This collection of stories is uneven, and I should probably only give it 3 stars, but there are many wonderful moments that I enjoyed too intensely to give it only 3, so it gets 4.
I am an Eve Babitz fan from way, way back. How could I not be, she loves L.A. with such a pure and innocent passion, the way I used to before things got so complicated-- as they will in any long-term relationship. (Then it becomes a more mature love where you see all the warts and have to reconcile all the inevitable disappointment and frustrations, not to mention the money issues.)
This is one of her earlier books, I believe the first full-length one, and the voice of her first-person stories, which I have always found delightful, is not as refined and controlled as in her later books. Here the very casual conversational style can sometimes veer into rambling which seems to prefer flourishes to coherence. She is, always, a girl very much concerned with style – in language, in clothes, in dance. In this debut, she had not yet achieved the point where style becomes substance. But this is apparent in only a few of the stories.
“Eve’s Hollywood” is a collection of short stories (some very short, one or two pages) about her growing up in Hollywood in the 1960s and ‘70s amid artists and musicians (her father was a movie studio musician and her godfather was Igor Stravinsky).
On a personal level, there seemed to be a real synchronicity going on for me while I read this book. In one story she mentions going to Ojai. I was then packing to make my first-ever trip to Ojai. The week before, I had a business appointment in mid-city L.A. , was searching for some lunch and stopped in at Papa Christos Greek Market and Deli, just because I passed it, where I had not been for over 15 years. The next day, I reach the story “Santa Sofia” wherein Eve tells of her family’s visits to the Greek deli “at Normandie and Pico.” (Not a Greek enclave as it once was, this is now a pretty gritty neighborhood, full of severely impoverished Central America immigrants and vicious gangs. But the lamb gyros are so worth the risk.)
And I happened to be reading, simultaneously, “Waiting for the Sun: A Rock and Roll History of Los Angeles,” by Barney Hoskyns where Eve is quoted throughout, having been a part of that scene in the ‘60s and ‘70s. A footnote in a chapter about Gram Parsons alerted me to the fact that the story “Rosewood Casket” in “Eve’s Hollywood” was a “pseudo-fictional depiction” of the relationship between Gram Parsons and Keith Richards. Oh, was that what that was about! I had to go and read it again.
“The Choke” was one of my favorite stories. Here Eve recounts her impressions, as a 13-year-old middle-class Jewish girl, of the mysterious and seemingly glamorous “Pachucos” in her school (defined as anyone with a Mexican accent). Her fascination with this other culture within her high school, so foreign, so dangerous, had its origins in her love for anything stylish, and she found their style irresistible. In her innocence, she believes their lives are “real” because they carry knives, steal, fight and get expelled. But the real draw was their clothing and The Choke, a dance that was “enraged anarchy posed in mythical classicism,” and “so abandoned in elegance it made you limp with envy. ” Her several-paragraph description of the details and nuances of this dance made me hear the music and feel the attitude of these dancers who could conjure up the precision and drama of a bull-fight. Eve learns about racial discrimination here too, when the “washed-out” white girls in their cotton circle skirts, though vastly inferior, would win dance contests, ”no matter how obvious it was.”
“The Polar Palace” is set in the local ice skating rink and is about the first time someone let the teenaged Eve know that it was okay to like what she liked, rather than what she was supposed to like. (I know 50-year-olds who still don’t get this concept.)
“The Sheik” is wonderful for its descriptions of the extraordinarily beautiful but dumb girls at Hollywood High who wielded enough power over students and teachers alike to throw things into chaos on a regular basis. “There were 20 of them who were unquestionably staggering and another 50 or so who were cause for alarm, or would have been in a more diluted atmosphere.” The beauty-as-power theme is a lesson learned, but not resented. It made life more interesting, and Eve is nothing if not an appreciator of beauty for its own sake. There are lovely moments too relating a teenager’s awareness of being in a special time and space during a SoCal summer: “. . . the sea was one long wave to be ridden in, our skins were dark, and time even stopped now and then and let things shimmer since time, too, is affected by beauty and will stop sometimes for a moment.” I love the rhythms of the last paragraph, a great example of Eve’s style that I enjoy so much.
“Now, no one will sit, staring into Persia—now when it’s raining. The Sheik is extinguished by dark skies and forecasts. And now it’s almost Christmas, an impatiently suffered imposition tolerated only until the clear hot skies return with shining palms, and the beautiful, scornful eyes of the new 20 gaze out of the windows of Hollywood High.”
“The Landmark” refers to two: The Landmark Motel where Janis Joplin O’D’d and the church at Olvera Street, the premise being, if only Janis had gone to Olvera Street that Sunday, instead of staying in her room to shoot up. There she would have found the world’s best taquitos and Mexican families enjoying a day out, “where Catholic mothers dress their daughters to look like the pompoms they put on the cars of the just-married couples. The little girls could be floated camellias, angels.” Eve recalls one Easter Sunday when she went “just to bask in the gentle mob and wonder over those angelic little girls, four years old, dressed in lilac organdy with flowers in their braided hair, or mint green silk, or pink fluffy ruffles with white lace and their little black patent leather shoes with the straps and white socks. How beautiful they are, their faces like Fra Filippo Lippi’s and their little gloved hands, how completely beautiful . . . “
Claiming that going to Olvera Street requires a leisurely drive down Sunset Blvd. -- “taking the freeway when you’re on your way to get a taquito for 45 cents is like taking a jet to go visit your cat, the texture’s all wrong” --she paints a picture of the working class east end of Sunset, ambling through the “hills and flowers and the car part places.” Yeah, Janis should have done that.
And the story about Rosie the Cat, I had to call my mother and read her the whole thing. But then, we like cats.
I don’t know if this collection is the best introduction to Eve Babitz for the average novice. I like her “Slow Days, Fast Company “the best. Perhaps start there and come back to this one. But anyone with a certain appreciation for Los Angeles, past or present, could find much to enjoy here.