Only On Sunday

I would never want to be a member of a group whose symbol was a guy nailed to two pieces of wood. - George Carlin

One Novella, One Book

June 29th, 2008 at 07:57amEmail This Post | Print This Post

I haven’t been doing any writing on writing in this blog since I forced myself off my overlong hiatus. That’s what the point of this blog was way back when; to write and, most times, to write about writing, either the world of writing or my own personal experience with it.

Plain fact of the matter is, life’s been hell this last year, even worse, in my eyes anyway, than the previous two or three. Not going to go into detail or anything so you won’t have to wade through a pity-river rant here. Suffice it to say that I’m adhering to that old adage, if you’re going through hell, keep going.

The one intolerable thing about this last year is that I’ve been unable to write. It’s not so much a block, more like quicksand. The idea bank certainly hasn’t failed me but for reasons I can’t, or don’t wish to, get into here, I haven’t been able to translate those ideas into a story. Every time I try I find myself sinking beneath the weight of a lot of things that never bothered me before and the harder I struggle against it, the deeper I sink. Bottom line, I’ve lost the ability to write for myself first but I’ll explore that whole morass in another post.

This inability to write hit critical mass about a month ago and I decided to give this blog a try again. My idea was this is, more or less, non-fiction, I’m not really looking to impress anyone, I control what I want to write about and how I write it, I have no idea if anyone is actually reading what I write and, though I care about that to be sure, it doesn’t seem as important as someone reading my fiction. Not sure that makes any sense but who cares.

It also occurred to me that writing in the blog might, A) get me back in the habit and, B) help me to sneak up on my fiction. Weird, yeah, but whatever works and nothing else has thus far.

Which brings me to the point of this post, the first to fall into ‘The Literary World’ category since I resurrected the blog.

First, I read a novella recently, or more accurately, had it read to me by the author. I’m a big fan of audio books as what I currently do to pay the rent doesn’t leave me with a lot of time to read and I can’t live without books.

The author is Alan Bennett and I’ve been given to understand that he something of a famous playwright and author. Sorry to say I never heard of him but, considering the direction my taste in reading generally leads, that’s not saying much.

The Novella in question is titled “The Uncommon Reader” and it is a most charming little story about the joy of reading. The ‘uncommon reader’ in the story is the Queen of England and it revolves around how she accidentally becomes a reader and the subsequent changes that come about because of this. The author’s obvious talent and feel for the story and that dry British wit and humor I love so much makes for a wry and entertaining little tale that will keep you turning the page (or changing disks) right up to the very last words. “The Uncommon Reader” was one of those rare stories I wished wouldn’t end and Alan Bennett does an excellent job of reading it.

The second item is a bit more perplexing.

I’ve never read Lawrence Block. No particular reason and he’s certainly prolific enough that I wouldn’t miss noticing him. Reading him just never happened until recently.

“Small Town” is a beautifully written, complex story that, from my understanding, Mr. Block was working on when the Twin Towers came down. Not sure where the story was going before 9/11 but the course Mr. Block put it on afterward makes it one of the most compelling and haunting stories I’ve read in a long while.

The story takes place in - where else? - New York, the ‘small town’ of the title, roughly a year after the tragedy. It is, in one sense, a murder mystery but it goes way beyond that in many ways. And one of the ways in which it does is the antagonist.

I’ve always had a fondness for the antagonist, both in what I read and in what I write. In general, if there is one main character in most genre novels that comes off as flat or cliched, it’s the antagonist. Not sure why this is but that’s been my experience so finding an antagonist such as the one in ‘Small Town’ has been a real joy, and a real study of a master writer at work.

So why am I perplexed?

I am by no means a prude. Sex in stories, right up to, and including, soft porn, doesn’t bother me so long as it’s integral to the story. Which, sad to say, it ain’t in “Small Town”. And believe me, this story is full of sex. Kinky sex, hetro sex, homo sex, you name it sex. Hell, I do believe there’s more sex than story. Indeed, if one performed a Reader’s Digest surgical procedure on this book, removing all the sex, you’d cut its size in half, if not more. And that’s kind of sad because the story itself is so wonderfully wrought and in no way needs all those throbbing cocks and silky vaginas not to mention the banana.

Would I recommend “Small Town” despite this nit-pick? Oh yeah. You bet I would. In, well, in a New York minute.


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Give Heaven Hell, George

June 23rd, 2008 at 06:13pmEmail This Post | Print This Post

Shit, piss, fuck, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker, and tits, George Carlin is dead.

I get up at 4:30 in the morning. On weekdays it’s work related. On the weekends it’s the cats. As any servant of the feline knows, cats don’t do weekends.

My usual routine at that hellish hour is to first plug in the IV bag of caffeine while groping about for a cigarette and trying not to trip over the cats in the process. Next comes the feline feeding frenzy, of course. Once the clamor has died down, I’m free to check; 1) Backspace, and 2) my email. This morning I wish I’d checked neither.

Not that it would have mattered. I would have found out soon enough. Once at work, I listen to NPR all day and the news about George was all over that station today.

It’s strange the way the death of a celebrity can affect you. And in different ways, too. When Kurt Vonnegut died last year, I was depressed for days. Yet, when Sydney Pollack and Utah Phillips, both of whom I greatly admired, died recently, it was sad hearing of their deaths but the sadness wasn’t lasting.

I’ve been sad all day. Profoundly sad. It’s like the universe has lost some essential part of its structure. To say that the man was an icon of my generation would be a vast understatement. And as hokey as it may sound, he was one of my heros.

I was first turned on to George back in the sixties. I don’t remember the exact circumstance. Hell, I don’t remember much of the sixties or early seventies come to think about it. Be suspect of anyone who does. But I remember listening to George on the stereo and seeing him a half-dozen times at different venues. The pony-tail, the gruff voice, the way he dressed, the combination of extreme intelligence and defiance in his words had a profound impact on this twenty-something kid. He had a way of surgically cutting through the bullshit, of saying fuck you to the rules, of exposing the emperor in all his naked absurdity.

In this, the twenty-first century, with the political and religious absurdity in the world at an all time high, he will be sorely missed.

If there’s a heaven, George, give it hell.


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Thanks, Jon

February 15th, 2007 at 09:18amEmail This Post | Print This Post

Finn

I’m sending Jon Clinch an early thank you. The release of his novel Finn is still a week away and in preparation for that event I decided to reread The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain. It’s been like being reintroduced to a long lost friend.

I ran with Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, Hank Morgan and many other Twain creations way back when I was a boy growing up in Detroit. They, and others, led me to places far beyond the bleak boundaries of my working class and all too often hostile neighborhood. Words were like that for me. Words were my salvation. The library was my time machine, the books lined up on those dusty old shelves my destinations. Many were the times when I wanted nothing more than to slip between the soft white pages of a book and live within forever.

But I grew up instead and many of those friends fell by the wayside, to be replaced by many others over the years. Words were still my salvation. I came to own the books on my own set of shelves, shelves that never grew dusty because they were always in use.

In my mid-thirties I found a complete set of Twain at a university library that was weeding its collection. I snatched that puppy up and went on a Twain binge, reading all the books I had never read, or even knew existed, when I was a kid. Having read and reread Tom and Huck and Hank so many times in my pre and early teens, I ignored those volumes.

Until now.

It’s closing in on half a century since I ran with those boys. I started Huck yesterday and I’ve been laughing and crying and stirring up memories. I’m mid-way through Huck and Jim’s adventure now and I don’t want it to end. I want to dig out a pair of raggedy jeans, slip off my shoes, dive into the Mississippi and swim out to their raft. Smoke a pipe, catch a cat fish, pull a straw hat down over my eyes and sleep the day away on Jackson Island or debate with Jim the wisdom of ‘Sollermun’.

And for that I have Jon Clinch to thank.

Tom. Hank. I’ll be with you boys in just a bit, just as soon as I finish up with Huck and spend some dark moments with Pap. Keep a lantern lit. I’ll find y’all.

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In Print, On Paper

February 12th, 2007 at 08:25amEmail This Post | Print This Post

It’s been awhile since I posted something, been kind of busy. I wanted to note that I have a story in this months issue of Static Movement. The good folks over there accepted my story Impulse Control for their February invitation only issue. Check it out.

Also, my story Quiet, which they published back in June, has been included in their Special Print Issue 1 anthology. I’ve ordered my copy. Have you ordered yours? You can get it HERE. Be sure and pay attention to the shipping method. The default setting costs more than the book but you can set it to slow-boat shipping which is less than 3 bucks US.

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Anansi Boys

December 20th, 2006 at 12:25amEmail This Post | Print This Post

Anansi Boys

Being the contrary person I am, I’ve been avoiding reading Neil Gaiman for much the same reason I avoided seeing the movie Jaws many years ago: Hype. When Jaws was released, it seemed like everywhere you turned, there it was; fin in the water, dum-dum-dum-dum echo in the air. Everyone, their mothers, their mother’s parakeet, were lining up around the block of every movie theater in town to see it. You couldn’t have a conversation with someone without the movie coming up. And heaven forbid you should mention that you hadn’t seen it nor had any inclination to. People would cover their mouths and move away from you as if you were carrying the plague.

Amongst the folks I hang out with in the Internet world, Neil Gaiman has been, for me, the writers equivalent of Jaws. It’s always Neil this and Neil that. Did you read American Gods? Awesome. I think Neverwhere was a better book. No, no, Anansi Boys is his best ever. Have you read the Sandman series? The best graphic novel out there. Neil’s oh so multi-talented. Neil’s oh so cute.

Neil’s oh so fucking young!

It was fifteen years before I finally saw Jaws. I have to admit I’m glad I didn’t wait that long read Neil Gaiman.

I just finished Anansi Boys and what a ride it was. Yep, this guy is talented. The language, the description, the pace, all of it first rate. And tight? The story was like a finally tuned string on a National guitar with not a single sour note from page 1 through page 334. Not bad for a story that weaves fiction and fantasy together like a fine Navajo rug.

And funny? Try pants wetting funny. I laughed my ass off. Kind of reminded me of some of Christopher Moore’s early work.

I guess this means I’m going to have to agree with all the Gaiman Gushers. I can live with that as long as no one expects me to drool over his good looks.


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