Although most episodes of The Waltons had moments dealing with books and writing strung through them, there are certain episodes that were based around or portrayed events in a writer’s life particularly well. These three are my favorites:
The Typewriter
Coming near the beginning of the first season, “The Typewriter” was one of the first episodes to concentrate specifically on John-Boy’s writing ambitions. When he submits his first story to a magazine (the now-defunct Collier’s Weekly), it’s returned because they don’t accept handwritten manuscripts. So he borrows a prized antique typewriter from the eccentric Baldwin sisters…and manages to lose it. Some of my favorite scenes in this episode come near the beginning: where John-Boy dares to show someone his story for the first time (yes, they point out the grammar errors first and you have to nervously ask how they liked the story itself), and where the rest of the family, who know he’s always writing but aren’t really aware of what he’s writing about, start to ask questions and become more interested.
The Book
In the third season, now attending college, John-Boy begins a new writing class and is properly overwhelmed by his classmates’ matter-of-fact descriptions of their highbrow and high-concept projects and their condescending questions about his ‘themes’ and ‘approach.’ Hoping to bolster his confidence, Olivia takes some of his stories to a ‘publisher’ she saw advertised, who claims they’d like to publish his collection. John-Boy’s exultation carries him a little too far, affecting his work, his behavior toward his family…and causing him to overlook some of the fine print in his contract…
One thing I find rather interesting is that the problems presented in the first half of the episode are never really resolved as such. John-Boy’s snobbish classmates are happy to accept him as soon as they find out he’s going to be published, apparently forgetting their low opinion of his work. Similarly, John-Boy no longer has any worries about the quality of his own work as soon as he knows it’s going to be published. Publication means validation. This still seems to be a common view, but when you really look at it in light of a situation like that in “The Book,” it’s extremely subjective.
The Prophecy
This episode is not specifically about writing—the main story is about John Walton Sr.’s reluctance to attend his high school reunion, feeling like a failure beside his more financially successful former classmates. But meanwhile, John-Boy is once again down in the dumps because a well-meaning and pessimistic professor gave him a personal lecture on how writers, no matter how good they are, never make a living from writing. This is a fine example of how the most skilfully-written episodes of The Waltons used a subplot to echo themes from the main plot, as Johns Sr. & Jr. both come to understand that the meaning of true success is not measured by money.
As a sidenote, I was amused at how, in spite of his struggles with the literary elite in “The Book,” John-Boy displays a little snobbishness of his own while trying to compile a list of writers who make a living. When Mary Ellen suggests Mary Roberts Rineheart (whose debut novel The Circular Staircase I read over the weekend, incidentally), he explodes indignantly, “Oh, be serious! I’m not talking about people who write murder mysteries.” Mary Ellen sensibly retorts, “We’re talking about writers making money, and lots of it.”
What are your favorites writing-related episodes or moments from The Waltons? Or other favorite TV shows?