53 pages • 1 hour read
Content Warning: This guide discusses explicit usage of illegal drugs, depictions of drug addiction, depictions of mental illness, depictions of violence (sexual, domestic, racial, and graphic), as well as stereotypes of racial and ethnic minorities. This guide references language from the text concerning race and addiction which may be considered offensive. This study guide quotes and obscures the author’s use of the n-word.
“Why do you haveta make such a big deal outta this? eh? Just ta lay that guilt shit on me, right? Right????—Sara continued rocking back and forth—you know youll have the set back in a couple a hours but ya gotta make me feel guilty. He continued to look at the closet—Sara silent and rocking—then threw up his hands, Eh, screw it, and pushed the set, carefully, out of the apartment. Sara heard the set being rolled across the floor, heard the door open and close, and sat with her eyes closed rocking back and forth. It wasnt happening. She didnt see it so it wasnt happening. She told her husband Seymour, dead these years, it wasnt happening. And if it should be happening it would be alright, so dont worry Seymour. This is like a commercial break. Soon the program will be back on and youll see, theyll make it nice Seymour. Itll all work out. Youll see already. In the end its all nice.”
The opening scene of the novel showcases the unhealthy relationship between Harry and Sara, as Harry steals his mother’s television to sell for drug money. Sara, who is addicted to television, also lives within an idealized version of the past, where her husband is still alive, and her son does not abuse her. This passage is indicative of Selby Jr.’s writing style: He often uses “/” instead of apostrophes, and he often skips punctuation all together, using a personalized version of stream-of-consciousness narration.
“Ya know what we oughtta do man? Huh? We oughtta get a piece a this shit and cut it and off half of it, ya dig? Yeah baby, this stuffs good enough to cut in half and still get you wasted. Yeah, we/d just take a taste for ourselves and off the rest. We could double our money. Easy. Thas right baby. An then we buys a couple a pieces an we got somethin else goin man. It sure would be righteous baby. All we gotta do is cool it with the shit, you know, just a taste once in a while but no heavy shit—Right on baby—just enough to stay straight an we/d have a fuckin bundle in no time. You bet your sweet ass. Those bucks would just be pilin up till we was ass deep in braid jim. Thats right man, and we wouldnt fuck it up like those other assholes. We wont get strung out and blow it. We/d be cool and take care a business and in no time we/d get a pound of pure and just sit back and count the bread. No hustlin the fuckin streets. You goddamn right mutha fucka.”
This passage lays out Harry and Tyrone’s plan: to score a piece of Brody’s strong heroin, dilute it, and resell it at a profit, until they can afford a pound of pure heroin, which would put them on the track to becoming big-time dealers. However, Harry foreshadows their eventual addiction and the ultimate failure of their plan. Harry and Tyrone’s responses can be identified by Harry’s use of stereotypical Jewish affectations and New York slang, while Tyrone’s are written in a stereotype of African American Vernacular English.
“They went back to the office, got paper cups filled with water and each one staked out a small portion of the floor for themselves. The radio was still playing but the concentration was so intense that no one heard the music or was aware of anything but their own cooker as they carefully dumped the heroin in it, then added the water and heated it until the dope dissolved, then drew the liquid up through the cotton in the cooker into the dropper, then tied up. Each knew they were not alone in the room, but paid absolutely no attention to what was going on around them. When their favorite vein was ready they tapped the needle into it and watched the first bubble of blood pulse through the fluid and streak to the surface, their eyes glued to it, their senses aware only of the fact that they got a good hit and that their stomachs were churning with anticipation and then they squeezed the bulb and shot the shit into their vein and waited for the first rush and then let the dropper fill with blood again and squeezed that in and then booted again and went with the flow as they flushed and felt the sweat ooze from their skin then filled their droppers with water and let their works set in the cup of water while they leaned back against the wall and lit a cigarette, their movements slow, their eyes half closed, everything inside them quiet and mellow; the air smooth, their lives free from all concerns; their speech slower, quieter. Harry started picking his nose.”
Harry and the others have a routine of use that is almost ritualistic; Selby Jr., who formerly had an addiction, uses scenes such as this to illustrate the dark allure of heroin that ultimately results in the protagonists’ decline and loss of agency to their addiction. What was initially recreation becomes a desperate act of survival later in the novel as they fall victim to The Effects of Drug Addiction. While such a frank depiction may be shocking, this scene is important because it is the most descriptive depiction of heroin use in the novel and should be kept in mind throughout the many other instances of characters using heroin.
“The water was quickly boiled and each had a glass of tea when they returned to the living room, just at the end of the commercials, and sat in the same strategic positions, their ear and eye still tuned to the television, as they discussed and speculated on the enormity of the coming event in the life of Sara Goldfarb, an event of such prodigious proportions and importance that it infused her with a new will to live and materialized a dream that brightened her days and soothed her lonely nights.”
The invitation to an unknown television show provides Sara with the opportunity to interact with her favorite source of entertainment, as well as a new lease on life. In her mind, this is an opportunity to become famous—a piece of the glamorous (but unattainable) American Dream for which she still longs.
“No matter what she is doing one and a half eyes on the television makes the job, the day and life pass bearably on.”
Sara’s television addiction has trained her to constantly attune part of her attention to the TV. She developed this addiction in response to loneliness; the entertainment that TV shows provide her fills the gap left by Harry and her deceased husband, Seymour, giving her a companion with whom to spend her lonely days.
“[Harry:] Someone like you could really make it alright for me. With you with me I could really do something. Marion almost sighed, Do you really mean that Harry? Do you really think I could inspire you? Harry looked into her eyes, then at her face and gently glided the tip of a finger over her cheek and traced the outline of her nose, his face and eyes in a soft and tender smile, You could really make my life worth while. A guy needs something to give his life a reason or whats the point of living? I need more than the streets. I don’t want to be a floating crap game all my life. I want to be something…anything. Marion hugged him tightly, O Harry I think I really can help you be something. Theres something in me thats crying to come out but it needs the right person to open the lock. You can unlock it Harry. I know it.”
Harry and Marion’s relationship begins with the earnest hope that they can help each other become the people they have always wanted to be. They bond over their mutual dream. However, heroin, the means by which they strive to achieve this dream eventually supplants the dream itself. This unfortunate end to their dream and the dreams of other characters is foreshadowed numerous times and expected by the reader. In this way, readers must knowingly follow characters as Selby Jr. depicts the realistic, horrific effects of addiction.
“But now she was dreaming. Sometimes a couple of dreams in one night. Like seeing chickens flying through her room, but they were neatly plucked and roasted to a golden brown with little balls of kasha on their backs. And then that roast beef. It kept rolling down the hill threatening to crush her but somehow it just whirled by, just missing her by a few inches, dragging behind it a gravy boat filled with rich brown gravy, and bowls of mashed potatoes and chocolate covered cherries with cherry juice filling. A couple nights of dreaming and Sara decided enough already. She got the name of the doctor from her lady friend and made an appointment. I dont know from diet pills, but eggs and grapefruit I/ve had up to here thank you.”
Sara’s sections of the narrative are populated by fantastical daydreams that progress into frightening delusions as her obsession over weight loss transitions into a dangerous addiction to diet pills. After several difficult days on her stringent diet, Sara gives up and takes to easy way out. This is the beginning of Sara’s catastrophic entry into the flawed healthcare system.
“She continued to draw the child, in each drawing the child was a year older and as she progressed the drawings became more skillful, more lifelike, more filled with emotion and she began to sketch little birthday candles under the drawings showing the age of the child and then the features became more distinct and the hair long and black, the same silent pain on her face, and then she started to blossom and become a woman and she was slowly transformed from a pretty child to a lovely girl and then a beautiful woman but always that haunted and pained expression on her face, and then she stopped drawing and looked at the beautiful woman on the pad looking back at her, a woman of long flowing lines and curves, classic features, dark shining hair, her inner pain reflected in her dark and penetrating eyes, and then she left a wide space and sketched another figure, a figure of uncertain age, but certainly much older than the last figure, but the lines and curves the same, the body the same, the features of the face the same until it suddenly turned into the anguished expression of the Munch figure.”
Marion finds artistic inspiration again after her date with Arnold, suggesting that Harry may not inspire her as much as the material fineries that wealth brings. Marion’s drawing represents herself, though she is characteristically unable to recognize this. Like the girl in her drawing, Marion was praised for her beauty growing up, yet she felt alone and hollow inside, represented by the girl’s metamorphosis into Edvard Munch’s grotesque figure as she ages.
“He wasnt going to be like those other guys who stayed in the business too long and got busted for heavy time or ended up in somebodys way and got burned. No, not me man. We/re going to make it.”
Harry recognizes that the longer he stays in the drug trade, the less likely he is to be able to exit it, particularly because he is using his own product. He runs the risk of being arrested or killed. What he does not realize is that his success depends completely on his and Tyrone’s access to strong heroin, since they cannot afford a significant quantity of uncut heroin like the Italian drug dealers.
“When you know the streets an stay away from the nuts, those drunken madmen who run around with butcher knives and guns, then theys just streets that you got to beat, but when you got somethin that somebody elses is wantin then you got trouble jim. Then its more than just concrete and tar you got to fight…you got to be fightin the fuckin crazies that those streets put into dudes. One of those cats by himself is alright. An the streets by themselves aint no big deal. But when you puts them together you got the mutha fuckin crazies jim an then you got to look out for your ass. An when you got somethin somebody else wants you got some trouble and when that somethin is shit an you walkin those streets you got some serious trouble. Sheeit. Its a bitch jim but the only way to beat those streets is to make them work for you. You just got to out hustle them mutha fuckas man.”
Even before the drug shortage that begins in Chapter 4, the streets are dangerous to anyone carrying anything of value. Tyrone has lived a hard life, but he has ironically gotten by just fine on the rough streets because he has nothing. Now that he and Harry have been making money, he has something to lose, and his familiar surroundings become threatening.
“Visiting his mother didnt seem like such a good idea when the time came to leave, but a little taste makes all things possible.”
Throughout Chapter 3, Harry, Tyrone, and Marion’s drug use becomes a dependency. Heroin initially aids Harry in doing unpleasant tasks, like visiting Sara, but the danger of relying on it is that he will soon be unable to do anything without getting high first. For this reason, successful dealers, like Big Tim later in the novel, avoid using their own product. However, it is too late for the main characters, who have come to rely on their own supply no matter the cost.
“Something was wrong. Her jaw hurt. Her mouth felt funny. She couldnt figure. It tasted like old socks. Dry. Sickening. Her stomach. O, her stomach. Such a mess. Like theres something moving. Like theres a voice in there saying look out, LOOK OUT!!!! Theyll get you. She looked over her shoulder again. Nobody. Nothing. LOOK OUT! Who’s getting? Whats to get? The voice kept rumbling in her stomach. Before when it started she took more coffee or another pill and it went away, now its just there. All the time. And that nasty coating in her mouth, like old paste, it used to go away, or something. It didnt bother her. Now, ech. And all the time the trembles in the arms and legs.”
As Sara’s tolerance to her diet pills increases, the dosage is no longer enough to stave off withdrawals and the side effects of amphetamine addiction. Sleep-deprived and starved, she is afflicted by an acute paranoia. In her ignorant, trusting way, she does not realize the seriousness of her predicament because of her faith in her doctor.
“A week later they still couldnt score for any uncut weight so they tried again to stop using, but this time they were back in the spoon before they were dressed. They awoke earlier than usual with panic roiling their stomachs, their eyes burning and their noses running, and the magic of the dope healed all their ills immediately. It wasnt that they couldnt stop using, it was just that this wasnt the time. They had too much to do and they werent feeling well. When everything was straightened out they would simply cut the whole scene loose, but for now theyd take an occasional taste to hang loose.”
Like many people with addictions, Harry, Tyrone, Marion and Alice want to believe that they can quit whenever they want to. However, as heroin becomes more and more scarce, it becomes harder to lie to themselves. Their dependency on the drug is quickly becoming a desperate addiction. Their addiction to their own supply is foreshadowed and expected, and readers must now experience the tumultuous downsides of the earlier, light moments in the novel.
“He looked at the old man. He stared. Hard…He look like a fuckin rat jim. Thas what he look like. A fuckin rat. His skin be so fuckin tight an gray an he got tracks all up an down his arms, his legs an his neck an he sittin back fat mouthin while he gettin ready to do some more time. Sheeit, that aint no fuckin way jim. Ah aint gonna marry no habit. No mutha fuckin death do us part with me an no jones. Uh uh. You aint gonna catch Tyrone C. Love boostin no steaks outta no store or sneakin down no cellar to cop their coffee. Sheeit, when ah gets out an we gets straight we jus gonna wheel an deal an not go fuckin with any penny boolshit. We gonna make it good jim. Things get straight an we get us a pound a pure an we gonna be back jus like we was, sittin back jus countin those bucks, an me an Alice gonna live high offa that hog jim.”
Encountering the “old dope fiend” causes Tyrone (and later Harry) to feel great cognitive dissonance. The old man is a stark reminder of what the future has in store for them, if they do not kick their habit. He acts as foreshadowing to the reader as well as Tyrone. Tyrone echoes Harry’s earlier sentiment that he will never let himself stoop this low; however, this scene reveals that Tyrone is already in denial about his drug dependency.
“They knew that sooner or later there would be dope all over the city, just like before. There was too much money involved for there not to be. Harry talked about it from time to time with Marion and, of course, the conversation was as fruitless as the ones with Tyrone. Except it did keep the bond between them cemented. As long as they could share they felt close and that was important. And whenever they started to feel the chills of fear and the grinding of anxiety they simply got off and melted all the cares and concerns away with its warmth. Sometimes they would fix up new cookers just for the sake of doing it. It was part of keeping house. The entire routine made them feel a part of something. It was something looked forward to with the greatest of joy and anticipation. The entire ritual was symbolic of their life and needs.”
As the heroin shortage wears on, Harry and Marion are forced to confront the degree to which the drug has become the center of their life together. No longer do they bond over shared dreams of a café; instead, they go through the motions of the ritual of heroin use, feeding their addiction with the misplaced feelings of security and stability it provides for them.
“It was the same. But she couldnt convince herself and all she could do was try to convince Arnold and so she chanted her mantra it was the same and though it did not make her feel clean it allowed her to do what had to be done and she just reminded herself, from time to time, that Harry needed the money and she was really doing it for him and not for the money and it was the same, it was the same, it was the same.”
Marion at last resorts to sleeping with Arnold for money to pay for heroin. While she essentially used sex work in exchange for high-class experiences with Arnold in the past, she maintained agency in the act, because she was doing it for herself. Now, she is pushed into the act, not only by her own addiction, but also by Harry, who implicitly condones it due to the demands of his addiction as well.
“It was the strangest night and the strangest scene the city had ever seen. The captain of the precinct had been advised days in advance of what area was to be used and that everything in that area was to be absolutely controlled and calm. It was like walking through the battlefield of a raging engagement and suddenly turning the corner and finding yourself in a demilitarized zone. The streets were empty. There werent even any fires in the abandoned buildings. Not even a bum in a hallway or under a mattress. The emptiness continued for five blocks in each direction from the appointed area. There were no prowl cars within the area, but they patrolled the border. The only points of entry were through one of the various check points where guards with Thompsons and walkie talkies checked everybody out before letting them pass. All weapons had to be left behind.”
When a new supply of heroin hits the streets, the precautions the distributor takes to ensure order shows both the desperate situation of the addicts, many of whom would literally kill for a fix, and the influence the drug industry has over city officials. Law enforcement gives its tacit approval to the situation by staying out of it, indicating that NYPD is either on the take or unable to cope with the sheer amount of crime involved in the situation.
“[Dr. Harwood:] I have told you I dont care about that woman. Even if you are correct in your diagnosis and assumptions, the worst that can happen is that she will have a few unnecessary shock treatments. [Dr. Spencer:] The worst— Dr. Harwood was staring hard at Dr. Spencer and leaning closer to him, [Dr. Harwood:] Thats right. The worst. Whereas even if youre right and I go along with you it will cause so much disruption in the staff and the calm and efficient functioning of this department that far more will be lost than a few months time out of the life of one woman.”
This interaction between Dr. Spencer and Dr. Harwood is the only scene in the novel in which one of the protagonists is not a direct participant. This emphasizes the fact that Sara’s fate is now completely out of her control, in the hands of a corrupt public health system that, like Dr. Harwood, prioritizes smooth functioning over patients’ actual needs.
“[Harry:] Why, you have something in mind? Marion continued to look at her cup and toy with her cigarette, [Marion:] I/d like to have more than just a days stuff Harry, I cant make it like this…Suppose what he has doesnt last long???? Harry shrugged, trying to ignore the action in his gut, but even the dope wouldnt allow him to ignore it, but it did allow him to believe whatever he had to believe. He wanted to say something, but couldnt find the means to put the words together even if he could find the words. He just continued to go along with what was happening, go with the flow as Marion would say. With whats happening he could be no where anytime too. Marion rubbed her cigarette around in the ashtray, cleaning off the bottom with her butt and pushing the ashes to the side, [Marion:] Maybe we should look into it right away. Harry took another drag on his cigarette and shrugged, [Harry:] If you want to. She continued with the butt in the ashtray, nodded her head and murmured. [Marion:] Yes. A little voice inside Harry said, Thank krist.”
Marion no longer feels secure without any heroin in her apartment, and, because the streets are too dangerous, she cannot even be proactive in searching for a score like Harry. Big Tim appears to be the only reliable dealer in town, and he will only sell in exchange for sex. The fact that Marion is open to exploring this offer and that Harry is not only unresisting, but relieved, shows how their love has faded in the face of their addiction. Marion continues to compromise her own moral limitations, which is becoming increasingly difficult for her to cope with.
“Harry? Yeah? Do we have to tell Tyrone about these bags? He looked at her, a voice inside saying, fuck no. Me and him are tight. He set the whole thing up. I know, I know, Marion looked up into Harrys eyes, but Im the one who went up there. Harry could feel the burning flush seeping out from his inner being somewhere and was hoping to krist he didnt turn red. He nodded his head, Okay. I guess what he dont know wont killim.”
Harry and Tyrone have been partners for a long time, and neither has ever held back from the other. However, the crisis on the streets pushes Harry, Marion, and Tyrone to be secretive, each holding out a bit of their scores from the other, hiding what they would have once shared—a sure sign of their desperation and of the degradation of their friendship.
“They tried to numb their minds with the uppers and heroin, but still the desperateness of the situation forced itself upon them. Separately they each felt increasingly aware of the fact that what they were doing was insane. They were half a world away from the neighborhood. They were strung out, a fact that they pussy footed around for a long time, but now it thrust itself right in their guts. They were strung out and they were driving through some asshole fuckin state trying to get to Miami and find the big connections. They could smell them. They knew they were following the connections. But what the fuck were they going to do when they got there? What the fuck was goin on?”
Miami represents Harry and Tyrone’s best chance at scoring a significant amount of heroin; however, they make this assumption based on rumors. Neither has ever been far away from their neighborhood, meaning they have no contacts and no safeguards. As they approach Miami, Harry and Tyrone feel out of their depth and exposed. Again, they did not consider the greater context of their actions.
“It wasnt only what she had done that was disturbing her, but the ease with which she had done it. And when she got her share of the piece she knew it was all worth it. When she got home she got off and any disquieting feelings were immediately dissolved by the heroin and she didnt even bother bathing, that could wait until morning. She just stretched out on her couch, in front of her television, ignoring the smell from her body and lips, thinking over and over that Big Tim was right, this is good stuff. That taste will last a long time. She smiled to herself. And theres more where that came from, and no one to share it with. I can always have as much as I want. She hugged herself and smiled, I can always feel like this.”
Marion has never felt as if she has a solid identity; initially, her relationship with Harry seemed like it was on track to help her figure out who she really is for herself. However, her addiction to heroin causes her to lose herself completely, giving up on any dreams that she and Harry built, to chase a false sense of security that getting high and stockpiling heroin brings her. She is easily able to justify and compartmentalize the increasingly degrading sexual acts she must perform to get her fix.
“Sara shuffled along the medication line with the others. She stood still for a moment, then shuffled forward a little, stood still for another moment, then shuffled forward again until she stood in front of the attendant who put the Thorazine in her mouth and watched her swallow it before letting her leave. She stood in the corner, her arms wrapped around her, watching the others shuffle up and get their tranquilizers. Then the area was cleared. Empty. She continued to stare in front of her, then slowly turned her head and looked in various directions, then she, too, left. She kept her arms wrapped around herself as she shuffled, in her paper slippers, into the television room. Some of the others were sitting with their chin on their chest, already feeling the effects of the medication. Some were laughing, some were crying. Sara stared at the screen.”
Sara is left tranquilized on Thorazine and other drugs, unable to adequately communicate her needs to her doctors and nurses, even if they wanted to listen to her. In a way, Sara has come full circle, left alone, staring at a TV, but even more isolated than ever.
“Harry was unconscious when they wheeled him into the operating room. They amputated his arm at the shoulder and immediately started anti-infection therapy in an attempt to save his life. He was being fed intravenously in his right arm and both ankles and was strapped to the bed so the needles wouldnt rip his veins if he started to convulse. A tube was in his nose so a steady supply of oxygen could be fed to his lungs. There were two drains in his side connected to a small pump under the bed in an effort to pump the poisonous fluid from his body. From time to time Harry stirred and groaned as he struggled to free himself from the claws of a nightmare and the nurse sitting by his side wiped his head with a cool, damp cloth, and spoke to him soothingly, and Harry would calm and once more be motionless, seeming almost to be dead, as he was absorbed by a dream and a feeling of weightlessness…then light surrounded him, light so complete and intense he experienced it in every part of his being, making him feel like he had never felt in his life, like he was something special, something really special. Harry felt the light/s warmth and he smiled so widely that he almost laughed as he felt joy flowing through his entire being.”
Harry loses his arm to infection after injecting over and over into a single vein on his arm and contracting gangrene. The imagery and his dreams as he fights for his life after the operation suggests that he has a near death experience, nearly succumbing to the infection spreading through his body. At the end of the novel, Harry is left in an uncertain condition, recovering from a major operation, yet still facing jail time.
“Eventually the spasms and retching passed and he was able to struggle through a days work with the help of other prisoners, and soon he was just another black ass to the guards and they left him alone to do his work and his time, and at night Tyrone would lie on his bunk thinking of his moms and the warm sweetness of her breath.”
Tyrone faces the already agonizing symptoms of heroin withdrawal, which are exacerbated by the conditions of the Southern jail and work gang. Other prisoners help him acclimate to this new life; even though his sentence is not long, this acclimation suggests that he is on his path to becoming more like the “old dope fiend” than he had hoped. At night he dreams of his mother, a symbol of innocence, comfort, and better times—a dream that is now lost to him.
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