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Hubert Selby Jr.

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Hubert Selby, Jr. (July 23, 1928April 26, 2004) was an American writer.

His work has been ranked as some of the most powerful literature written by an American author in the twentieth century.Selby was ranked as one of America's best writers by New York Times. The paper also compared his work to that of Dostoyevsky. His best known novel, Last Exit to Brooklyn (1964) is regarded as a classic.

Early Life

Hubert's father, Hubert Selby Sr., was a merchant seaman and a former coal miner from Kentucky. He married Adalin, and they both settled in the Red Hook district of Brooklyn. Hubert Selby, Jr. was born in 1928, in Brooklyn, New York City. He attended various New York state schools, including Peter Stuyvesant High. His childhood nickname, "Cubby," stuck with him his entire life.

In 1943, Hubert Sr. returned to the merchant marine. His son, Hubert Jr., dropped out of school, and at the age of 15 was able to persuade the recruiters to allow him to join the merchant marine. The young Selby quickly met with a number of misfortunes.

In 1947, while at sea, Selby was diagnosed with advanced tuberculosis. The doctors predicted that he would live for less than a year. He was taken off the ship in Bremen, Germany, and sent back home to America. The next three and a half years, Selby was in and out of the Marine Hospital in New York for treatment.

Selby went through an experimental drug treatment, streptomycin, that later caused some severe complications. During an operation, surgeons removed several of Selby's ribs in order to reach his lungs.In the obituary, Selby's wife, Suzanne Selby, states that during the treatment the doctors removed a whole lung along with eleven ribs.. One of the lungs collapsed, and the doctors removed part of the other. The surgery saved him, but left him with a year-long recuperation, and with chronic pulmonary problems for the rest of his life. The medical treatments also marked the beginning of Selby's addiction to painkillers and heroin that lasted for decades.

Becoming A Writer

In 1949, Selby married for the first time. But with no qualifications, no work experience aside from the merchant marines, and his poor health, Selby had trouble landing a job. He spent most of the time at home, raising his daughter while his wife worked in a department store.

For the next ten years, Selby remained bed-ridden and frequently hospitalized with a variety of lung related ailments. The doctors continued to issue bleak prognosis on Selby's life, telling him repeatedly that he could not possibly survive, because he "just didn't have enough lung capacity". But Selby refused to give up. A childhood friend, writer Gilbert SorrentinoSelby dedicated his first work, Last Exit to Brooklyn, to Gilbert Sorrentino, with whom he grew up in Brooklyn., encouraged Selby to spend his time on fiction. Unable to make a living due to health concerns, Selby decided, "I know the alphabet. Maybe I could be a writer."

Selby traced his desire to write to a sudden realization. He wrote:

I was sitting at home and had a profound experience. I experienced, in all of my Being, that someday I was going to die, and it wouldn't be like it had been happening, almost dying but somehow staying alive, but I would just die! And two things would happen right before I died: I would regret my entire life; I would want to live it over again. This terrified me. The thought that I would live my entire life, look at it and realize I blew it forced me to do something with my life.

With no formal training, Selby used his raw language to narrate the bleak and violent world that was part of his youth. He stated "I write, in part, by ear. I hear, as well as feel and see, what I am writing. I have always been enamoured with the music of the speech in New York." In style, Selby also differed from other writers. He did not care about proper grammar, punctuation, or diction -- but is should be noted that Selby's work is internally consistent: he uses the same unorthodox techniques in most of his works. He indented his paragraphs with alternating lengths, often by simply dropping down one line when he was finished with a paragraph. Like Jack Kerouac's "spontaneous prose", Selby's writing was often done in a fast, stream of consciousness style, and to facilitate this he replaced his apostrophes with forward slashes "/" due to their closer proximity on his typewriter, thus allowing uninterrupted typing. He did not use quotation marks, and dialogue may consist of a complete paragraph, with no denotion among alternating speakers. His prose was stripped down, bare, and blunt.

His experience with longshoremen, homeless, thugs, pimps, transvestites, prostitutes, queers, addicts and the overall poverty-stricken community, is best expressed in his most praised work, Last Exit to Brooklyn.

Early Works

In 1958, Selby started working on his first piece, The Queen Is Dead. At the time, Selby had a succession of jobs. Yet he continued to work on his fiction every night after his day job as a secretary, a gas station attendant, and a freelance copywriter. The short story slowly evolved for the next six years before it saw the light of publication.

In 1961, a short story Tralala was published in a literary journal, The Provincetown Review. It also appeared in Black Mountain Review and New Directions. With his unstructured style and coarse descriptions, Selby examined the life, the gang rape, and murder of a prostitute. He quickly drew negative attention from a number of critics. The editor was arrested for selling pornographic literature to a minor. The publication was in an obscenity trial, but the case was later dismissed on appeal.

As Selby continued to work on his writing, Amiri Baraka, Selby's long time friend, encouraged Selby to contact Sterling Lord, who at the time was Jack Kerouac's agent. In 1964, Tralala along with The Queen is Dead, and four other loosely linked short stories, appeared in his first novel Last Exit to Brooklyn. The novel was accepted and published by Grove Press, which had already released works by William S. Burroughs.

The novel was praised by many, including Allen Ginsberg, who predicted that it would "explode like a rusty hellish bombshell over America and still be eagerly read in a hundred years". But as with any controversial work, not everyone was happy. Because of the detailed depictions of homosexuality, drug addiction, gang rape, and other human brutality and cruelty, the novel was prosecuted for obscenity in Great Britain in 1967. Anthony Burgess was among a number of writers who appeared as witnesses for the defence of the novel. The all-male jury's conviction was later reversed on appeal. The novel was banned in Italy. For more details on the British trial of Last Exit to Brooklyn see the entry Last Exit to Brooklyn Trial.

In 1967, Selby moved from Brooklyn to Los Angeles to escape his own addiction. That same year, Selby met his future wife, Suzanne, at a bar in West Hollywood. The couple moved in together two days after they met, and married in 1969. For the next decade, they traveled back and forth, between their home in Southern California and East Coast, settling down permanently in Los Angeles area in 1983.

Even though all of his work was written while he was sober, Selby continued to battle his drug addiction. In 1967 heroin eventually landed him in Los Angeles county jail, where he spent two months for possession of heroin. After his release from jail, he kicked his habit and stayed clean of drugs and alcohol through to his death. He refused morphine on his death bed, even though he was in pain.

After 'Last Exit'

In 1971, Selby published his second novel, The Room. The novel received positive reviews, and was considered to be another masterpiece. Selby himself described the book as "the most disturbing book ever written", and he noted that he could not read it for decades after writing it.

Selby continued to write short fiction, screenplays and teleplays at his apartment in West Hollywood. His work appeared in many journals, including Yugen, Black Mountain Review, Evergreen Review, Provincetown Review, Kulchur, New Directions Annual, Swank and Open City. For the last 20 years of his life, Selby taught creative writing as an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California. Selby often noted that the New York Times would not review his books when they were published, but he predicted that they'd print his obituary.

In the 1980s, Selby made the accquaintence of rock singer Henry Rollins, who had long admired Selby's works. Often championing Selby's works, Rollins not only helped broaden Selby's readership, but also arranged recording sessions and reading tours for Selby. Rollins issued original recordings though his own 2.13.61 publications, but also distributed Selby's other works.

During the last years of his life, Selby suffered from depression, and fits of rage. The last month of his life, Selby spent in and out of the hospital. Selby died in Highland Park, Los Angeles, CA on April 26, 2004 of chronic obstructive pulmonary lung disease. Selby is survived by his wife of 35 years, Suzanne Selby (b. 1946); four children, Kyle Mack of New York; Claudia Selby of Kentucky; and Rachel Selby and William Selby, both of Southern California; and 11 grandchildrenSelby was married three times and had four children..

Works

Fiction

(in chronological order)

Spoken Word

(in chronological order)

Filmography

(in chronological order)

Documentaries

(in chronological order)

Unfinished/Unpublished

At least one work-in-progress remained unfinished and unpublished at the time of Selby's death: The Seeds of Pain and the Seeds of Love. Excerpts from this work are heard on the Live in Europe 1989 CD.

Quotes

Notes

Trivia

  • Selby's first work "The Queen Is Dead" (appearing as a chapter in Last Exit) inspired the name of an album by Manchester pop group The Smiths, and became their most highly regarded LP.

References

External links

 


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