scarified wallpaper of my Liverpool
gaff, and invite the other residents up to view them. This I duly did. I found
working on the Olivetti indecently pleasurable. I can’t touch-type; even so, my
stick fingers produced satisfying percussive paradiddles, in between which came
blissful fermatas, devoid of electronic whine and filled instead with the sough
of the wind on the windows, down the liftshaft, and wheedling through the
Vent-Axias. The new instrument altered my playing style: instead of bashing out
provisional sentences, as I would on a computer, the knowledge that I would have
to re-key everything caused me to stop, think, formulate accurately, and then
type.
It was laborious to begin with, and I had the nagging suspicion that, as so often in the past (I feel confident many will identify), I was seeking a technological fix for a creative problem. But I persisted, and after I’d completed the story in Liverpool (it’s called ‘161’ and appeared in my collection Dr Mukti and Other Tales of Woe), I wrote my next book entirely on the Olivetti. In retrospect, although the decision to revert to a redundant writing technology may have been prompted by the valetudinarian tower block, there was an underlying and more significant cause: wireless broadband had been installed in our house, and now whenever I was writing I was only a few finger-flicks away from all the pullulating distractions of the web. Much later I began to understand why exactly the new technology was so inimical to writing fiction, but to begin with my revulsion was instinctive: and I recoiled from the screen - straight into the arms of Shalom Simons. I’m not quite sure how I acquired Shalom, but as soon as I had him I began to worry about losing him. He must’ve been in his late 50s then (he’s 69 now), and while he’s never spoken of retiring, he has in recent years conceded: ‘I’m not looking for work.’ Apparently there is one other like him in Surbiton, but I’ve never been tempted to make overtures; Shalom seems curiously antagonistic towards this nameless conspecific. I suppose it’s the cosmic irony one would expect; just as the nanny and the Billy that Shem selected to preserve their goatish lineage probably butted and bored each other all the way into his father’s ark, so the last two typewriter repairmen in London are wholly antipathetic. [Simon is a typewriter engineer based at 36 Morland Road, Harrow, Middlesex.]
Over the decade Shalom and I have consorted I have at times been
visited with a terrible (and reasonable) anxiety: that he will shut up shop
before I do, leaving me with these battlefield-wounded machines and no one to
perform triage. My Wikipedia entry says that I ‘collect and repair vintage
typewriters’; the very idea of it! The repairing, that is: a child of
cack-handed epigones who never got over the ‘servant problem’, I wouldn’t know
how to repair a potato for printing purposes, let alone a typewriter. But I do
collect them: soon after Shalom began working on my Olivetti I started buying
more typewriters; in part because my nasty habit was steadily turning into
full-scale fetishism, but also because I wanted to give Shalom as much work as I
could, simply to keep him at it. I’ve always been like this with artisans and
workmen I viscerally need: manufacturing employment for them out of
transgenerational anxiety and personal ham-fisted desperation. I speedily
acquired a second Olivetti and a brace of 1930s Imperial Good Companions; a
friend gave me a serviceable 1970s Adler, and, after long hours spent perving
over a US website called The Vintage Typewriter Shoppe [Scott McNeill?], I lashed out and bought
an early 1960s Groma Kolibri for $500. This last machine attracted my lustful
gaze when it had a cameo part in The Lives of Others, in which East German
dissidents behind the Wall in the 1980s jive to bebop and type samizdat.
In the film, the Groma is celebrated by one character as ‘the thinnest
typewriter ever made’; this means it can be neatly concealed from the Stasi
under a door lintel. I didn’t need my Groma because it was easy to hide – I
needed it because I hadn’t seen anything quite as beautiful since my youngest
child was born. Yes, it had got that bad: I mooned over the things, I caressed
them, and I thrilled to the counterpoint between their blocky inertia and their
percussive eruption into creative being. I wanted older and older machines, and
seriously considered trying to acquire an example of Rasmus Malling-Hansen’s
proto-typewriter of the 1860s, the Writing Ball (so called for its globular
appearance, with the keys emerging from the core as pins do from a pincushion),
a machine that was used by Nietzsche, among others. Throughout this pell-mell
race into the past Shalom was my trainer, offering counsel, wisdom and
expertise; although I never really felt he grasped the seriousness of my
obsession, how for me the manual typewriter was coming to be more than a writing
instrument, but rather a reification of the act of writing fiction.
Shalom grew up in an Orthodox family in Stamford Hill. His father, who
ran an office-furniture business, intended him for a synagogue cantor, and when
Shalom finished school he was sent to the yeshiva. However, Shalom said to me,
wryly, ‘I was a good Orthodox boy and didn’t like the idea of working on
Shabbat.’ Instead, he went to train as a typewriter engineer with Smith-Corona
in Osnaburgh Street, then worked for a dealer with premises near Liverpool
Street Station. After that he was employed by various other typewriter dealers:
‘The last one was in Camden Town, but then I got ill, and when I came back they
didn’t want to know.’ Shalom went round various stationery suppliers and picked
up work that way. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s he kept on: ‘I did a fax
machine course and one on electric typewriters, but I had enough work and I
really couldn’t get my head round computer technology.’ When he told me this I
developed a strange image in my mind’s eye: Shalom’s typewriter world shrinking
and shrinking, but always able to contain him; he was a micro-organism swimming
in this droplet of obsolescence, one that plummeted through fluvial time until,
in 2004, it met me, a writer wilfully submerging himself in bygones.
Not that Shalom’s life is quite as bounded by typing as my own; now he’s in
semi-retirement he can devote more energy to his singing. He’s the first tenor
for the Shabbaton Choir, which tours extensively; recent highlights include
concerts in Israel and Los Angeles. You might have imagined that Shalom and I
would clash politically - he being of the Orthodox and Zionist persuasion, me
being a Jewish apostate who supports a two-state solution - but we never have.
Shalom is one of those given to the homespun homiletic: ‘A happy person is a
person who’s happy with his lot,’ he’ll say. Or, ‘Food on the table and your
family happy, that’s all you need.’ It’s at this base layer of comity that we
tend to communicate, all other potential disputes being incorporated into the
tinking, clanking matter at hand: how is this or that half-century-old machine
going to be coaxed back into utility? And not just my own burgeoning collection,
but writer friends’ old typewriters I’ve encouraged them to let me give to
Shalom. They’re often piqued by the idea of manually reverse-engineering their
own compositional practices, but I know perfectly well that once serviced and
cleaned their Remingtons and Hermes Babys will end up back in the cupboards and
attics they were disinterred from, because, let’s face it, hardly anyone writes
books on a typewriter anymore.
Even so, as the technology takes its final bow there’s been quite a
flurry of interest: Cormac McCarthy auctioning his Olivetti Lettera 32 for a
quarter of a million bucks made big news. I was approached by Patek Phillipe to
write about typewriters for an advertorial feature. I could see the synchrony of
watches and typewriters: both beautifully efficient devices wholly animated by
human power, object lessons - along with the bicycle - of what truly sustainable
technologies should be. Less enticing was the offer from Persol, the Italian
sunglasses manufacturer, to advertise their eyewear with a little film that
would depict me frenziedly typing my ‘great novel’ on my ‘iconic’ typewriter.
True, the money was good (€80,000 for a single day’s work), but the destruction
of my sense of myself as a writer would’ve been complete and utter: ‘The End’ in
blood-red Courier to the accompaniment of a firing squad of keystrokes.
Beryl Bainbridge, who typed all her first drafts on an Imperial Good
Companion (a delicious, steam-punky 1930s machine), went to her grave in 2010,
preceded a year earlier by J.G. Ballard, the last writer I’d known personally - besides myself - who took his books all the way to typesetting as manually
generated typescripts. One of the last services I performed for Jim was to
obtain a ribbon for his 1970s Olympia; after his death, his partner, Claire
Walsh, gave me the machine. It’s an unlovely thing, its textured
mushroom-coloured plastic casing anticipating the coming CPU towers and
printers, rather than harking back - like the Good Companions - to the steel and
glass engineering of Joseph Paxton. I meditated on the Olympia for some time,
wondering if working on my dead mentor’s typewriter would either lend me some of
his strange vision, or, on the contrary, rob my prose of whatever originality it
might possess. In the event, after I’d written one piece on the Olympia, I had a
letter from Jim’s daughter, Fay, who said she was distressed to learn I had the
machine, since it had been an integral part of her childhood; and although her
chronology was way out (she must have been thinking of its predecessor), I
conveyed the Olympia to her with something like relief.
Relief, I now realise, because just as I’d subliminally registered the
inception of wireless broadband by changing my own corporate culture, so another
transformation was now underway. Finishing my last novel I’d had various
problems with the Groma, and since the parts were apparently no longer
obtainable I’d bought a second machine. Watching Shalom fiddle about with the
deteriorating Gromas I’d begun to have unworthy thoughts: how did I know he was
actually any good as a typewriter engineer? It might be argued that the last
living individual of a given species should be the fittest - after all, they’ve
managed to survive the others’ extinction. But an alternative view is that the
others underwent mutagenesis, becoming part of the burgeoning IT genotype, while
Shalom, the poor dinosaur, roved the clashing, bashing, hammering lost world of
obsolescence. But really my suspicions about Shalom - entirely unfounded - were
symptomatic of a deeper malaise: I was falling out of love with the typewriter
because I’d found a new old writing method to fetishise.
For some time I hadn’t been manually retyping my first drafts (let
alone all of them), but instead had begun to key them into a computer for
reasons of speed and editorial convenience. I still thought of the typewriter
draft as the ‘first’, but I’d discovered a certain resistance in myself to
bashing the keys first thing in the morning, and so had taken to handwriting at
least a couple of hundred words which I would then type up. In time the amount I
was handwriting increased until I realised I was effectively composing a proto
first draft this way. It dawned uneasily on me that I could very well cut out
the typewriter stage altogether. And what a relief that would be: no more
lugging the machine about when I wanted to work somewhere else; no more - entirely justifiable - complaints from my wife, who sleeps in the room below
where I work, and who, despite the interposition of several layers of rubber
matting, was still rudely awoken by my early morning drumming; and of course, no
more anxiety about keeping the damn things working after Shalom finally retires.
I mean, what was I going to do when that day inevitably came? Wander the leafy
back roads of Surbiton calling out tremulously for a new saviour?
I haven’t as yet started the next novel, and it may well be that once I
begin I’ll recoil from the hard handy-graft, but for now my mind is made up and
my heart has begun to sing: for years I’ve had a twinkle in my eye when I gaze
upon the slim, silvery forms of the Mitsubishi propelling pencils I customarily
use to take notes; finally I’ve decided to go all the way with them. There’s
only one problem: as far as I can tell from a cursory web search, this
particular model has been discontinued. I’ll have to ask Shalom if he can
introduce me to a propelling pencil engineer before he bows out.
Well, I hope Self won't completely abandon typewriters, but he has demonstrated some genuine love for them, and he writes about it in a most entertaining way.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear of his love for typewriters.
ReplyDeleteI hope he keeps on collecting and keeps on typing.
I wouldn't call it any worse than collecting vintage baseball cards or tractors. Some like them, some don't. If they work for you, great. Make good art.
ReplyDelete