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Authors: Colin McEnroe

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“I want you to put this under your rubber plant, in case I get hit by a bus someday.”

“Okay.”

“Gödel’s ‘incompleteness theorem’ is probably the most important idea in all of modern higher math, but I think he’s wrong.
I’m pretty sure I’ve got it right.”

The hubris in this statement is almost incalculable. Gödel’s “incompleteness” is, one could argue, almost as important as
Einstein’s “relativity” or Heisenberg’s “uncertainty.” (And they’re all cousins at the twentieth-century family picnic of
throwing up one’s hands over the whole question of precise knowledge.) The only difference is that fewer people have heard
of Gödel because nobody really cares whether higher math works or not.

Saying you can disprove Gödel is like saying you can prove ice is really air or that outer space is really black velvet draped
over an aluminum frame or that
Ulysses
is really the Dublin phone book.

My father is a polymath, a voracious reader, and a grandiose dabbler with crackpot tendencies. He has been reading extensively
about higher math and is just the type to conclude that he has imploded one of the pillars of the field. Now he stands before
me in his wool dress slacks and the rumpled white dress shirt he wore showing houses the day before and asks me to join him
in this delusion.

“That’s… great,” I tell him.

“You can’t show it to your friends.”

“I’m not sure I’d want to.”

He leaves, and I sit there for a while trying to picture myself spilling the beans to my friends: “Hey, Stinky, my dad has
cracked Gödel’s theorem. What’s your dad up to?” Nyah, nyah, nyah.

There is a rule of thumb in the newspaper business. One of my editors used to call it the “Three-Minute Mile Principle.” It’s
almost as important as Gödel’s “incompleteness.” People show up in newsrooms claiming to have done all kinds of breathtakingly
improbable things. Assassinated the premier of Hungary
using oven cleaner and margarine. Held prisoner by talking leopards. Spotted Barry Goldwater spreading banana peels on the
Chappaquiddick bridge. And if they’re telling the truth, you’ve got a great story. The problem is, they’re usually not, and
quite often they themselves don’t know that they’re not. The Three-Minute Mile Principle is a kind of information triage.
It says that you can’t spend too much of your life checking out all kinds of nutball contentions. If somebody shows up claiming
to have run a mile in three minutes, he probably hasn’t.

Should there be a corollary that says, “On the other hand, if you don’t check out the wildest assertions, you’ll miss Watergate;
you’ll spend your career confirming and reconfirming the dull normal”?

No. We don’t need that rule. You go into the newspaper business because you believe or at least hope that the fabulous is
sometimes true, that giants do walk the earth, and that the tip about machine-gun-wielding teenaged dropouts forming a secret
commune at an abandoned marina on the river is real. You tell your editor you’re going to drive down there and check it out,
and she says, “Good,” because she’s the same way. We don’t need any reminder to keep a certain dreamy romanticism alive in
our work. We had fathers who talked to fairies and who claimed to be secret math geniuses, fathers who took their pre-Christmas
paychecks to the racetrack and hoped the kids would remember the year they came back with the best toys ever.

So when it comes to Bob McEnroe vs. Gödel, screw the Three-Minute Mile Principle. Sitting there with that paper in my hand,
I really believe he’s done it. What choice do I have? One-third of my identity, roughly, is bound up in the belief that this
man with the unruly hair and the permanently distracted look, with his head bowed and his eyes sliding over into an unseeable
crack in the universe, this man is an overlooked genius.

Without having to be told, I know that he is worried about
piracy. What if someone, somehow, got hold of his proof (or disproof) and claimed it as his or her own? His only hope is
to publish it under his own name, but what journal of mathematics is going to listen to a real estate agent and former Broadway
playwright with no formal education in higher math (his recent incarceration in a psychiatric facility being very much the
cherry on the Crackpot Parfait)? I know also that, in my dad’s mind, this mathematical insight is some kind of souvenir from
his supernatural travels, a pale flower plucked from a path in the underworld or an elf-cake baked by the little people.

The little people. He stays up late, communing with them and (more than I know) tippling. They’re the ones who have him thinking
he’s a math genius.

He needs to get it set in type, published, so that he can prove he was the first to refute Gödel. But if he approaches anyone
with this idea, he’ll be dismissed, he knows, as a crank.

“I have a fiendish plan,” he tells me one night.

“Oh?”

So what’s
your
father up to?

“The bottom rung on most ladders is a cell, a place to lock away those who might do harm if left free to roam. There are different
kinds of cells and they make up a ladder of their own. At the top is the luxury cell, which is set aside for dictators, kings,
and presidents. This story is concerned with a cell at the very bottom. It holds a naked mental patient. His mind has been
in a fugue state for five years. He is incontinent. He is washed by a hose. His food is prepared in chunks like dog food.
He cannot be trusted with a knife or fork.”

These are some notes by my father for his novel
The Nemo Paradox.

My father has never been inclined to do harm, but he knows what it is like to wake up from a coma and find his hands
and feet tied to the frame of a hospital bed, to have only the dimmest sense of how he arrived there, to have the daunting
and exhilarating task of rebuilding his life from a point of implosion.

From this starting point he constructs a novel. He has never written one before, and I’m not even sure he likes them that
much. He plunks himself down at the dining table and writes. Late at night, when my mother and I have given up, gone to bed,
he’s still writing and—I now see—probably drinking.

The plot concerns a man named Henry Nemo, accused of terrible crimes and treated, because of his thundering rages, to a lobotomy.
Nemo wakes from surgery with no knowledge of his identity or past. He reconstructs the world ab ovum and when he learns of
the accusations, he escapes from a state mental hospital with the intention of finding himself either innocent or guilty.

Henry Nemo is huge and hairy and dirty and horny.

We have temporarily abandoned fairies and taken up, instead, with a giant.

The Nemo Paradox
is its own kind of paradox. It is, in places, poetic, charming, funny, cosmic. “God made the universe—a trillion trillion
spinning balls of fire. What did he want a universe for?”

It is, in other respects, crude, hostile, and simplistic. It seems unnaturally concerned with sustained erections and sexual
prowess. Most of its women characters exhibit odd and disturbing sexual appetites. If your father had written it, it would
give you the creeps. You would start to wonder what was running through his mind when he took you to the zoo or played whiffle
ball with you. Here is an example of what I mean and—trust me—I’ve made a point of staying away from the truly vivid, visceral,
and viscous.

“She put her feet on the coffee table so that her thigh pressed against me. I did what anybody else would have done and kept
right on doing it until she went from 98.6°F to 102°F. At 102°F her pulse was at 180 and her sweater and slacks were
in a pile on the floor. Her central nervous system rang her engine room for steam and got it. She started to writhe like a
snake on a hot bed of coals. She moaned, trembled, clawed, bit, whispered obscenities in eight languages. Her hips rotated
on a vertical axis, while her pelvis boxed the compass. The effect was gyroscopic and tremendously alive.”

Yeesh.

His career as a successful Broadway playwright lies fifteen years in the past, but he finds a William Morris agent named Ramona
Fallows and courts her.

“Dear Ms. Fallows,” he writes, when she has been too long in responding to his second manuscript submission, “I have been
trying to think of ways to get
The Nemo Paradox
out from under the rubber plant.

“The proposal I have strikes me as being dubiously arithmetical, but it’s all I have.

“I suggest you read the last forty-nine pages, starting at
page 181
. If you like this material it will mean that, by adding
the material you like in the first version to the forty-nine pages, you approve of 77 percent of the novel. (177/230)

“Of course, there are people who are immune to the charms of arithmetic, and lots of people don’t go near rubber plants for
months.”

Three months pass, and he writes her again.

“Dear Ms. Fallows, I dreamed about
The Nemo Paradox.
In my dream the script was under a seven foot rubber plant in the corner of a large waiting room. The script was squashed
down by the weight of the tree. Bits of rubber leaf and rubber-tree spores circled the tree with elastic detritus. As I watched,
a small boy used the planter as a urinal. I had the feeling that the script had been forgotten—that whoever had put the script
under the tree had left the publishing business and gone into real estate.

“There is no particular reason why you should interest
yourself in my dreams. It’s just that I haven’t got anybody else to tell them to.”

I am an adolescent when this is written. If you think he doesn’t intend for me to see myself in the small boy pissing on his
manuscript, if you think he doesn’t intend for me (and the rest of the universe) to sigh at the notion of his having no one
to tell his dreams to, if you think he does not intend for me to find this letter someday—well, you should know that he makes
three or four copies of it and sprinkles them through his files.

He does more rewrites and contacts her again.

“The book is finished,” he writes to Ramona. “It contains:

2 murders

143 grammatical errors

6 acts of intercourse

847 misspellings

1 lesbian relationship

1,131 corrections made with Liquid Paper

6 B & Es

1 unlikely love story.”

I am tempted to say that a second unlikely love story ensues—that of Ramona Fallows’s affection for my father’s ugly-duckling
book. It is nearly impossible to like, but she embraces it anyway.

Alas, no one else does, although virtually everyone else agrees the ingredients for a very good novel seem to be moiling around
in the book’s innards.

“He writes with real humor and sensitivity—rarities both,” says one editor in a lengthy letter to Ramona Fallows about why,
ultimately, he is not taking the book. There are a lot of these letters, longer and more ambivalent than most rejection notes.
Reading them now, I feel a sense of helplessness on my father’s behalf, coupled with a slight unease, as if something in these
letters
might be contagious, as if something might travel from him to me and push my writing one or two degrees south of saleable.

The letters themselves are so full of little apologies and half-compliments and flashes of enthusiasm that they make a kind
of blizzard before my father’s eyes, obscuring from him the inevitable truth. Nobody is going to buy this book because nobody
likes it. I mean “like” the way you like a dog or your best friend Fred, not the way you like Mozart or
Heaven Can Wait.
There’s something a little snarly and uncongenial about this novel.

“If only I’d liked this a little better, all of the above, it seems to me it could be cured by rewriting and editing,” writes
an editor at Random House. “But unfortunately, I simply don’t like it well enough to want to undertake the job…”

What is not in any of the letters to or from anybody, what is not confessed to Ramona Fallows, what is not detected by any
of the dozen or so editors to read the book is this:

Henry Nemo, our family giant, is afflicted by visions and dreams. Like my father, who can’t stop thinking in numbers whether
he is writing sex scenes or courting Ramona’s approval with unwieldy fractions, Henry has integers flying through his head.
Odd progressions pop into his mind, shards of memory from his obliterated life. Taken together, these fragments constitute
something my father is desperate to preserve between two covers, with a copyright date and a Library of Congress number.

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