Dance lessons

Since many of you have asked, things are proceeding apace with the manuscript. I haven’t really pulled the leftovers into a new book, but it’s on the schedule to do that.

My most excellent friend is working feverishly on copyeditting the book. I have collected factual edits from my uber-kind sister, B.J., and am anxiously awaiting the rest. My goal here is to have the cleanest possible copy of my manuscript to send to possible agents.

I want to disabuse you of the notion some of you may have that all of this has been sewn up. It hasn’t. In fact, I feel I still need to work on spit and polish before I begin to sell the book. Many of you have said “I can’t wait for a copy.” I appreciate that. Some of you have said, “When can I read it?” Again, I appreciate that. Probably even more than those of you who can’t wait for a copy.

But there is this delicate dance I’ve described in earlier posts that I haven’t even learned the steps to. It involves writing query letters, pitching the book, developing a one-liner, working on “firsts” … like first page, first chapter, first impressions (like the title). And then the sell-in begins. I expect to have plenty of rejections. (I’ve already started a list of very kind agents that have politely turned me down.) I plan to give myself a set time period to sell this book the “traditional” way. Let’s call this the Pulishing Polka.

If I master that dance, I win! But you are going to be delayed of the gratification you so richly deserve. My understanding is that once a book is purchased by a publisher, it can sit as long as three years before anything actually happens. (It’s a harsh reality, this part of the Polka, kinda like getting your feet stamped on by an overzealous dance bully.)

If I become bored with the Polka, I plan to learn the Self-publishing Shottish. If that’s the case, you Kindle owners, online shoppers, and the like … those of you into non-traditional folk dancing …  will be the first to know when and where to go to get a copy.

So far, it’s been a journey of conditioning my muscles, learning to take feedback and advice from the masters, and putting one foot in front of the other.

We have a long way to go before we even hear the music, but I thank you so very much for hanging in here with me.

Days like this

Rainy days and Mondays always get me down. (I’ll love you forever Karen Carpenter.)

So, it’s during days like this that, from time to time, I think about Carl Swanson. You Missoulians know Carl. Or you remember Carl, rather. He was that guy who looked like Howard Hughes. Not the Leonardo DiCaprio Howard Hughes, but the Jason Robards Howard Hughes.

From a distance, Carl looked like your average, run-of-the-mill homeless guy. Except he always wore a fedora and a London Fog rain coat. In fact, Carl’s duds were pretty impressive … from a distance. Up close, you’d see the fabric of the snappy three-piece suit actually had worn holes in the creases. Up close, if you greeted Carl, you’d be impressed at the deep, resounding tone of his voice. This guy sounded like money. Up close, Carl smelled pretty bad. He didn’t smell like a homeless person. He smelled like a bad second-hand clothing store. He kinda smelled like the 1940s to me. Well, okay … he smelled like the 1940s if the 1940s had rotted and shown up in the 1980s.

Turns out, Carl wasn’t homeless. In fact, he had an apartment in my building.

Once a day, come rain, shine, snow, freezing cold, air quality alerts, you name it, Carl would leave his apartment, all dressed up, and walk up Front Street, cross the Higgins Street Bridge and go to Hansen’s Ice Cream Store to have lunch. I imagined the crew at Hansen’s either gave him lunch or, like his apartment rent, Carl’s lunch money was endowed from an unknown source.

Doesn’t matter.

The fact was, regardless of his situation and the weather, Carl Swanson, the you-could-have-sworn-he-was-homeless guy, made it out of his apartment and into the world on days when I couldn’t. I think that’s probably the key symptom of my gloomy days. I just don’t want to leave. Or rather, my main motivation is to stay. That’s when I know I’m in trouble. I want to stay in bed. I want to stay in the shower. I want to stay in my car. I want to stay at work. You name it, my go-to stance during periods of depression is stasis.

One day, in a fit of pique much like I’ve described above, I stopped Carl in the hall and asked him if he wouldn’t rather come into my apartment for a cup of coffee and some leftovers than venture out into the weather. My friends and neighbors had assured me Carl was harmless. (Once you got past the obvious smell and unshaven face.) In fact, they contended Carl was rather genteel. At the time, his backstory was that he was an executive who had drank himself over the edge, and never quite recovered. His apartment was paid for by a daughter in a far-away city. Unlike many of us who occupied the Colonial Apartments (known affectionately as the Plaza de la Coloniale), Carl always paid his rent … on time.

I wasn’t interested in his life story. I just wanted Carl to come in and have a cup of coffee instead of fending off the 40-below-zero temperatures to cross a frozen river to an ice cream shop that was most likely closed due to the cold.

After a little coaxing, he agreed to come in and sit down at my kitchen table, as long as I put a newspaper on the chair. Don’t know why, but apparently, Carl preferred to sit on a newspaper.

So I put down a newspaper and he gave me his hat and coat.

Here’s the entire conversation:

“It’s really very, very cold out there today, Carl,” said Grant.

“I’ll say,” said Carl.

And that was it. I didn’t engage him, and he didn’t offer much of an explanation for his present state. Or the newspaper. When he was finished, he got up, excused himself, put on his hat and coat and went back upstairs.

But lately, as we continue to be hammered by rain and lonely gray sky, I find I take more and more motivational tips from Carl. Some days, all I need to get started is the promise of a good cup of coffee and a little conversation. And I count myself quite lucky that I have ready access to both.

News travels fast

I don’t suppose it surprises you to know I had a long, long chat with my sister last night. I’d sent her my manuscript to take a look and make sure she was OK with the content. Turns out, it was hard for her to read—for a number of reasons. But mostly it was that trick of memory and storytelling. The narrative was close enough to warm her heart with nostalgia but exaggerated just enough to cause concern.

Let me be perfectly clear about this, just so we’re all on the same page. These musings are stories. What the literary world refers to sometimes as creative nonfiction. They have a basis in fact (i.e., these things really happened to me) but the rest of it is up for grabs. Including the characterization of the people involved. And they are my stories. My perceptions. My distortions. I own them and am responsible for their content.

I’m the first to admit the characterization of my sister comes off borderline horrific. And I come off smelling like a rose (most of the time). That’s the story part. The facts are different. Being facts, they existed only at the time the events of the plot happened. The rest is … not to put too fine a point on it … creative, as in made-up. A casual observer roaming through the pages of my memoir may see my sister as a hellion, fueled by equal parts vengeance and spite. Kind of a Lucy to my Linus. But here’s what you’re not seeing, (and something I need to work on before I throw this book out there to the wolves):

  1. My sister (B.J. for you regulars) literally spoke for me for most of my childhood, and most of the time, she got everything right. I was tongue-tied and hornswoggled most of the time.
  2. She was my staunch defender in my agonizing fight against school, frequently showing up in the office of W.K. Dwyer Elementary to tell them I’d barfed on my way to class and was headed home to my mommy.
  3. She drove me everywhere from the time she was 13 until she left for college. And I mean EVERYWHERE.
  4. One cold December night, after my dad had thrown the decorated Christmas tree out on the lawn, she helped me put everything back in order so it appeared untouched the next day.
  5. She told me what was dangerous, and why not to do things. Then she let me do them and didn’t tell my parents.
  6. She once broke up with a boyfriend because he was making fun of the fact I conducted the pep band at basketball games.
  7. She calmed me down when I was hysterical over euthanizing the family dog while my parents were away on vacation.
  8. She taught me how to defend myself against hangovers.
  9. She loaned me money when times were tight and college tuition was due.
  10. She regularly told me I looked stupid (“Like a camel”) when I smoked, and it was highly unattractive.

Every good story has a villain, and to me the best villains are hilarious. I love a good hilarious villain. So yeah, when the jig was up and it turned out we had set fire to the Buick, of course, B.J. left me sitting in the front seat of the blazing car. Of course she thought my fascination with the Watergate hearings was bizarre. Of course she called me stupid when I jumped head first into a wading pool. What good, self-respecting, hilarious villain wouldn’t?

So please, townspeople, please. Lay off. (I’m talking to you, lady in the grocery store who approached her and said “So YOU’RE the sister?” all sinister and snotty like. Yeah, you and all the others like you.) These are stories. My storybook sister is my version of a hilarious villain.

My real sister … well … she’s the best.

 

 

Yahrzeit

Before you ask, no … I’m not Jewish. But observant Jews have a custom of lighting a candle on the anniversary of the death of a loved one. It’s a way to remember them. Think about them.

Reflect on their lives.

Today is the 25th anniversary of my father’s death. And, while I don’t usually dwell on such things, I do have a tendency to remember these days. This one is particularly filled, as I have now had as many years without my dad as I did with. There’s a sting in that which cannot be ignored.

If I had to sum up what it is I managed to glean from him in the 24 years I had, I’d have to say “I’m not sure.”

Did he love life? I’m not sure. I hope to think so, but … I’m not certain.

My dad wasn’t a particularly demonstrative guy. He had quite a few opportunities to be effusive, but he never completely took advantage of them. He did, however, have a wicked sense of humor. He knew what was funny. But he rarely laughed. When he did, it wasn’t audible. He’d kind of hunch up his shoulders and look a little sheepish and bounce a little. He was, by many accounts, and with all my memory … a serious man. He was particularly kind to strangers. And relations. I remember once explaining how he was sullen most of the time and my cousin said, “Really? Uncle Bob? The gracious host?” And I’d say “Yes. Uncle Bob. Uncle Bob is a great guy. Father Bob is … well, an enigma.

But you know? I think after 25 years, I’m allowed to say I *think* that was by design.

I think almost everyone else knew my dad better than I did. And I miss that feeling. Especially on days like today. I miss thinking I need to ask my sister to ask for whatever it is I want him to give us, or do for us. I miss having my mom speak about him … his feelings … to me while he was in the room. Sometimes sitting right next to me. She’d say “Your father doesn’t think that’s a good idea.” And he’d be sitting right there … working a crossword.

I had occasion to become pretty close to my grandmother before she died. She outlived Dad by four or five years. I would go to her apartment and visit her on Tuesdays, during my lunch hour at MCT. We’d discuss her kids, she let me know how each was doing. We didn’t really bring up Dad, or my aunt Lola. Both had passed away before her. Gramma was 74 when I was born, and well into her nineties when my parents died. One Tuesday we got to talking about Dad, though. I remember it was cold outside, maybe it was the weather that started the discussion. Dad had a hard time in the cold. His war injuries would bug him. Or maybe Gramma asked me how I was doing, and maybe, for a lark, I answered “Poorly, poorly,” the way my father always had. I don’t remember how we got started, but I remember confessing to her that I really didn’t know him very much, and I always kind of got the sense that, although he was proud of me, he didn’t really like me. I imagine she scoffed at that. She could scoff, my grandmother. If she thought you weren’t paying attention, she’d scoff under her breath.

At any rate, I remember we were sitting at her table, drinking tea. She looked down at her hands and ran them across the table, like she was smoothing out a table cloth that wasn’t there. And she looked at me over the top of her glasses and said, “He drank too much, you know, your father.” I got the sense she was ashamed of that.

“I know,” I said, “but he gave it up toward the end.” She kind of scowled at that. She was a kind person, but she could scoff and scowl, that’s for sure.

“What was he like with his father?” I asked.

“Oh, you know. Walt didn’t have a lot to do with the kids,” she said. “Except Fern. He loved Fern like the Dickens.” She referred to my aunt Fern, my father’s younger sister.

We sat for awhile in silence. Both of us given to long spells of just sitting in the quiet. Then she said, “You know your dad gave the commencement address at his high school graduation?” I did not. “Walt came home from work and I told him he should go see Bob speak, but he didn’t go,” she said. (Of course, I concluded that she didn’t go either, which probably made sense at the time, but in retrospect not so much.)

“Why not?” I asked.

“I don’t know. I never brought it up. I never thought about it until just now,” she said.

I remember thinking, Yeah, well … that acorn doesn’t fall very far from the tree. The wounds of the deaths of both my parents were probably still pretty fresh at the time.

But on days like today, I remember all the piano recitals, the band concerts, the football games, the church solos, the three (and only three) wrestling matches. The choir performances. The plays, the musicals, the children’s shows. I remember him sitting up with me when I was sick, driving me to the movies, driving me to the bus for speech meets and band festivals, teaching me how to drive myself to these places (“You can drive a little faster, you know … it won’t kill you to at least go the speed limit. You need to trust the department of transportation to know what’s safe.”) He taught me how to cook. He taught me now to keep books. Write checks, mow the lawn. Replace window panes. Do my multiplication tables. Take pictures. Change the oil. Change a flat tire. Check the spark plugs.

He taught me how to carve willow whistles.

By God, he was a pretty good dad. And I miss him every day, with every breath. How he would have marvelled at the way things turned out.

It all depends

Upon your point of view. That POV thing, that’s a stickler, especially if you’re writing about yourself. I’d wager a dollar on the fact that the majority of the copy edits being made to my book will be all about point of view. It’s a little weird. Not only do you have to figure out WHO you are, but actually WHEN you are. From there, things get a little more complicated.

So last week at our writer’s workshop. One of the best things about my job, might I add, is a built-in group of caring writers. We worked on an exercise in which the POV shifts from first to second to third person.

Here’s what has to happen in the story: A guy takes his dog for a walk and ends up getting shot. For this story, we used Ben Bernanke and a Mexican hairless named Bunting.

Here’s where I landed:

I didn’t actually see it happen. It was that fast. One minute, one moment, really, I was walking Bunting and the next second I had a hold of a leash that was tethered to a massacre.

Bunting was minding his own business. At least, that’s what I assume was the case. He and I have a pretty good routine. Maybe it was the unfamiliar walk, or the smell of the ocean air.

At any rate, Bunting and I set out on an innocent walk along the beach when the other dog—was it some kind of wolf? They are all some kind of wolf, I guess. But this was more wolf-like than Bunting. OK. I know, just about every other dog is more wolf-like than a Mexican hairless. That’s beside the point. This German Shepherd-looking-attack-Nazi dog just came out of nowhere and throttled my little dog.

It was that fast. He—the other dog—I think it was a he—isn’t it odd how we assign aggression to males? Anyway, HE grabbed my baby Bunting by the neck, gave a quick shake, and … it was over. At least it was over for Bunting. The Nazi and I were another matter.

***

You grab at just about anything you can, a leash, a collar—this dog had nothing—no distinguishing item of any kind. Not even a collar. You grab, and you twist, and you shout. Oh boy do you shout. Your dog lies dead at your feet. His killer turning his blood lust on you. And suddenly, you are all hands! Your body is tense. If you could only relax into the fight, like something you do everyday, but no you are as stiff as a … well, a stiff. The dog can sense this, you know this. Your blood is up. That’s probably what the animal can smell—its large, dark, flaring nostrils find your own, coursing, carotid artery on their own.

Your mind fades as the Nazi-dog-out-of-nowhere sinks its teeth in first to one side of your neck—the wound—then the other side of your neck—the kill. You think, This must be what it feels like to be attacked. Except you aren’t feeling attacked. You are feeling cold. Calm, cold, no fear—just you, the dog at your throat, and the cool, numbing cold of the world you are leaving.

***

Ben’s mind went first. You could see it in the way his eyes just faded out of focus. Only a minute into the attack, blood coursing out of the open wound in his neck, Fritz waited. Jaws locked. Until just the right moment. Then, as easily as he had dispatched the Mexican hairless, he gave a solid yank on its human prey and a strong, forced twist.

The sound of Ben’s neck breaking echoed up the bank. That was what caught Officer Hernandez’s ear.

He charged, the officer, just fast enough to arrive at the scene as Ben was finishing bleeding out.

“Fritz,” he called. “Heel!” And the dog let go of Ben and trotted to his side. Hernandez slipped the collar over the dog’s neck and buckled it under its bloody jowl. Some of Ben’s blood slipped onto Hernandez’s sleeve. Shit, Hernandez thought, I’ll have to explain that now. Fritz sat, then downed at Hernandez’s side.

Hernandez exhaled, drew his service revolver, and walked calmly up to Ben’s body. “Stop,” he said, barely audible. “Police,” he said in a dull, clear voice.

Then he discharged a bullet into the forehead of Ben’s lifeless body.

This much I know

This I know: There’s a back story to every big decision. Last weekend I walked along the Oregon Coast and contemplated a major purchase. A big deal. Something that could very easily crack the foundation upon which I’ve built my most cherished possession—my stability.

It wasn’t unlike the day we decided to (quite literally) put all our eggs (quite metaphorically) in one basket. Though this time, my father was way more involved than I would care to admit.

My thoughts last weekend all began with the Magicland Development Corporation. You know, those few hardy souls behind the development of Gregson Hot Springs. (For those of you born after the Kennedy assassination, Gregson Hot Springs is what we used to call Fairmont Hot Springs.) My dad was an officer in the development corporation, along with a man named Bob Franklin. Both of them have long since passed away, but Bob F, Bob B, and a couple of other entrepreneurs put their heads together and developed Gregson into a resort, which they sold it to a Canadian man named Lloyd who had a resort in British Columbia called Fairmont Hot Springs. The big deal at Fairmont (Montana) was the golf course. The bigger deal was supposed to be the timeshare condominiums. Back then, timeshares and condos were totally new concepts. New enough to not come with the baggage they seem to carry today.

I think, and by that I mean I do not know, Dad had a vested interest in the timeshares in Fairmont. There used to be a map in the hotel lobby with a future state of the condos. Byington Trail was one of the streets. I don’t know if the condos ever materialized. In point of fact, I don’t really know whatever happened between my dad and the Magicland Development Corporation. Maybe it had something to do with Lloyd. Maybe not. But something happened. Something soured. I do know the whole thing became something we never spoke about again, once it happened.

My thoughts were futher complicated by the overt inability of my parents to go on a family vacation without a major dispute. I do not exaggerate.

Exhibit A: Note how they spent an entire week in Canada not speaking to each other. My father worked, my mother sighed heavily, my sister spent so much time in the swimming pool her hair turned green. I passed the time tightly coiled in the fetal position with stomach cramps.

Exhibit B: Note how they held a rather demonstrative conversation in the front seat of the car before vowing to never take another trip again. We checked into a motel cabin on Lake McDonald. My mother refused to speak. My father refused to eat. My sister wrote endless letters to her camp friend. I learned to shop and cook in a motel kitchenette—a skill that will serve me a hundredfold in later life.

Exhibit C: Note how, due to their inability to truly express themselves, they decided to tour Temple Square in Salt Lake City instead of going to Lagoon, the family fun center (and affordable alternative to Disneyland) their children had seen advertised on cable television since infancy.

I ask you: HOW DIFFICULT CAN RELAXATION GET?

Since those experiences it might not surprise you to know that I consider a vacation to include a lot of sitting and staring. Maybe some reading. Maybe a little walking. Maybe some good cooking. And a nice bathtub. (I do enjoy a nice, long bath.) Views are optional. (Although a huge bonus when staring, views can be distracting when reading, and if the views are truly view-worthy, they are not necessarily bereft of strangers, which can interfere with walking.)

It also might not surprise you to know that my most favorite vacations are those in which I can sit, stare, read and cook in the comfort of a cozy enclosure away from strangers. An oceanfront condo is, well, Sitter-and-Starer’s Nirvana. And a couple of years ago, in a deperate attempt to sit and stare, Alana and I found just the spot. It has haunted us ever since. The only hitch in this giddyup? It was a time-share sort of situation.

But here’s the deal:

In my mind, my dad loved the idea of sharing time. Time sharing. Whatever. Not having to maintain a completely different place that sat empty most of the year. I think he would have found the economy of the entire idea far outweighed the cost. I can see the gears turning in his mind. He wanted a quiet place for his family. He didn’t want to worry about restaurants. He wanted to cook for himself. He didn’t want to stress about reservations. He wanted to plan ahead. He only wanted to pack and unpack once. He didn’t want to be surprised. He didn’t crave adventure. He loved side trips. He loved geology. He loved to sit and do crosswords and read Rex Stout books.

Now I know this is gross displacement. I know this is me, making excuses to do what I want. And I know the decision I made, we made, I made, will lose its lustre if times ever become tight.

But if there’s one thing I know, it’s what I want.

So we got it. Now we have it. Let the sitting and staring commence.

I’m back (and I’m better than ever)

Whew! I have to admit, cutting and pasting all those posts into this new site was arduous. In the process I lost all your lovely comments, but I gained much more functionality I was looking for.

I have tales to tell of the past month, and I’ll be catching everyone up on what’s happening with the book, but for now add this space to your RSS feed and welcome back!

We’ll see

Okay campers. I know I’ve been a little flirty these days. I mean, who actually writes a book, tells the world and then refuses to let people read the damn thing?
This past week has been a bit off-schedule, as I think most of the rest of this project is going to go. I’ve sent my manuscript to the only person I trust to not only call me on my bullshit, but also know when to use “that” instead of “which”. She’s thrilled at the idea of taking care of my baby while she’s also going to be busy delivering a baby of her own. (She’s due to give birth to an actual child, not a book—although she’s an excellent writer.) So those of you awaiting a cursory glance at the manuscript while in it’s infancy are going to have to wait for another infant to at least give his mother some time to take a serious look. Personally, I’m counting on all those raging hormones to give me a break. We’ll see.

I’ve also got a call into someone who is going to help me with the website. So the next time you read the blog, you’ll be able to subscribe, and that darn picture of me running across my Aunt Clara’s backyard just might stretch across the whole page the way I want it to. We’ll see.

And probably the biggest thing I have to let you know about is “the book” page will most likely change to “the books” as I have enough leftovers for another start on a fascinating tale of a young man perfecting his slacking abilities whilst pursuing fame and fortune in the big city. Granted, that means I’m going to have to keep writing about myself, and to be perfectly honest, I’m a little bored with that. I might pick up a fiction story I whipped up years ago and finish it. We’ll see.

That’s what’s on the agenda. I’ve committed to three posts per week—roughly 50% of what I’ve been doing these past six weeks. They may be short and sweet, but that’s the plan.

We’ll see.

Now what?

Well, I did that. Now what?

I’m so grateful to everyone who stopped by and gave me such great support. One of the wisest things a prospective agent said to me when I started this project was “I like coming-of-age stories, but my experience has been that they’re almost impossible to sell. So you don’t want to get lumped into that category. You need to signal as early as possible in the book that something more is happening.”

Granted, this person hadn’t read the entire book. Hasn’t seen this blog. Has no idea what my something more is. I have to admit, up until I sat down and started receiving such encouraging feedback from all of you—Anacondans especially, I didn’t know what my something more was.

Now I do.

I’m on a roll here

God bless Stephen King. He laid out my writing goals for me, and so far I’ve been able to hit them. But today I surpassed them—twice. Not only have I exceeded my goal of 80K, I’ve surpassed it twice now.

And I’m not finished.

I did, however, fall down on my blogging goal yesterday (Damn that Super Bowl), but I feel great today. I’m not finished, but I think tomorrow I will be. That gives me a couple of days to improve the website and get started marketing this manuscript. I already have plans for the next memoir, but I think I should take a break from this for awhile and take a crack at fiction again.

So far, the goals I set for myself have been met in other ways too. I finally, finally have a sense of discipline about this activity. I’ve never had that before. I’d attend workshops or talk with authors and they all said the same thing: Establish a routine, stick to your schedule, go easy on yourself. Up until this sabbatical, I’d never made it past the routine part. Writing was a luxury, not a daily activity. Now, when I take a day off, I feel like I’m cheating myself. At least that’s the way I felt yesterday, so today, instead of two thousand words, I wrote five thousand.

I’ve never done that before. It’s exhilarating.