Marilyn Monroeโ€™s library: The truth behind her 400 books and literary life

Marilyn Monroeโ€™s library: The truth behind her 400 books and literary life


Book Review

Marilyn and Her Books: The Literary Life of Marilyn Monroe

By Gail Crowther
Gallery Books: 304 pages, $30

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In 1951, not long after her breakthrough appearances in โ€œAll About Eveโ€ and โ€œThe Asphalt Jungle,โ€ Marilyn Monroe went to college: She enrolled in a pair of 10-week classes at UCLAโ€™s adult-extension program, both covering literature. Looky-loos peeked through the windows. Some likely assumed a publicity stunt. But Monroeโ€™s passion for books was sincere. An orphan who bounced around upward of a dozen foster homes and orphanages regretted that sheโ€™d never graduated high school, she moved often in her life but always made sure her books came wherever she went.

Gail Crowtherโ€™s โ€œMarilyn and Her Booksโ€ is the story of that library, though more precisely itโ€™s about what weโ€™ve projected upon Monroe when weโ€™re asked to consider that she had one. Our prevailing cultural reflex, then and now, is skepticism larded with misogyny. A famous 1955 photo of her sitting in a Long Island playground reading James Joyceโ€™s โ€œUlyssesโ€ โ€” one of 50 known photos of her reading โ€” is routinely scoffed at whenever itโ€™s posted online. (Crowther gathers up a sampling of misogynistic comments.)

But Crowtherโ€™s sleuthing determines that Joyceโ€™s novel was a regular companion of hers, and she was particularly enchanted with Molly Bloomโ€™s closing soliloquy. As an actor who had to be exceedingly smart to play dumb blondes, she used the shoot to make โ€œa profound statement about her social positioning.โ€

Actress Marilyn Monroe reads the book "To the Actor: On the Technique of Acting" by Michael Chekhov

Marilyn Monroe reads the book โ€œTo the Actor: On the Technique of Actingโ€ by Michael Chekhov in a quiet moment at the Ambassador Hotel in New York.

(Ed Feingersh / Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images)

Writing about Monroeโ€™s reading habits demands a lot of speculation on the part of Crowther, whoโ€™s written engaging books on Dorothy Parker, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton. We know a lot about the starโ€™s library โ€” when she died in 1962, she owned more than 400 books, diligently cataloged and auctioned in 1999. Thereโ€™s documented marginalia and scribblings that suggest a serious reader, and anecdotes about her reciting poems at parties, reading Proust on set, and expounding on Whitman, Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. She had strong opinions about Hemingway: โ€œThose big tough guys are so sick, they arenโ€™t even all that tough. โ€ฆ They always want to kill something to prove themselves.โ€

And Crowther literally has the receipts from Los Angeles and Beverly Hills stores like the Pickwick Book Shop, Martindaleโ€™s Book Store and Hunterโ€™s Books, where she purchased titles that were practical (โ€œHow to Live With a Catโ€), relatable (โ€œSister Carrieโ€) and weighty (a three-volume life of Sigmund Freud).

Her third husband, playwright Arthur Miller, suggests the purchases were largely a pose: In his memoir, he wrote that aside from some short stories and Coletteโ€™s โ€œCheriโ€ she likely never read anything start to finish. It would be nice to know more, but as Crowther pointedly observes multiple times, journalists never thought to ask her about her reading. When the subject of literature came up, Monroe seemed compelled to play to ditzy expectations. After telling interviewers she wanted to play Grushenka in an adaptation of โ€œThe Brothers Karamazov,โ€ they asked her if she could spell the characterโ€™s name. She demurred.

A clearer historical record might have blunted the sexist comments that have stalked her, and given Crowther an opportunity to do less guesswork. โ€œMarilyn and Her Booksโ€ is scaffolded with 15 chapters, each dedicated to a question that usually canโ€™t be answered in full: โ€œDid Marilyn read all her books?โ€ (probably not, who does?), โ€œDid Marilyn suffer from imposter syndrome?โ€ (probably, who doesnโ€™t?). Some questions feel like attempts to pad the pages (โ€œAre there any surprising omissions from Marilynโ€™s personal library?โ€ โ€œHow did Marilynโ€™s reading compare to that of her contemporaries?โ€). The elegiac opening and closing chapters, in which Crowther imagines visiting Monroeโ€™s home and scanning her shelves, also add to the feeling that too much is being extrapolated out of not enough information.

Curiously, the book also dwells little on Monroeโ€™s own literary ambitions. Crowther shares a few scraps of despairing, Plathian verse, but almost entirely neglects her unfinished posthumous memoir, published in 1974 as โ€œMy Story.โ€ Its relative shapelessness, along with its use of a ghostwriter, doesnโ€™t bolster her literary credentials, but its existence points to Monroeโ€™s ambition to have them.

And thereโ€™s plenty to say about the literary work that Monroe herself has inspired, including Joyce Carol Oatesโ€™ 2000 masterpiece, โ€œBlonde,โ€ or Sharon Oldsโ€™ poem โ€œThe Death of Marilyn Monroe,โ€ in which a man who carted away her body is shocked into the reality of โ€œa woman breathing, just an ordinary woman breathing.โ€ Writers have afforded Monroe the grace and status in death that she was rarely afforded in life.

But the core question that drives the book, the subject of a central chapter, is valuable: โ€œWhy is Marilyn Monroeโ€™s reading ability doubted?โ€ Among other things, Crowther argues, Monroe suffered from a โ€œpoisonous cocktail of patriarchy, industry decisions, cultural stereotypes, social expectations, Marilynโ€™s unwitting complicity,โ€ and more. Crowther keeps her focus narrowly on Monroe, but it doesnโ€™t require a substantial mental leap to see how Monroe is just one example of a cover-model-worthy woman artist being told sheโ€™s a try-hard for demonstrating intelligence. (To pick just one example, the pop star Dua Lipaโ€™s book club has a demonstrated high-literary bent, selecting Tommy Orange, Olga Tokarczuk and Percival Everett, which got her mocked as โ€œan alien spaceship touching down in a medieval peasant village.โ€)

โ€œMarilynโ€™s reading formed a concerted effort to overcome any inadequacies she perceived in herself,โ€ Crowther writes. That, too, made her a lot like anybody who goes to books to satisfy gaps in our knowledge. We can do that in private, to avoid embarrassment. For Monroe, though, the effort was always public and always suspect โ€” the culture was attuned to see any book in her hand as a prop. For most people, reading is an escape route. For Monroe it only led to one more cul-de-sac.

Athitakis is a writer in Phoenix and author of โ€œThe New Midwest.โ€

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