Things Worth Fighting For: Collected
Writings
by Michael Kelly
(The Penguin Press, 426 pages, $26.95)
“One day in 1998,” Michael Kelly wrote in November 2002, “I was
invited to have an off-the-record chat with an important staff
person on the Clinton Administration’s National Security Council…
The whole experience was terrific fun, although I could never shake
the feeling that it was all a mistake — that I was supposed to be
someone else entirely, someone who mattered, Tom Friedman or Bob
Woodward probably.” The column adjoined to these words is reprinted
with dozens of others in Things Worth Fighting For, a new
and solemnly accoutered collection of Kelly’s journalism from the
Penguin Press. Kelly, “embedded” with the 3rd Infantry Division in
Iraq, was killed in a Humvee rollover on April 3 of last year.
The bit about being “someone who mattered” is, I think, one of
the most personally revealing statements to be found in Kelly’s
body of work. It reads like humility: I, Mike Kelly, am not in any
wise comparable to the Friedmans and Woodwards, the titans of the
scribal world. Look closer — look for the cocky Irish dynamo who
chewed right through the nucleus of American journalism in about a
decade. He’s not bowing to his betters in that sentence: He’s
astonished at the effrontery of this… this Clinton hack who
thinks, Christ on a bike, that he can spin Mike Kelly!
As if, like Bob Woodward, Kelly would happily accept precious,
half-digested morsels of insider dope, whizzing across town to
trade them for more of their like. As if, like Thomas Friedman, he
would happily apply a layer of marzipan to some ambitious turd’s
geopolitical layer cake and present it to the world as Received
Wisdom. Mike Kelly! Imagine Mike Kelly as “someone who
mattered!”
He was, and knew he was, someone who mattered to the consumers
of newspapers and magazines — not someone who mattered only to
their creators. His reporting on the first Gulf War made his
reputation. Indeed, our mental picture of that war — particularly
of the atrocities committed by the occupiers of Kuwait, and of the
carnage on the “Highway of Death” from Kuwait to Basra — was
defined by him.
Later came Kelly’s unprecedented serial transformations, as
editor, of the New Republic and the Atlantic
Monthly. He made the former a general-interest magazine again,
in the full meaning of the term, and until he laid hands on the
latter it wasn’t the sort of thing you’d buy except by accident. It
took him about four years, all told, to perform this. I was
bewildered when Peggy Noonan wrote in a eulogy to Kelly that “He
was going to be one of the great editors of his time…” Going to
be? Cripes, lady — what more did you want?
In fact, at the time of his death he had already ascended to the
well-deserved Valhalla of the “editor-at-large.” That is generally
a place no man leaves willingly to return to the world. But Kelly
was just too young to settle into a puffy naugahyde armchair and
dictate dozy columns to an assistant once or twice a week. Feeling,
quite rightly, an almost proprietary interest in the outcome of
America’s struggle with Saddam, he went back to Iraq — where the
road ended.
His writing is, hence, only half of his achievement, and maybe
not even half. For better or worse, it’s the half that will have to
perpetuate his reputation, if that is to happen. (Kelly didn’t stay
in any one place long enough to become synonymous with it, William
Shawn-fashion.) The subjects dealt with between the pages of
Things Worth Fighting For are necessarily ephemeral, but
will the prose last? Setting aside the natural impulse to deify the
man, I can do no better than to answer “maybe.” It may not linger,
qua writing. Kelly’s bon mots are très bon
indeed, but not the sort that get you into Bartlett’s. A
week after I read it, I’m still chuckling over his line about a
couple that had to divorce owing to “irreconcilable similarities.”
But it’s not a self-sufficient epigram, and you could wait ten
years even to steal it and work it into a conversation.
YET KELLY’S REPORTAGE IS indisputably terrific: as a selector of
devastating anecdotes there was none better. Whenever something
chances to make human beings interested in Bosnia or Kuwait, people
will find it useful to consult this book. His potted 1994
history-cum-diagnosis of the Gaza Strip, “Arafat Bombs on Opening
Night,” is particularly fine — almost reminiscent of Black
Lamb and Grey Falcon, Rebecca West’s prophetic and compelling
account of the Balkan Peninsula in 1937. (This may not be a
coincidence, since the piece was serialized in the
Atlantic in 1941.)
And readers could do worse than to consult Things Worth
Fighting For as a general meditation, accidentally compiled
over a working life, on the nature and meaning of warfare. Here,
reporting aspires to the level of Stoic philosophy. When confronted
with the stench and surrealism of mass death on the Basra road,
Kelly did not shut down his inquiring mind in favor of engaging an
outraged tongue. He sought to reflect, and learn. The hard training
prepared him better than most to react to September 11, and he
reacted better than most.
You’ve heard plenty about his gifts as a storyteller already. It
is the significance of his work as a newspaper columnist that has
been minimized somewhat by his colleagues since his death. Speaking
as a neophyte in that field, I must say I consider Things Worth
Fighting For to have been a graduate education; someone ought
to have sent it to me a year ago. Kelly’s fate, perhaps decided by
his birth in Washington, D.C., was to be a man of
hell-in-a-handcart propensities who worked in overwhelmingly
liberal environments. All and sundry took him to their hearts — it
seems that, given the sort of fellow he was, to do otherwise was
impossible — and dismissed his conservative ferocity as an
idiosyncrasy.
In short, they wrapped him in the Blue State flag before they
buried him. In the posthumous anthology, he rises again in all his
Clinton-hating, hipster-crippling, Baby Boomer-excoriating glory.
Michael Kelly, to the life.