Hellfire feels like it was written fast, too — but not ground out like a quickie, really written,  in what I envision as a month or two of icy lyric fury. Even at the  end, when what begins as heroic narrative breaks down into a string of  clipped little items that might just as well have been lifted whole from  the trades, the police blotter, and the secret diary of Oral Roberts  Jr., the book has the kind of trance-like coherence that has overtaken  every writer at the dawn of a specially blessed all-nighter. Basically  the tale of the archetypal Southern backslider, it’s been described as  Biblical and Faulknerian, and it should be. But Tosches, who has lots of  just-the-facts hack in him, sustains a page-turning pace that  intensifies its of-a-pieceness. And his tone partakes of the grand,  inexorable distance of a genuine epic as well.
Such things cannot be, of course — the epic is of the past. All the  oral tradition south of the Mason-Dixon line can’t bring it back  unspoiled, and anybody who thinks different is ignorant, pretentious, or  both. So Hellfire can only succeed as some kind of mock epic,  the chronicle of a would-be hero in an antiheroic age. And indeed,  Tosches does cut King James’s English with journalese; he does mix  straight reporting and bent faction with the stuff of legend; he does  disfigure his story with the mean details of Lewis’s vanity, cruelty,  and crazed sense of humor. But Hellfire isn’t mock anything.  Without hewing foolishly to the usages of a dead form or trying to write  like someone he isn’t, and without presenting Lewis’s excesses as  merely cool, colorful, or semi-divine, Tosches limns the life of a doomed  hero as if that hero deserved our respect, and his. As a dedicated  classicist who is also a former snake hunter and a contributing editor  to Penthouse, he rejects the notion that there’s something  debased or devalued about the mongrel rhetoric he exploits. It’s just  there, with all it’s peculiar virtues and drawbacks, and it’s Jerry Lee  Lewis’s mother tongue.
Not that this avowed Pindar fan doesn’t respect the past — not even  that he doesn’t believe there-were-giants-in-those-days. Like most rock  critics with a specialty in roots music, he disdains most of today’s  pop, and his Jerry Lee is driven by his heritage as “the final wild son”  (Tosches’s phrase) of a family with “a big history” (Lewis’s). Nor is Hellfire  at all solemn — in fact, it’s very funny indeed. Lewis’s excesses  aren’t merely cool or colorful, but they’re at least that — this wild  son has done a lot of exorbitant things in his life, and he’s some  interview:
 “‘I mean Elvis this, Elvis that. What the shit did Elvis do  except take dope that I couldn’t git ahold of? That’s very discouraging,  anybody that had that much power to git ahold of that much dope.’ ”  Furthermore, Tosches does play his story for laughs, often finding punch  lines in the grand rhythms of his rhetoric itself: “She caressed Jerry  Lee and soon told him that she was pregnant. He told her that it was no  seed of his that had rendered her so. They lifted their hands in anger  anew.” Nevertheless, Tosches never makes fun. There is a humor not of  derision of of delight.
I’m making big claims for Tosches’s complexity of tone, and I’m sure  not everyone will read him that way. His elevated periods can be  dismissed as rodomontade, his jokes a sarcasm, his compact narrative and  penchant for interior monologue as proof that he didn’t do his  homework. Then again, you can also dismiss Jerry Lee Lewis as one more  unholy roller, or pigeonhole his achievement as a couple of classic rock  and roll songs, a piano insignia, and a fling as a country star. But I  would argue — having listened long and hard, I would swear — that  there’s a lot more there. Lewis’s offhand arrogance, candid insincerity,  and unshakable sense of destiny are not qualities commonly found in  any artist. He’s very much a modern, set apart not so much by the  elementary truth and transcendent power of his singing and playing as by  his self-consciousness itself. His distance from his own show of fervor  can seem positively eerie upon reflection, yet it in no way diminishes  that fervor — if anything, the distance helps the fervor penetrate and  endure. 
Tosches has absorbed this sensibility if he didn’t share it all  along. In Country, he avers (pace Bird and JB) that Jerry Lee  Lewis’s mastery of 20th century rhythm is rivaled only by Faulkner’s,  but what author has learned from subject hardly stops there, and where  it ends is with that same synthesis of distance and fervor. This is why  Albert Goldman’s half-truths about rock’s attitudinal roots in “the  put-on and the take-off” are so irrelevant — it’s radically unlike “Mad  or the routines of Sid Caesar” because its formal roots are in the  ecstatic, vernacular music of the American South, just as Tosches, who  is touched with the spirit, is radically unlike Goldman, who has all the largess of an unemployed gag-writer.
 
What Tosches believes is harder to know. I suspect, however, that the  source of his own fervor isn’t second-hand — isn’t just his passion for  Jerry Lee Lewis. Tosches’s account of Pentecostal fundamentalism  maintains an objective if not skeptical tone. But like everything else  in this terse, intense book, it never gets theoretical, never  socializes, and though nothing else would be formally appropriate I’m  left wondering. 
Not only does it seem that Tosches envies Lewis the  simplicity of his Manichaeism, which is bad enough, but it also seems  that in a less literal way he counts himself in thrall to the same  dichotomies. Tosches makes no bones about the wages of this belief,  always linked so intimately with romantic agony in extremis — he leaves  Lewis unloved and without male issue, his career and his IRS account in  tatters. His judgement, however, is muted. If Lewis has traded an  eternity in hellfire for some great music, you can’t help but feel that  Tosches has gotten a fairly great book at similar cost.
As a skeptic in the matter of eternity, I don’t really believe that myself, of course, and Hellfire is fairly great indeed — the finest rockstar bio ever and up with Mystery Train among all rockbooks. But as such it raises philosophical questions, for it reminds us that even the much more reflective Mystery Train  is rooted in — and perhaps limited by — the Puritan tradition and/or  the Great Awakening, which between them sometimes seem to ground all  American culture. Because Nick Tosches, Greil Marcus, and Jerry Lee  Lewis each takes this heritage seriously, each creates worth that isn’t  mock anything, that connects us with an epic, heroic, deeply felt past.  But in escaping modernism’s cul-de-sac they don’t escape modernity,  which is why it’s worth remembering that in the end both Hellfire and Mystery Train  aren’t epic at all. They’re tragedies of damnation. I’m not lodging a  complaint — these aren’t just fine rockbooks, they’re fine books, a lot  finer and more durable than most of what passes for literature and  criticism these days. But one reason for that is that neither of them is  content with such achievements. To the either-or — and beyond!