Sunday, June 20, 2021

Happy Father's Day

For writing about my father, several pieces you can access online are the short story "My Father's Great Recession" and the memoir excerpts "Back and Broke in Philly" and "A Poor Man's Christmas." There were times when he was flush, and he was hardly an invariably unhappy man, so I can't say that these slices of his life capture the whole of Dad. While there's a lot more I hope to publish, I also have a vintage selfie, his Kunderas, and other reflections in and around this blog or elsewhere.

Saturday, June 19, 2021

so thin and underfed

"Every once in a while at the hotel there would be a banquet. A banquet it was indeed, even for those lined up at the back door, the extra helps. Sometimes as many as twenty additional hands were called in. I noticed that at a banquetbehind the scenes at leastnobody seemed to get tired of eating, ever. At the beginning we were idle for a few minutes sometimes. Then each contrived to get a handful of nuts or a swallow of coffee . . . taking our last course first. I could see why the extra helpers ate. They all looked so thin and underfed, I think they had no other job. Day after day just waiting for banquets.Maybe they called at all the big hotels. Maybe they hunted garbage. I don't know."

Monday, June 7, 2021

patience toward writers

"Roger Straus was legendary for his patience toward writers on his list, blithely letting deadlines pass as long as he felt reasonably certain that someday the wait would prove worthwhile. But even he had a limit, as the epic vagaries of Charles Jackson would eventually bear out. By 1960, as Roger noted, his friend had 'red ink on the books to the tune of $9,398.94,' which didn't include personal loans in the neighborhood of $2,700 ('or at least that is the total of the traceable sums in my file'), though almost to the end he continued to encourage Charlie and help him make ends meet. However, there simply wasn't as much to talk about now that Charlie only made 'an occasional, embarrassed, dutiful allusion' to his stalled novel(s), as he would admit five years later in 'The Sleeping Brain,' where he nonetheless also claimed that his meetings with Roger had remained as frequent and affable as ever. His letters tell a different story: 'Wanna take any bets on my lunch date with Roger tomorrow?' he wrote Sarah in 1961. 'It's still on but momentarily I expect a cancellation.'"

~~ from Blake Bailey's Farther and Wilder: The Lost Weekends and Literary Dreams of                                           Charles Jackson


Wednesday, June 2, 2021

verboten

"Unfortunately Charlie was not sober, strictly speaking, nor had he been sober for the previous six months. On the contrary: now that he was no longer drinking, he was taking more pills than ever. As he'd later admit to AA (claiming he didn't realize, at the time, that it was verboten): 'I couldn't meet a friend for lunch, I couldn't write a line, I couldn't attend an AA meeting, without the help of these drugs.'"

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