In her memoir âSlow Days, Fast Companyâ (1977), Eve Babitz described the joys of â4/60 air conditioning,â which is what you get when youâre on the freeway with all four windows down and youâre traveling at 60 mph.
The best of Babitzâs writing keeps the windows cranked down, too, and she is always moving at speed. The recent rediscovery and reissue of her books â her memoirs are especially resonant â has been a deep pleasure to witness.
Lili Anolik helped jump-start the Babitz revival five years ago when she published a warm retrospective of the authorâs life in Vanity Fair. Anolik is back now with âHollywoodâs Eve: Eve Babitz and the Secret History of L.A.,â an expansion of that profile.
Donât arrive here in search of a proper biography. Anolik warns us up front that she âwonât attempt to impose narrative structure and logicâ on Babitzâs life. Further, she âdoesnât believe, or expect you to, that facts, dates, timelines, firsthand accounts, verifiable sources tell the tale.â
This is awkward. When did âlogicâ and âfactsâ and âfirsthand accountsâ get such a bad rap? (Did I miss a memo?) Anolik makes a show of tossing her carâs steering wheel out the window at the first turn.
The resulting book is good and bad in almost equal measure. Itâs good because Anolik has an instinctive grasp of why Babitz mattered as a writer and because, despite her apparent protestations to the contrary, sheâs done her homework. âHollywoodâs Eveâ fills in many of the gaps in our knowledge of Babitzâs life and work.
Itâs bad because itâs so breezily written, as if willing itself to become a work of what used to be called the New Journalism, that â4/60â does not begin to cover it. Reading it, you feel youâre taking part in three conversations, two on call-waiting.
Anolikâs book is filled with interjections such as âIâve got to break in here, say somethingâ and âHang on a secondâ and âWait, I want to withdraw that statementâ and âNow, look sharp because things are about to take a turn for the funky.â Her insights deserve better than this flip tone.
What âHollywoodâs Eveâ has going for it on every page is its subjectâs utter refusal to be dull. âI think Iâm going to be an adventuress,â Babitz reports saying as a child to her mother, in âEveâs Hollywoodâ (1974), her first memoir. âIs it all right?â It was, and it is.
Babitz grew up under the Hollywood sign. Her father was first violinist for the 20th Century-Fox orchestra and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and her mother was an artist. Her godfather was Igor Stravinsky. âHeâs been slipping you glasses of Scotch under the table since you turned 13,â Anolik writes, âand his wife, the peerlessly elegant Vera, taught you how to eat caviar.â
When she was barely out of her teens, Babitz posed for a now-famous photograph of herself playing chess with Marcel Duchamp. He was clothed; she was naked. Babitz was beautiful and wild and opinionated.
She was a star of Los Angelesâ bohemian art and music crowds. âEve was our Kiki of Montparnasse,â artist Ed Ruscha said. She designed album covers for Buffalo Springfield and the Byrds. She seduced Jim Morrison and many others. Among them was writer Dan Wakefield, who commented: âMen didnât conquer Eve Babitz, she conquered them.â
Babitz was 28 and approaching burnout (she termed it âsqualid overboogieâ) when she began to write in earnest. With the help of Joan Didion, a friend, she sold an essay to Rolling Stone in 1971. Babitz being Babitz, she slept with Grover Lewis, her Rolling Stone editor, and later with the editor of her first book.
Didionâs intervention is interesting because itâs among this bookâs contentions that Babitzâs literary career was a reaction to that of her famous friend. Where Didion took a fundamentally dark view of Los Angeles â she was an intellectual Easterner, slumming it for the easy screenwriting money â Babitz had a feel for her hometownâs charms and celebrated them.
Anolikâs writing about Didion and Babitz is graceful until it isnât. At one point she writes, referring to an earlier conversation with Babitz: âNow, I suppose, is the time to come clean. Eve was right. I do have homicidal designs on Didion. I think âPlay It'â â Didionâs novel âPlay It as It Laysâ â âis a silly, shallow book. I think âSlow Daysâ should replace it, become the new essential reading for young women (and young men) seeking to understand LA. There. I said it.â
Babitz had affairs with Warren Zevon and Annie Leibovitz and Steve Martin. (She advised Martin to wear white suits.)
She once wrote a letter to Joseph Heller, author of âCatch-22,â that contained two sentences: âI am a stacked 18-year-old blonde on Sunset Boulevard. I am also a writer.â She spent the entirety of her first book advance on a big meal at her favorite restaurant, Musso & Frank Grill, ordering the caramel custard for everyone in the house.
Her books â there were memoirs, and then novels â never sold very well. She did too much cocaine. She wrote a screenplay for the Eagles, and when they delayed paying her she threatened to kill herself. (They paid.) She got into Alcoholics Anonymous in the early â80s.
Babitz suffered third-degree burns over much of her body in a freak accident in 1997, when she tried to light a cigar in her car, a VW Bug that Steve Martin had bought her, and her skirt and pantyhose caught fire. She essentially disappeared from public life. She is now 75. Anolik tracked her down in Los Angeles, where she listens to right-wing talk radio and mostly lives like a recluse.
Anolik sometimes verges on condescending to Babitz (âwhat a sport and a champ and a trouperâ). But sheâs a sensitive reader of her work and owns a sly wit. About the nude photo with Duchamp, for example, Anolik writes: âShe might have something on â the radio, for example, or Chanel No. 5.â
In âSlow Days, Fast Company,â Babitz observed that âthe best way to approach anything was to be introduced by the right person.â Anolikâs book succeeds in its primary mission: It sends you racing to read the work of Eve Babitz.
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Publication Notes:
âHollywoodâs Eve: Eve Babitz and the Secret History of L.A.â
By Lili Anolik
Illustrated. 277 pages. Scribner. $26.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.