No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart.
Month: May 2013
Friendship: an Aztec poem
Like a quetzal plume, a fragrant flower,
friendship sparkles:
like heron plumes, it weaves itself into finery.
Our song is a bird calling out like a jingle:
how beautiful you make it sound!
Here, among flowers that enclose us,
among flowery boughs you are singing.
On Writing Multi-Character Novels
Periodically I go back to trying to write a book with several main characters and inter-connecting plots. This is something I first attempted in the early 1970s when I was writing politically-themed novels. The first was a book called Utopia Parkway-Exit 1/4 Mile which is a highway sign on the Grand Central Parkway in Queens, NY. That version had 4 main characters and about the same number of supporting characters and 3 plot lines. I was never satisfied with it and later, using the same title, wrote a second book about a group of graduate students at a Midwestern college that used composite characters from my own MFA experience. This book also had 4 main characters and a host of supporting players and though my agent at the time tried selling it, he couldn’t place it with a publisher. Jimmy Powell, who at the time was running the Writers’ Center of Indiana, did publish an excerpt of it in a literary magazine called In-Print.
The idea, though, did not die there. I attempted it again with 6 main characters in probably my most autobiographical novel about the last year of my bookstore Intellectuals & Liars in LA. That was called Lost Illusions but again my agent could not find a home for it anywhere.
It wasn’t until I wrote Night & Day that I achieved the desired effect of several stories involving about 10 main characters crisscrossing through each other’s lives. It was like trying to keep 10 balls in the air at once and was exhilarating. The plot revolves around the production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at a college on Long Island and the romances that develop or don’t quite develop between various members of the college community. Since A Midsummer Night’s Dream has 4 distinct groups—the court, the lovers, the fairies, the clowns—it was best suited to a romance that involved multiple ethnic and racial groups. My agent at that time spent 2 years submitting it to various publishers but again had no success finding a home for it. It was a major disappointment not only for me but for her, too.
I found, though, that the idea just won’t go away and after returning to Turkey in 2010, I began tinkering with the idea of trying to use the same motif—a theatre group at a college putting on a new version of a Shakespearean play—set in Istanbul. That book, Istanbul Days, Istanbul Nights—uses Romeo & Juliet instead since rather than feuding families, I let the idea of language and culture be the stumbling block to the potential romances between foreigners working in Istanbul alongside Turks. The theatre director also decides to refashion the tragedy as a comedy and this book is lighter in tone than Night & Day, though both are bittersweet.
So the two books are similar in some ways but different in others. There are characters who fulfill the same roles in both books but their back stories are different and in most cases their lives take different turns. That was the fun of writing those books: letting these characters loose to bump and collide on their own. And though there are characters who are left alone at the end of Istanbul Days, there aren’t any tragic events that befall characters in Night & Day. Perhaps life for foreigners is harder in America than in Turkey, or perhaps I saw more heartbreak there than here. I’m not sure why that is, but then again winning half the time is pretty good odds in life. After all, Mickey Mantle only had a career batting average of .298, Willie Mays .302, and Ty Cobb has the record high of .366. So getting it right half the time is like having a .500 batting average which in baseball is deemed impossible.
And love, like baseball, involves getting up at bat and taking your best shot. Getting on base in both is pretty much impossible half the time and a miracle the other half. And ain’t that a kick in the proverbial head?
The Inlaid Harp by Li Shang-Yin
I wonder why my inlaid harp has fifty strings,
Each with its flower-like fret an interval of youth.
. . . The sage Chuang-tzu is day-dreaming, bewitched by butterflies,
The spring-heart of Emperor Wang is crying in a cuckoo,
Mermen weep their pearly tears down a moon-green sea,
Blue fields are breathing their jade to the sun. . .
And a moment that ought to have lasted for ever
Has come and gone before I knew.
translated by Witter Bynner & Kiang Kang-hu
Drinking Alone Beneath The Moon by Li Bei
A pot of wine among the flowers:
I drink alone, no kith or kin near.
I raise my cup to invite the moon to join me;
It and my shadow make a party of three.
Alas, the moon is unconcerned about drinking,
And my shadow merely follows me around.
Briefly I cavort with the moon and my shadow:
Pleasure must be sought while it is spring.
I sing and the moon goes back and forth,
I dance and my shadow falls at random.
While sober we seek pleasure in fellowship;
When drunk we go each our own way.
Then let us pledge a friendship without human ties
And meet again at the far end of the Milky Way.
LATER by Robert Creeley
If I could get
my hands on
a little bit
of it–neither fish,
flesh, nor fowl. Not
you, Harry. No one’s
mother–or father,
or children. Not
me again. Not
earth, sky, water–
no mind, no time.
No islands in the sun.
Money I don’t want.
No place more
than another–
I’m not here
by myself. But,
if you want to give
me something for Xmas,
I’ll be around.
excerpt from Rizzo’s World
Rizzo always walks his dog at eleven. It’s a habit his first dog got him into that this new dog has unwittingly insisted on continuing and he’s too old and too much a creature of habit to resist. So this morning, like all the other mornings past and all the mornings, he supposes, that lie ahead of him, finds him walking. And this new dog tags along.
“You got a new dog,” Abdur says when Rizzo stops at his favorite pizza parlor for lunch. “You really went ahead and got one.”
“Yeah,” he nods. “It looks that way.”
“Does your wife know?” Abdur asks.
“Not yet,” Rizzo says, and doesn’t say she probably won’t even notice, and certainly won’t even care.
“She comes home soon, no?”
“Today,” Rizzo says.
“Today?” and Abdur grins that lopsided grin he has when whatever is said seems like a cosmic joke to him. “I guess she will know soon enough.”
Rizzo nods again, not wanting to prolong this conversation any longer than necessary and pays for the meatball hero with extra cheese he always gets on Monday and a meat pie for the dog and starts to go.
“What’s his name?” Abdur asks.
“I don’t know yet,” Rizzo says.
“You are going to name him, are you not?”
“Probably.”
Abdur laughs, the dog looks up at him with his head tilted to one side, Rizzo tugs on the leash gently, and they walk on.
Once home, Rizzo washes down the meatball hero with a glass of Pellegrino and lemon and the dog eats his meat pie to keep it in the loop. They are both deliriously happy in the end and it’s only the clock on the wall that ruins everything by reminding him of the time of day. It’s then he notices he has a message on his voicemail. He doesn’t know why it is that no one calls when he is home but as soon as he steps out, messages appear on voicemail. This is one of those unwritten laws of the universe, and it’s comforting in a way. He speed dials voicemail and listens as his daughter’s voice says, “Don’t forget to get Mom at the airport. And no, I’m not cutting classes, I’m already done for the day. Call me your tonight, my morning, and be nice to Mom. She’s been out on tour.”
Rizzo thinks he needs a drink right about now so he tries to find a substitute but a Life Saver somehow doesn’t quite do the trick, so he pours a quick shot of Bushmill’s to steady his nerves. He would like to have another but it’s raining out now and he’s driving soon and he thinks he’s getting much too old to be doing things like that so he doesn’t. Instead he drinks his third cup of coffee this morning and eyes the clock. He doesn’t want to leave too early because he hates waiting around airports but he also doesn’t want to be late. Burcu expects him to be late. He’d like to show her he’s changed in the last six months she hasn’t seen him but knows she wouldn’t believe in the permanency of the change even if he did. Punctuality, though, would be a nice trait to possess, even at this late stage of his life, which is why he eyes the clock and does mental calculations of the Van Wyck Expressway. And before he finishes his third cup of coffee, he has another shot of whiskey anyway. So much for changing.
Finally he allows 40 minutes for the drive to Kennedy and, of course, there’s an accident on the LIE and delays on the Van Wyck because of construction he didn’t expect, though he doesn’t know why he didn’t expect it since there always seems to be some highway under repair. Anyway Burcu’s flight is already disembarked and he heads for the passenger pickup area knowing she’s probably already been through Customs which is where he sees her talking with a guy much too casually for him to be a stranger. He has that kind of proprietary look that Rizzo’s seen before that he’s never really liked, especially when it’s directed at his wife. But then again, Burcu isn’t exactly his wife any longer, though she isn’t exactly his ex-wife yet, either, which is, more or less, exactly the problem. And though seeing the guy annoys him, the sight of Burcu standing there with one leg bent at the knee, one hip slightly higher than the other, in her signature white suit with vest almost takes his breath away. It’s then he remembers just how beautiful she is and how lucky he’s been to have spent nearly half his life with her. Suddenly he just wants to crawl inside her arms. Instead, though, he stands next to her and says, “Sorry I’m late.”
“Are you?” she asks, and gives that indulgent smile that seems to be her favorite look where he is concerned. “I always assume you’ll be 15 or 20 minutes behind the rest of the world so, for you, that’s on time.”
Rizzo nods, thinks it’s not the best way to start this visit but plays the stoic and lets it roll off his back.
Meanwhile Burcu turns to her companion and says, “Ted, this is my husband, Rizzo.”
“Ahhh,” and Ted’s eyes widen in what must be admiration or else mockery. “It’s an honor.”
“Ted’s an impresario,” Burcu says.
“Is he?” Rizzo says, his eyes returning the look of awe. “I didn’t realize there were still some around.”
“Promoter,” Ted says. “We’re called promoters now. But surely you run across more than your share in your business.”
“Every day,” Rizzo says. “And three times on the weekend.”
“Rizzo sees everything in triplicate on the weekend,” Burcu says. “Don’t you, Riz?”
“Not everything,” he says. “I don’t see three of you.”
“That’s because there’s only one of her,” Ted says. “Which is how I see selling her.”
“Selling her?” Rizzo asks, and can’t help it if an edge creeps into his voice. “Is that what you’re doing?”
“Trying to, anyway,” Ted says. “But she’s not an easy sale here in The States.”
“Ah no,” Rizzo says, his stomach tightening. “No easy sale here.”
And Burcu looks at him then, sensing the danger lurking beneath the tight smile, and says, “It’s just business, Riz. He wants to back my act for a tour.”
“A tour?” Rizzo asks.
“Of several US cities, then later a sweep of all the major European cities as well. A long tour, actually.”
And then the details that he always has a hard time listening to because they only spell separation, long periods one after the numerous others. A litany of dates, and more babble he has difficulty understanding until the goodbyes.
And later, as both Burcu and he walk toward the parking lot, he asks in spite of knowing he shouldn’t, “So who is that guy really?”
Burcu looks at him for a second, both quizzically and suspiciously, and says somewhat guardedly, “Just what we said he is: an impresario.”
“Really?” he asks.
“Yes, really,” Burcu says. “Just what do you think he is?”
“A new paramour, perhaps.”
Burcu laughs. “A paramour? Oh Riz, I do love your choice of words. So old- fashioned, but so you.”
He winces, involuntarily, at the reference, more or less veiled, to his age. Old- fashioned because he is, after all, old. Older than her by 15 years, older than their daughter Cansu by 40. An old-fashioned, older old man.
“But it’s a charming trait, Riz,” Burcu says, softening the blow a bit. “And one of the reasons we all love you so.”
“Love me?” he says, and regrets immediately the tone. Why, he thinks, do you always ask a question when simply keeping your mouth shut would not only be so much more appropriate but effective, too. He knows what he should do, but always manages, somehow, to not take his own advice.
“Yes, Riz, love you,” Burcu says, her voice not able to mask her weariness of having the same conversation yet again, and so soon after her arrival. “But not in the way you wish anymore.”
And on that note, of regret mixed with resignation with a pinch of savoir-faire tossed in for seasoning, they endure the ride back to the house they sometimes share in silence. And once there, Burcu notices the dog.
“And what’s this?” she asks as the dog follows her from suitcase to closet as she unpacks her bags in what is now her room while Rizzo stares at the ceiling and tries rather unsuccessfully not to drink what remains in the bottle of whiskey from this afternoon. “You got another dog?”
“Well,” and he shrugs, “I thought maybe it was about time to replace the old one.”
“He’s been dead twenty years, Riz,” she says.
“I’m a little slow sometimes,” he says.
“In some departments anyway,” and she laughs. She bends down and strokes the dog’s head. “Did you name this one?”
“Not yet.”
She smiles and shakes her head. “Slow in that department, too, aren’t you?”
And as night falls, Burcu talks first to their daughter Cansu in Istanbul, the conversation switching back and forth between Turkish and English, and then in somewhat hushed tones in Turkish only to someone else. And Rizzo, in another room in what seems like years away, finds himself wishing for the millionth time in their twenty odd year relationship that he had learned Turkish, then drifting off to what could only loosely, in a better world, be called sleep.
The next morning Burcu is up and out early. Rizzo, on the other hand and in another room down the hall, lies awake wishing he were still asleep. The phone ringing, however, finally rouses him and though he just stares in its direction without answering it, the phone ringing does serve its purpose and before his voicemail takes over, he gets up, lets the dog out for a quick pee in the backyard, and makes a pot of coffee. After his second cup, he stands under the shower for what seems like hours but is only maybe twenty minutes trying to wash away the sadness he feels settling in. Afterwards, with a real drink in his hand, he looks out the window to the street beyond hoping to see something to inspire him. Nothing goes by.
The dog, meanwhile, nudges his arm and he knows, without needing any more encouragement, what his duty is: to go for their walk. But first he tends to the water bowl, his dry cereal, a Milk Bone treat. Then, to the dog’s relief, he picks up the leash and they’re off.
Lunch again, a sausage and peppers hero for him, the usual meat pie for the dog, and Gator Aid to help replenish deficient vitamins and minerals from all that drinking. Life the way he knows it now. He walks past Burcu’s room and wonders why she keeps the door closed, what secrets she’s hiding from him, what it is she thinks he shouldn’t know. It pains him, this closed door, a symbol of what they’ve become, what they are no longer, what does not exist anymore.
The phone rings again and he stands listening to it. He counts the four rings until voicemail kicks in, a recorded message somewhere out there in the electronic world, substituting for him and waiting for him to retrieve it some time later. And with that knowledge, of another message safely tucked away, he pockets his keys and is off for the day.
Jake’s at noon. The usual cluster of people on the make, on the mend, trading information about jobs, gossip, musicians, singers, actors mixing with A&R men, would be producers, agents, wannabe players, and journalists, all hungry for the same thing: a score. And Rizzo, a regular, joins the fray somewhat reluctantly but with a place of honor in the back: his own booth, where he finds his childhood friend and colleague Peter slumped at the table, his eyes devouring trade papers propped up on his journal in front of him, absently stroking his head as if to make certain there is still hair there, his eyes moving rapidly line by line behind tinted reading glasses. Rizzo sits, barely making a ripple in Peter’s consciousness, so he watches his old friend in bemused silence until Peter looks up and sees him.
“Ah,” Peter goes. “You’re here.”
“And where else would I be at lunchtime on a work day?”
“In front of your PC in the office doing your feverish one finger typing of a hot column while Harvey leans over your shoulder panting in your ears.”
“I think I’d rather be here drinking with you.”
“Of course you would,” Peter says, removing his reading glasses and folding them neatly into their carrying case. “But that’s not where you should be.”
“I didn’t say should,” Rizzo corrects him. “I said would.”
“Did you?”
“I did.”
“Ah,” Peter goes. “How did I miss that? And with these remarkable ears of mine?”
“I don’t know,” Rizzo says. “They must be slipping.”
“Hmmmm,” Peter goes. “Getting old does have its toll.”
“Speak for yourself, partner. I refuse to acknowledge age.”
“An ageless wonder, are you?”
“In print anyway.”
“And for a journalist, what better place to be ageless.”
Jake comes by then, that dark, Irish brooding, his mouth set in a perpetual frown, as if having just tasted something most foul. He wipes his hands on the towel he keeps dangling from his belt and says, “The usual, I suppose.”
Rizzo looks at him the same way he’s been looking at him for over 30 years of patronage and says, “Have I ever asked for anything else?”
“You had wine there for a while,” Jake says, “back in the seventies. And there was that period of White Russians.”
“Those were for a certain woman who once, in another lifetime long, long ago, accompanied me, and who, for reasons we need not delve into, shall remain nameless,” Rizzo says. “But I, personally, have never asked for anything other than good old Irish whiskey.”
“You had rum once,” Jake says. “Mount Gay with a twist of lime,”
“It must have been summer,” Rizzo says, “and I was in love.”
“I can’t speak to the love part,” Jake says. “But it was the summer of ’82, I believe.”
“Hot, was it?” Peter asks.
“Blistering.”
“I might have had rum, too, then, I suppose,” he says.
“You drink anything that comes in a bottle and has an alcohol content over fifty percent,” Jake says. “My one piece of heaven right now is you’ve cut down because you’re in love again.”
“Ah, but less business for you,” Peter says.
“Since neither one of you pays,” Jake scowls, “it’s a moot point.”
“We have a tab,” Peter says.
“And we pay something toward it every month,” Rizzo joins in.
“Yes, but the tab grows faster than your payments,” and Jake sighs. “My biggest regret, besides my three marriages, was giving you guys a tab.”
“You shouldn’t regret the marriages,” Peter says. “Especially number two.”
“Maria,” Rizzo says.
And then they both break into a verse from West Side Story and Jake endures as best he can. “Finished?” he asks finally. “Because I do have paying customers to attend to.”
Both Peter and Rizzo watch him leave with that air of the suffering victim about him. Rizzo turns to Peter then and says, “He’s abnormally surly for a Monday.”
“I guess we didn’t pay enough on the tab this past month,” Peter says. “How much did you pay anyway?”
“I didn’t pay anything. It was your turn.”
“No,” Peter says, his head shaking as he speaks. “This month is me. Last month was you.”
“No,” Rizzo says. “I’m this month.”
“Impossible,” Peter says. “I paid in July, you were August, I’m September.”
“No, I paid July,” Rizzo says.
“We both paid July?” Peter asks.
“Hmmmm,” Rizzo goes. “It would appear so, and no one paid August.” They look at each other for a long second and then he adds, “No wonder he’s in a foul mood.”
“However,” Peter says, “since there was a double payment in July, that really covers August, so he shouldn’t be upset. We actually, though by accident, of course, paid August early.”
“You’re right,” Rizzo agrees. “He should be grateful, not petulant.”
“Right.”
“So there’s absolutely no reason for us to feel the slightest tinge of guilt.”
“Right again.”
“We should, in fact, congratulate ourselves on our ability to not only stay abreast of our obligations but to be ahead.”
“Right once more.”
“Let’s drink to that, shall we?”
“We shall,” Peter says, “as soon as he brings the drinks.”
And on that note, Jake appears with two whiskeys. “The tab, gentlemen.”
“To the tab,” Peter says and raises his glass.
“The tab,” Rizzo echoes and clinks Peter’s glass.
They drink and then bask in the glow of a world they know to be, at least here in this bar they consider a second home, comforting. And while in that mood, Rizzo feels lulled enough to broach uncertainty.
“Burcu’s back,” he says in as nonchalant a manner as he can muster, though Peter, of course, has known him long enough not to be fooled.
“Oh?” he replies, his eyebrow raised. “As in back in the country? And back in town?”
“Yes,” Rizzo says. “And staying at the house.”
“Ah,” he goes. “Cozy, that.”
“Yes,” Rizzo nods. “The modern couple.”
“And how is she?” he asks.
“She looks great, as usual,” Rizzo says. “And, as usual, there’s nothing to say to one another.”
And he looks off then at nothing in particular and nothing in particular looks back. The sadness, though, that always seems to hover just out of reach, gets a little closer. He’ll need more whiskey to help keep it at bay so Jake coming by with a second round is like the Seventh Calvary to the rescue. “Harvey’s on the phone again for you,” he says somewhat gruffly.
“Again?”
“I forgot to mention he’s been calling all morning,” and then somewhat wearily, “I’m not good at being a stand-in for voicemail.”
“You could have told me,” Peter says. “I remember things.”
“One would never know it from the way you pay your bills,” Jake says. “Anyway,” and he looks back at Rizzo, “he says it’s very important.”
“It’s always important to Harvey,” Rizzo sighs.
“Why don’t you get a cell phone?” Jake says. “Everyone else has one.”
Rizzo winces. Whenever talk comes round to the subject of cell phones, he begins to get depressed. It’s hard enough, he reasons, to try to maintain a sense of privacy in this world and cell phones, to him, are just another device chipping away at that notion.
“I don’t know,” Rizzo says. “It probably has something to do with all the fine print on those agreements you have to sign.”
“There are phone plans for people like you,” Jake says. “Very temporary plans with a minimal commitment of a month. Even you,” he says trying his best not to sound too sarcastic, “can handle a month’s commitment.”
“And then,” Rizzo says, still trying to ward off, what is for him, evil spirits, “you have to carry it around with you, in a holster like a gun, on your belt or in your pocket. They become like appendages.”
“That’s the point of it,” Jake says. “That’s why they’re called mobile phones.”
“Rizzo prefers being invisible,” Peter says. “He likes to melt into his environment unobserved.”
“There are other descriptions for his behavior,” Jake says, “but I’m too busy right now to get into it.” Then back to Rizzo, “Just go pick up the bar phone and talk to Harvey.”
Harvey, of course, in all the years they’ve been working for him, four decades and counting, has always, and stressing the word always, made important, urgent phone calls to them, especially to Rizzo, usually because he was dangerously close to missing a deadline and Harvey was frantic he’d have to run the magazine without his column. This happens a lot when Rizzo is doing a series, some expose say, of some corruption lurking somewhere in the city, or one of his cultural pieces where he’s rhapsodizing so long and so passionately about something or someone that people feel the need to go out and buy a CD or see a show or buy a ticket. But Harvey’s constant nagging about deadlines drove Rizzo several years ago to write what he calls his “think” pieces, which he keeps in reserve for those times he misses a deadline. This has greatly reduced the number of panic calls so Rizzo knows it’s not about a deadline Harvey’s calling about now. And thus, he is in no hurry to hear whatever hot idea Harvey’s got for him to consider as a possible column. But he is the boss, so one can’t avoid him forever.
“Harvey,” Rizzo says into the receiver, “what’s up?”
“Cemal’s dead,” Harvey blurts out. “I’ve been trying to reach you all morning. Some kind of shooting in Turkey.”
Rizzo is stunned. His mouth opens wanting to respond but there are no words in his brain to handle this. Just a vacuum, a void.
“You there, Riz?” Harvey asks, breathless. “Riz?”
Cemal. Dead. The two words do not go together in his book. Like antonyms, they only exist in opposition to each other. There is no way Rizzo can make sense of what’s been said.
“Riz?” Harvey says, his voice desperate. “You hear me? Cemal’s dead.”
Rizzo makes some sound, he thinks, that shows he’s still here on the end of the phone line and Harvey continues with facts, information, or what passes for information, some hazy, half coherent listing of names, a time, some stretch of highway, Istanbul, bullet holes, and he listens because it’s all he can do, as he stands frozen by the bar at Jake’s.
“You get this?” Harvey asks. “You hear me?”
And Rizzo nods, mumbles something, looks off to the far end of the bar where Frank from Sony is nodding back his way, and someone else he sort of remembers is tipping a glass in his direction. This world he stands in, his world, his everyday world of familiar faces and routine business and people he loves and some he hates, and most he tolerates, all mill about doing the things they always do, this world is suddenly tilted to the side and the only thing keeping him from sliding off is the edge of the bar he is leaning against. Harvey’s still talking and Rizzo hears something about a plane ticket, a flight number, a hotel he’s supposed to be staying in, and he can only nod some more, hand the phone to Jake who looks somewhat bewildered by his side, and says, “Take this down, will you, please.”
And Rizzo walks on fairly unsteady legs back down the length of the bar to his back booth and fumbles as he sits.
“Are you okay?” Peter asks. “Riz? You okay?”
“The phone,” he says. “Talk to Harvey. Cemal…” Rizzo says and then loses any words he might have had. He just slumps forward, his face in his hands, and tries, not very successfully, not to cry.
Guardian Angel by Rolf Jacobsen
I am the bird that flutters against your window in the morning,
and your closest friend, whom you can never know,
blossoms that light up for the blind.
I am the glacier shining over the woods, so pale,
and heavy voices from the cathedral tower.
The thought that suddenly hits you in the middle of the day
and makes you feel so fantastically happy.
I am the one you have loved for many years.
I walk beside you all day and look intently at you
and put my mouth against your heart
though you’re not aware of it.
I am your third arm, and your second
shadow, the white one,
whom you cannot accept,
and who can never forget you.
translated by Robert Bly
On Writing a harris & company
I posted an older story, a harris & company, because I wanted to write about how I work as a writer and this one was important because it was one of the ones that lead to the discovery of my voice.
First, I was in graduate school, an MFA Program at Bowling Green University in Ohio (which, by the way, is one state I prefer to fly over rather than drive through, but the program was helpful in that it gave me plenty of time to write since the teaching assistantship was not demanding, there were few other distractions apart from playing pinball with my esteemed colleagues like Jimmy Powell, Gordon Anderson (both of whom would later be my partners in the first year of the bookstore Intellectuals & Liars in LA), Joel Dailey, Randy Signor (both of whom would end up working at the store, though Randy’s contribution excelled all the others), and others too numerous to name. There was always breakfast afterwards at 2:30-3:00 in the morning when the bars closed and the pinball machines lay dormant. But I’m off topic here, as usual.
So, I was visiting my friend Rip Crystal (older brother to Billy) in LA where he was sharing an apartment with Joel Gotler who was, if I remember correctly, still an agent at William Morris before he struck out on his own (that’s Joel, not Rip, who was writing/acting there). Anyway, Joel decided I needed help coming up with stories so he gave me one: the trip his friend A. (Arnie) Harris took to Mexico to buy drugs, I think, though I might be wrong here (you see what an impression that original story had on me). Anyway I was polite and listened but what struck me most about the whole experience that visit was the fact that Joel was involved with some woman who would call him up at all hours of the day and night and say “Come” and he would drop everything and go. This image of him rushing off stayed with me long after the trip was over.
Now the trip was just before I started the MFA Program so things were fermenting in my head.
Oh yeah, there’s another little piece of the story I should add: Al Secunda. He was a former agent at William Morris, too (I knew these people through Rip who had worked there, also, as an agent before he decided to let his artistic side flow and quit). Well Al decided to be an actor and left the agency to pursue that career. But the thing about Al was that he had all these part-time jobs to support himself while trying to make it as an actor, including handing out take-ones for WTFM and working at Gimbels around the same time I worked there but in different departments (I was in vacuums and he was, I think, in Mens’ Wear). He’s the one who watered the fake plants and caused a flood on the 2nd floor of the store.
Anyway, there I was at BG sitting in my office in the basement of Hanna Hall ignoring my office mate who was reciting Gregory Corso’s poem on marriage when the germ of the story started to work its way from my head to paper on my typewriter (this was ages before PCs). What came out was the story posted.
So even though a harris started out as Joel’s friend’s story, only the name remained, along, of course, with bits and pieces of Joel and Al. Characters we create in turn create themselves. We give them a back story, facts and personality traits, throw them into a situation where they must interact with other characters we have also created in much the same way, and they take on a life of their own.
And that’s the joy of it: allowing for discoveries. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t. But that’s more or less the way life works, too, right?
The Carpet by Olav H. Hauge
Weave a carpet for us, Bodil,
weave it from dreams and visions,
weave it out of wind,
so that I, like a Bedouin, can
roll it out when I pray,
pull it around me
when I sleep,
and then every morning cry out,
“Table, set yourself!”
Weave it
for a cape in the cold weather,
and a sail
for my boat!
One day I will sit down on the carpet
and sail away on it
to another world.
translated by Robert Bly