In May of 2012 a tall man from Oklahoma climbs the stairs to an apartment on the Upper West Side. Blake Bailey (b. July 1, 1963) has written to Philip Roth (1933–2018) and said he hears Roth wants a biographer and asks if they might talk. Roth calls him. They meet. At that first meeting they barely touch the subject of the book. Roth tells him to come back Saturday.
When Bailey returns, Roth sits in a far grimmer mood. Bailey asks about his back. Roth cuts him off. “You didn’t come here to ask about my back,” he says. “Sit down.” Then Roth asks the question that decides everything. Why should a gentile from Oklahoma write the biography of Philip Roth?
Bailey has an answer ready. He is not a bisexual alcoholic with an ancient Puritan lineage either, he says, and he wrote the life of John Cheever. Roth presses him on the Jewish American tradition, on Bellow and Malamud, on where Roth stands in it, having just told Bailey he does not consider himself a Jewish American writer at all. Bailey decides this man will not daunt him. He answers. Roth grows impatient, finishes the answers for him, then recollects the finished thought as though Bailey had nailed it himself. Roth asks what he makes of the reputation for misogyny that trails him.
That afternoon Roth chooses his biographer. Six years later Roth is dead and the book is nine hundred pages and Bailey stands at the top of his profession. Three weeks after that, he stands nowhere at all.
The shape of Bailey’s life rhymes with the lives he chose to write. He spent two decades inside the records of gifted, damaged American men, asking how the same flaws that wrecked a life could also drive the work. Then the question turned on him.
Oklahoma
Bailey grows up in Oklahoma City in the shadow of his father. Burck Bailey is an eminent litigator, president of the Oklahoma Bar Association, a man who argues cases before the Supreme Court and carries among his colleagues the reputation of a real-life Atticus Finch. A 1989 citation praises his conduct, honesty, integrity, and courtesy as the highest standard of the profession. The father owns the courtroom. The younger son does not yet own anything.
There is an older brother, Scott, and Scott is the wound at the center of the family. Bipolar, addicted, in and out of institutions from the 1970s on, charming and destructive in the same hour, Scott absorbs the household’s fear and grief for thirty years and then, in 1999, in his thirties, kills himself. Blake is the favored younger son, the watchful one, the survivor with a notebook. He will write that story later and write it without flinching and without sentiment.
He attends Bishop McGuinness Catholic High School in Oklahoma City, where one of his friends is the future writer Dan Fagin. He goes to Tulane University and graduates in 1985. He wants to write fiction. He writes unpublished novels. An agent reads one, tells him he writes well and that she cannot sell it, and asks him to propose a nonfiction book about anything that grips him. What grips him at that moment is the question of whatever became of the novelist Richard Yates.
The classroom
Before the books, there is a classroom.
Through the 1990s Bailey teaches eighth-grade English at Lusher in New Orleans, a school run out of a repurposed courthouse Uptown. His room sits on the top floor. Big windows, high ceilings, more glamorous than the trailers some of his colleagues teach in. He gives gifted children serious literature and asks them to write with care, and they love him for it. On field trips a flock of them gathers around him while he keeps up a witty patter. A retired colleague, Steve Burt, watches it and finds it pleasant, nothing worse than that. It was kind of nice to see, he says.
The class reads Slaughterhouse-Five. Bailey sets an assignment. Each student writes a timeline of the good and bad things that have happened in a life. One girl, Eve Crawford Peyton, turns in her own: a brother’s suicide, her parents’ divorce, the rest of it, handed to a teacher for a grade and for his approval. Years later she describes what she thinks she handed him. Proof that she was easy pickings. Proof that she was damaged.
She is thirteen then. Decades later she and other women say the warmth in that room had a second purpose. They say Bailey stayed in their lives through high school and college under the cover of mentorship, that he asked about their love lives, that he tracked their virginity with a recurring question. Have you punched your V-card yet. Peyton says that at sixteen he greeted her with a spinning hug and a hand on her backside and a remark about her figure. These are accounts given in 2021, two decades after the events, and Bailey denies the conduct they describe. The denials and the accounts will collide in public later. For now the room is only a room with good light, and the man at the front of it is the best teacher many of these children will ever have. In 2000 the state names him Louisiana Humanities Teacher of the Year. Both things are part of the record. The biography of any life has to hold them at once, which is the problem Bailey spent his career solving for other men and never had to solve, in print, for himself.
The making of a biographer
Yates gives him his subject and his method. Bailey publishes a long critical profile arguing that a neglected novelist deserves a second reading, then persuades a publisher to let him write the life. A Tragic Honesty: The Life and Work of Richard Yates appears in 2003 and reaches the finals of the National Book Critics Circle Award. Bailey refuses the easy versions of Yates, the romantic martyr and the mere drunk, and gives instead a writer whose exacting standards keep colliding with his weaknesses. The collision is the story. It will be the story every time.
A Guggenheim Fellowship in 2005 carries him through the next book. Cheever: A Life (2009) draws on the family’s papers, the journals, the letters, and renders John Cheever (1912–1982) as a man split between suburban respectability and private chaos: the drinking, the buried desires, the religious hunger, the self-deception. It wins the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography and the Francis Parkman Prize, reaches the Pulitzer finals, and stands as the definitive account. Bailey also edits Cheever for the Library of America. Cheever’s daughter Susan calls his work on her father thorough and intelligent and loving, and a hard road walked just about perfectly.
He rescues another forgotten novelist with Farther & Wilder: The Lost Weekends and Literary Dreams of Charles Jackson (2013). Charles Jackson (1903–1968), remembered for The Lost Weekend, returns under Bailey’s hand as a talented insecure man consumed by addiction and by his need for literary success.
The same period gives him his first memoir, The Splendid Things We Planned (2014). He turns the family camera on Scott. The book refuses both pity and judgment. Scott comes off destructive, magnetic, pitiable, beyond saving. A finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in autobiography, it shows the root of Bailey’s lifelong pull toward gifted men who break themselves. He had lived with one.
Roth
By 2012 Bailey is the obvious choice and not the first one.
Roth had spent years hunting for a biographer who might answer his ex-wife Claire Bloom and refute her memoir. He approached Hermione Lee and Judith Thurman, both friends, both accomplished, and landed instead on his friend Ross Miller, an English professor and nephew of Arthur Miller, who had never written a biography. Roth thought Miller’s prose no jeweled thing and cared more for sympathy than for style. He told Miller he did not want the book to become the story of his penis. He wanted the novels at the center.
It went wrong. Roth could not keep his hands off the project. He set up the interviews, drafted the questions, in one case steered Miller toward a dying friend to extract old gossip. He wrote the Library of America chronology himself and signed Miller’s name to it. By fax he declared himself too angry to speak to his own biographer. The friendship dissolved and the book died with it. At a luncheon Bailey hears that Miller has stopped returning Roth’s calls. He writes to Roth. The chair is open.
What Bailey brings to the chair is a rule he learned from the wreck of Miller. He tells Roth in those early meetings that he wants a professional relationship, not the intimacy that curdled the last one. He gets, in June of 2012, a collaboration agreement granting unrestricted and exclusive access to the archive, the unpublished work, the private correspondence. Roth, seventy-nine, makes himself available for years of interviews and leans on friends and family to cooperate. He hands Bailey a three-hundred-page chronology of his own life and a copy of an unpublished manuscript titled Notes for My Biographer. He inherits Miller’s taped interviews. Miller will not answer his letters.
For six years they are collaborators, friends, sometimes combatants. Bailey writes that their time together was complicated but rarely unhappy and never dull. One hour Roth cracks jokes and pages through a photo album of old girlfriends, of whom there are many. The next he seethes over Bloom. Bailey expects the lewdness and the tasteless jokes. What surprises him, he says, is the essential benevolence of the man. He sits at the deathbed in 2018, Roth surrounded by former lovers and old friends rather than a wife or children, and watches the end the way he watched everything, as material.
Philip Roth: The Biography publishes on April 6, 2021. It runs to nine hundred pages. On the front page of the New York Times Book Review, Cynthia Ozick (b. 1928) calls it a narrative masterwork. The book debuts at number twelve on the Times nonfiction list. David Remnick praises the literary genius who keeps getting it wrong, loving and then hurting, devoted past reason to his art. Not every notice glows. In the daily Times, Parul Sehgal faults Bailey for a sprawling fixation on Roth’s private life and a reticence about the work, and calls the result a narrow portrait of a wide life. Other reviewers argue that Bailey took Roth’s own version of his women too readily, that the sympathetic life makes its subject a spiteful obsessive rather than the wronged man he hoped to become. The argument over whether Bailey served Roth too well is, for about two weeks, the only argument anyone is having about the book.
The collapse
The second argument starts in a comment thread.
On April 16, 2021, several of Bailey’s former Lusher students post on a critical online review of the Roth biography and say he groomed them as minors. On April 18 his agency, the Story Factory, drops him. On April 20 the journalists Ramon Antonio Vargas and Edward Champion report the allegations in detail. Eve Crawford Peyton tells the Times-Picayune and The New York Times that Bailey raped her when she was twenty-two, on a book-tour night that began with drinks and an invitation she accepted because she thought she was spending an evening with a mentor. On April 27 a publishing executive, Valentina Rice, tells the Times that Bailey raped her in 2015, when both were overnight guests at the home of the Times critic Dwight Garner. Another former student, Caryn Blair, says he tried to rape her years after Lusher. In June the Virginian-Pilot reports allegations of harassment and abuse from four women who studied under Bailey at Old Dominion University, where he held an endowed chair in creative writing from 2010 to 2016.
Bailey denies all of it. He calls the claims categorically false and libelous. He has never been charged with a crime, much less tried or convicted. In an email to Peyton sent before the story broke, he writes that she was in her twenties and he in his thirties on the night in question, that he was never attracted to her as a student, that he never laid a glove on any student while she was his, and that he was suffering from an unspecified mental illness at the time of the encounter. The email concedes the encounter and disputes its character. Peyton, after Norton acts, says the news is disappointing but not surprising, that she told the truth, and that she has nothing more to add.
Norton moves fast. On April 21 the publisher pauses shipping and promotion pending further information. On April 28 it takes the book out of print. Recorded Books pulls the audio the same day. Then Norton goes further and announces it will pulp the biography and reverts to declaring its 2014 memoir out of print as well. Julia Reidhead, Norton’s president, says Bailey is free to seek publication elsewhere.
He does. His lawyers threaten action over the canceled contract. Norton pays out the remainder of his advance and reverts the rights. Skyhorse Publishing, an outfit with a taste for authors other houses drop, acquires both books and reissues the Roth biography in ebook and paperback within weeks. The defining publishing fight of the early 2020s ends in a settlement, not a courtroom, and the nine-hundred-page life of Philip Roth stays in print under a different imprint than the one that made it a bestseller.
The fight splits the literary world along a line that does not track the usual partisan one. The accusers and many readers see a predator finally named. Free-expression groups see a publisher punishing a book for the conduct of its author absent any finding. PEN America, the National Coalition Against Censorship, and the Authors Guild all object to the pulping. The argument is not whether the accusations are grave. The argument is who decides, and when, and on what proof, and what a publisher owes a reader who might want to weigh a contested life for himself.
The ghost
Bailey survives by going underground. A friend gets him work as a literal ghostwriter, which is the kind of irony he would have flagged in someone else’s biography. He learns the etiquette of social death. At weddings and large gatherings old acquaintances fix smiles and pretend they have not seen a ghost. A writer friend tells him the life he knew is over, forever, and that the sooner he accepts that the better.
In 2025 he answers with Canceled Lives: My Father, My Scandal, and Me, a short book, under two hundred pages, that braids three deaths and one disgrace. His father’s final illness. Roth’s. The drug-driven suicide of his brother Scott, which Bailey describes with a hard mercy as a favor Scott did himself and his family, sparing them the man he had become. And his own social erasure. The book defends him in places. He still calls the accusations false. But it reads less as a brief than as a study of grief and family loyalty, of a son measuring himself against a father who won his arguments in court while the son, a biographer rather than a litigator, can only set down a life and hope a reader weighs it fairly. The reviews are sparse. The strategy against him, Bailey tells one interviewer, has changed from attack to silence, and silence works. He says he will go away soon enough. In the meantime he has said his piece, and no one, he claims, has stood up to deny it.
He is at work on a biography of James Salter (1925–2015). The return to the form that made him is itself a kind of argument, made in the only court he trusts.
The unfinished life
Bailey’s biographies hold a settled place in American nonfiction. He builds from thousands of letters, journals, interviews, and unpublished pages, often won through unusual cooperation from estates and survivors, and he tells the result as story, chronological, scene by scene, the personality surfacing through what people said and did rather than through theory. Psychology sits where another writer might put criticism. His subjects are nearly always men whose talent shares a body with their wreckage, and he asks, book after book, how the achievement grows out of the frailty, whether the same flaw that ruined the man also fed the work.
He never had to answer that question about himself in one of his own books, and now he never can, because the standard he applied to the dead, the patient assembly of testimony toward a fair verdict, is the standard his accusers say the public skipped in his case, and the standard his defenders say his publisher skipped too. He spent a career insisting that a life is more than its worst chapter and also more than its best, that a man is the sum of the record and the record is large. His own record now carries a front-page review calling him a master and a front-page story calling him a predator, a teaching prize and a list of women, a pulped book and the same book back in print. Whether the reader files Blake Bailey under the finest literary biographer of his generation or under the publishing scandal of the decade, the file stays open. He built his life’s work on the belief that such files should stay open. He may have to live inside that belief for the rest of his life, with no one to write him.
Letting the Repellent In
Some time before the accusations go public, Blake Bailey writes to a woman he taught when she was a girl. Her name is Eve Crawford Peyton. He wants the record straight. He tells her she was in her twenties on the night in question and he in his thirties, just barely. He tells her he was never drawn to her when she sat in his eighth-grade classroom. He says he never laid a glove on any student while she was his student. He mentions an illness he was carrying at the time. The email concedes that a night happened and disputes everything about what the night was.
She files it away. When the story breaks she gives a short statement. She told her story. She told the truth. She has nothing to add.
Two people. One night. Two accounts, each offered as honesty, each meaning by that word something the other cannot use. This is where the life of Blake Bailey turns, and the turn runs deeper than scandal. It runs down to the question Ernest Becker (1924–1974) spent his life on in The Denial of Death, which is how a man makes his existence feel real against the certainty that it ends, and what he reaches for when the scheme that made it feel real turns on him.
Becker says man is the animal that knows it will die, and the knowledge is unbearable, so every culture hands its members a part to play in a drama that outlasts the body. The drama tells you what counts as a hero and what counts as nothing. Live by it and you earn a sense that your days add to something the grave cannot reach. Becker called these the immortality systems. The terror they hold off comes in two grades. The first is the body’s death. The second is worse, the dread of having left no mark, of being a man who passed through and counted for nothing. The first kills you once. The second can be done to a living man, and when it is done the world calls it disgrace.
Bailey built a hero system around the rendering of a dead man complete. He spent two decades inside the archives of gifted, ruined American writers, and he came out each time with the same offering. Here is the man entire. Here is the talent and the drinking and the cruelty and the tenderness, set down in order, withholding nothing, judging nothing. He took the phrase for it from Philip Roth, who told him to let the repellent in. The motto became the craft. To leave the repellent out was to lie about a life, and to lie about a life was the only sin the system named. Completeness was the form his honesty took. A man who had been reduced to his worst chapter had been, in this system, half murdered, and the biographer’s work was to undo the murder and give the dead back their full size.
Watch the work and you see what death-defiance looks like when a man does it for a living. Bailey sits at Roth’s bedside in 2018 and the novelist is dying and Bailey is taking it in as material. There is no cruelty in this for him. It is reverence. The body fails and the record does not, and the record is the part of a man that outlasts the body, so the biographer at the deathbed is the priest of his own faith, present at the one moment the work exists to defeat. He had done the same to his own family. His brother Scott killed himself in 1999, and Bailey turned the suicide into a book that refused to flatter Scott or pity him, and the refusal was the love. He gives the dead the only thing he has, which is accuracy, and accuracy is how he holds off oblivion for them and, in the holding, for himself.
His own bid for the part runs through the same channel. Get the lives right and become the man who got them right, the great biographer, consecrated by the institutions that decide such things. In April of 2021 the bid pays out. Cynthia Ozick calls his life of Roth a narrative masterwork on the front page of the Times Book Review. The book lands at number twelve on the nonfiction list. Nine hundred pages, a Guggenheim behind him, the Cheever already canonical. A man becomes, for about two weeks, exactly the hero his system promised he could become.
Then the same institutions perform the second death on him, and they do it fast.
The accusations arrive in a comment thread and move to the front pages within days. Former students say he groomed them as girls and pursued them as young women. Peyton says he raped her at twenty-two. A publishing executive named Valentina Rice says he raped her in 2015. Bailey denies all of it and calls the claims false and libelous, and no court ever tests them, because the trial happens somewhere else. His agency drops him. Norton pauses the book, then takes it out of print, then pulps it, and reverts his memoir too. The press, Julia Reidhead, says he is free to seek publication elsewhere. He becomes, in the word he later reaches for, a non-person. He runs into old friends at a wedding and watches their faces fix into smiles while their eyes register a ghost. Everybody knows. A writer friend tells him the life he knew is over, forever, and the sooner he accepts it the better.
This is the subtraction, and its cruelty is precise. Bailey is destroyed by the exact operation his craft existed to refuse. The world takes a man of many chapters and reduces him to one. It declines to let the talent and the teaching and the twenty years of careful work stand beside the worst thing said of him. It performs on Blake Bailey the half-murder he spent his life undoing for the dead. A man whose entire faith held that no one should be collapsed into his lowest act is collapsed into his lowest act, by the priesthood that had just crowned him, in the pages that had just blessed him.
He feels the symmetry and cannot make anyone else feel it. The reason sits at the center of Becker, and it is the reason these essays keep circling the same wound. The word that names the highest good does not carry across the border between hero systems. Honesty is not one thing that some people honor and others betray. It is a different sacrament in every faith, and the faiths do not recognize each other’s rites.
Consider the system Bailey was born into. His father, Burck, argued cases before the Supreme Court and ran the Oklahoma bar and carried among his colleagues the name of a real-life Atticus Finch, cited for conduct and integrity of the highest order. To the litigator, honesty is candor inside a contest. You take one side and argue it to the limit, and the other man takes his, and truth is the thing that survives the collision under rules a judge enforces. The verdict comes after the hearing. Never before. A litigator who pronounced a man guilty before the evidence was heard would have violated the only honesty his system knows. Bailey grew up watching this and absorbed its deepest assumption, that a full hearing precedes judgment, and he carried the assumption into a country that had stopped sharing it. His memoir of the disgrace sets his father’s courtroom against the tribunal that erased him and finds the second has no tribunal at all, only the accusation and the sentence fused into one act. To the son of the litigator this is the death of honesty. To the people who erased him it is honesty’s arrival, late and partial.
Because to the witness, honesty is testimony, and testimony is the breaking of a silence that protected a powerful man. Peyton hands her teacher a timeline of her own griefs when she is thirteen, a brother’s suicide, a divorce, and she says years later that she handed him proof she was easy to take. Her honesty is the act of saying, at last, in public, what was whispered for decades over wine by women who each believed she was the only one. In her system the complete account is the enemy. The complete man, the talented charming teacher rendered in full, sympathetic size, is the instrument that buried the harm in the first place. The demand to see the whole figure, to understand before judging, is to her the precise move that lets a predator keep his standing. She has heard the language of completeness all her life, and in her hearing it has always served the man and silenced the girl. So when Bailey asks for the courtesy he extended to Cheever and Roth, the full and unhurried account before the verdict, he is asking her to perform the rite that wronged her, and he cannot understand why she refuses, and she cannot understand how he dares.
The novelist held a third honesty, and Bailey served him for six years. To Roth, honesty was transgression, the exposure of the shameful self as the highest aim of the work, the willingness to wound the living and the dead alike in pursuit of the unsayable. Roth spent sixty thousand dollars to change a passage in a book and called his ex-wife’s memoir a slander and wrote rebuttals he never published, and none of this struck him as a betrayal of honesty, because in his system honesty is what you put on the page about the human animal, and the casualties are the cost of art. Bailey admired this without limit and built his sympathetic life of Roth on its terms, and the critics who turned on the book before they turned on the man said he had taken Roth’s honesty too far inside, that the biographer had caught the novelist’s faith and could no longer see his subject from any other church.
Set beside these the man who keeps the confessional seal. To the priest in the box, honesty is the penitent’s full confession, said once, to one hearer, under a silence that may never break. The completeness Bailey craves is sacred here too, total disclosure, the soul laid bare with nothing held back. But the disclosure exists to be buried, not published. Honesty and secrecy are the same act. A confessor who wrote a nine-hundred-page account of what he heard would have committed the gravest betrayal his system knows, and the same thoroughness that makes Bailey a hero in his faith would make him a monster in this one. The full account is holy. Printing it is damnation. Two systems, one value, opposite commands.
And there is the editor at the front page, whose honesty is the single line the public reads over breakfast. The headline cannot hold nine hundred pages. It holds a verdict. Completeness is its enemy, because a man rendered in full cannot be set in a headline, and a country that runs on headlines will always reduce the man to the chapter that fits the type. The same front page of the same paper consecrated Bailey in one season and erased him in the next, and both acts were honest by the editor’s lights, because the editor’s honesty is fidelity to the verdict the moment has reached, not to the man underneath it.
Lay these beside one another and the shape of Bailey’s catastrophe comes clear. He thought he and his accusers were arguing about whether he was honest. They were not. They were standing in different temples, each holding the word, each meaning a different god by it. To him the reduction of a man to one act is annihilation, the very crime his life opposed. To the witness the refusal to be reduced to a footnote in a great man’s sympathetic Life is survival, and naming the worst chapter and forbidding the charm to bury it is exactly the honesty he should have practiced on the men he wrote and never did. The operation is identical. Take the man, find the chapter, let it stand for the rest. In one temple it is murder. In the next it is justice. Bailey ran the operation on the dead for twenty years and called it love, and the world ran it on him and called it a reckoning, and neither side was lying.
So where does a reader stand who wants the truth and not the comfort.
He can stand inside Bailey’s temple, and from there Bailey is a man who told the truth about the dead with more care than anyone of his generation, and was destroyed by people who would not grant him the completeness he granted everyone, including the worst men he ever studied. The pulped book is a censor’s bonfire and the disgrace is a hearing held without a tribunal.
He can stand inside the witness’s temple, and from there Bailey is a man who spent his gift teaching the world to see charming predators in their full and sympathetic size, and whose erasure is a rough, late, incomplete justice, the first time the verdict came before the obituary instead of after, the first time the chapter was allowed to stand for the man while the man was still alive to feel it.
Or he can stand where Becker stood, above both temples, and see that neither congregation is lying and that this is the worst news of all. Each is a man or a woman holding off the dread of counting for nothing by serving the only honesty that makes a life feel real, and the words do not convert at the border, and there is no higher court to set the exchange rate, because the higher court is the thing every temple was built to replace. Bailey wanted the full hearing his father believed in. His accusers wanted the testimony their silence had denied them. Both wanted to be real, and to be real in this world a man has to be a hero in some story, and the stories were at war, and the war was fought over a single word that each side owned and neither could share. The same newspaper crowned him and buried him on the same kind of page, and if you imagine each front page held up to the light and asked whether it told the truth, the honest answer, in the only sense the word will bear, is that both of them did.
