For weeks, I have carried around The Best American Short Stories 1989. Weeks combined into months. As I have experienced with previous volumes, the time a book spends in my bag only increases its weight on my back.
In my head.
The book, purchased from Thrift Books, Amazon or Better World Books, I can’t seem to remember, still holds its bright orange cover but has suffered from sun exposure along its spine. The sun washed away the bright orange and a dusty tan now is mismatched against the front and back covers.
Out what window did this book look for so long?
What sun passed over it each day?
Where was it plucked from before being stuffed into a padded envelope and rushed to my waiting hands…only to spend more time on a shelf…and then, finally pulled from its spot several weeks ago…”Finally, it’s my turn! He has picked me! Let me do my best to remain strong and to deliver my contents as I was designed!”
And then my new companion finds himself riding on my back…day after day….week after week…with each opening of my bag, he sees my eyes glance at him only to have a hand grasp a fellow traveler. Perhaps a New Yorker…Swann’s Way or the journal.
I have done the book a disservice by carrying it along with others. The book’s companions have left crease marks along the faded spine and large indentations into the top pages, and adding final insult to injury, it appears that tea, which is also a daily traveler in my bag has leaked and placed a couple of nice brown stains with the liquid further compounding the damage by dissolving the strength of the paper as pressure from another book dug into the tightly pressed pages.
Now, finally, he sits on the desk beside me. Lifted from his space- dreams that perhaps, this could be it! Time to deliver!
His purpose to be fulfilled.
“How long will he spend with me?” What will he think of my stories?” What will become of me when the last page is turned?”
“24 long years of waiting… and now…how long will he hold me?”
Here we are: the 1989 Best American Short Stories. If my history plays out the same as it has with previous volumes, this book should be with me for several more months.
1989 was a big year for me. I was not yet 18 and entering my final year of high school. I had not reached the halfway point of the age that I am now, never imagining that I would be so old. I thought I knew everything then and of course only realizing within the last few years that my true education began…yesterday. Memories of that year really don’t mark it as one that deserves any sort of special mention.
My circle of friends started to fracture as I we unconsciously (perhaps?) prepared for our separation in a few months. We seemed to know that a long goodbye would be easier. We would all attend different schools in different states only to compare experiences during the holiday breaks. I had a steady girlfriend but continued to seek a return of the love from the one that still held my heart.
In a few short months, I would be tossed into the world…but not really. I would be sheltered but not by the protection I had been afforded for the previous 18 years of my life. College would envelope me in its warm embrace – holding off reality for a few more years.
I feel a pushing and a pulling by these volumes now. It will be a huge step when I finish this volume and move into the 1990s. I will be crossing from one of my lives into the next. 1998 and 2000 will also be big years. As will 2010 – all of which I will address in their introductions.
Margaret Atwood is the editor for the 1989 volume of BASS. I was a bit intimidated at the thought of writing some sort of introduction about her considering her density. I realized only in writing the lines above that I needn’t worry so much about her and that I should push forward into reading and thinking about the stories she selected for me. Her introduction, “Reading Blind”, didn’t hold me in a way that I feel it necessary to waste your time in reading my writing about it.
Her last line did state one point of what I am doing in this reading and writing exercise.
“From listening to the stories of others, we can learn to tell our own.”
Perfect.
Who or What to blame this time? I have to have something to turn to for my slack-ass reading.
Shit look at how long it took me to read this volume.
6 months 13 days
or
28 weeks
or
196 days
or
0.54 years
I have to figure that it's a record.
20 stories
That works out to one story read and written about every 9.8 days.
11 stories by men – 9 by women authors.
ONLY 3 from The New Yorker! – The Atlantic is represented the same number of times.
In terms of motivation, I will say that I was not at all motivated to read the stories in this collection.
I can easily lean on Helprin and say that his distaste for the minimalist turned me off...I can blame my work schedule...
There is no one to blame though - just me.
There really is only one thing to do. Keep reading. 1989 is up.
Helping - Robert Stone
It's tough out there. Life is tough.
I wonder if there is anyone who lives there life without a struggle of some sort.
Sure, our struggles are relative to our existence and I think that my struggles/problems/issues/challenges are nothing compared to those faced by someone someplace else.
It's almost embarrassing to even think of my life and associate the word tough with it.
But - it's all relative.
I am so very lucky in my life.
I have a job (two actually) that I enjoy.
I have a wife that loves me.
I have a beautiful wonderful son. We have plenty of food to eat. We are all healthy -physically and emotionally.
I do not sit in a cubicle, in a job that I detest.
I do not have coworkers that I loathe.
I do not suffer from PTSD or substance abuse.
I do not self-medicate through food or drink.
I do not fight with my wife.
I am not envious of my neighbors.
I am so fortunate.
I read the news, and it seems that people are so troubled - that they are so unhappy.
There seems to be millions in our society that are challenged with problems that make their lives so difficult. They hate their job, they fight with their spouse, their children are in trouble, they wrestle with mental illness (their own or another's), their finances are shot, they struggle with substances - they want to be better than the Jones'.
There are petty little things that we (M and I) would like to change in our life (house vs. apartment), no student loans...and some stability in my parent's lives. But honestly…this is nothing.
This story – Helping, it’s about love and need and companionship – I have all those and more –
Victoria - Hilding Johnson
I'll turn once again to my thoughts on me and writing - and yes, they are still thoughts and they are just that – nothing more.
Perhaps I'm a volcano and I'll erupt - or one day, I'll get hit on the head, and my world will tilt just enough to get me to actually write something - meaningful.
Hilding Johnson, in her contributor's notes, reminds the reader that an author has the luxury of creating a world through their writing...sometimes a world that they have never physically visited.
I've been doing a lot of world creating and it's remained in my head - there have been efforts in the past to get them on paper but that perfect stone has not fallen from the sky causing those worlds to be transferred to paper.
I am afraid at times that the stone will be too big and crush me under its weight. It needs to be just the right size - and come at just the right time.
Could I possibly set up any more barriers for myself?
Still Life- Marjorie Sandor
I still find pleasure in flipping through old photo albums.
The yellow tinted photos of the 70s, the overly color saturated photos of the 80s and the glossy deep rich photos of the 90s. The near perfect processed hard copy photos of the digitally manipulated shots that I tuned before sending off to the drugstore – existent - but a noticeable smaller collection as most live in hard drives.
The photo albums that W will be able to glance through will be so different that what his mother and I once thumbed through in our younger years.
In my albums, no doubt, he will find old hard copy photos of M and I dutifully ordered by our parents many years ago swiped from their albums to fill our own. He will be able to look back through old photos of M and I – and recreate our lives in his mind before he was born.
He'll be able to see us before our marriage, before we met each other, before I left home and traveled to that town in southeastern Europe He'll be able to fill in the gaps with his imagination and over time piece together stories from the stories we tell him...someday relying on his own memory of our fractured memories.
He will see himself in my baby pictures, as a boy of 2. He'll see me as a scared and awkward boy of 10, and then a teenager struggling with teenage problems. He'll see me in photos with girls that aren't his mother. He'll see me with friends that he'll never meet. He’ll see me with my parents - grandparents that he may recognize in their physical form but who are something different in who they present themselves as today. He'll see me in a uniform. He'll see me with a beard and long hair. He'll see me in distant countries, with strange looking people. He'll see me living in his mother's village...but in photos without her.
And then he'll begin to see her appear in my photos. He'll see us as friends, co-workers and then the shots of our marriage. Celebrations with a family so far away.
He'll see two young people boarding an airplane looking brave, hiding their fears and insecurities about their future together. He'll see their lives develop together over the years, trips with family and friends...and then with the turn of a page, he'll appear.
If he finds his mother’s small book of photos, flipping through the pages, he’ll see his eyes in his mother's eyes as she stands in her little "young pioneer's" kindergarten uniform. Photos of her playing with her two brothers. Black and white images not taken not in the 40s...but the 80s...poor Romania.
He'll see her as a student with friends and boys that aren't his father. He'll see her happy at family gatherings and at dances. And then he'll see the two books become one as he begins to recognize images from my photo albums.
I have seen a few...5 or 6 at the most, photos of my mother and father when they were young. I don't ever remember seeing photos of them starting school, attending dances, graduating from high school or college. There are a couple of the two of them before I was born...but the real photos start flooding into the pages of albums once I arrived. As a child, I viewed the photos, I placed myself at the center of my focus. I've since shifted that focus to what surrounds me in those photos in an effort to understand the two of them a bit more.
Their relationship intrigues me and I have a long term assignment to learn from it. I no longer trust either of their memories - obviously not my father’s due to his disease, but my mother's memory has started to shift towards invention. She also has tainted her memories with those leaning towards only the good aspects of their time together - forgiving him for what he did, and not holding him accountable for the life he gave us after he left.
I will teach W to look at these photos without placing himself our M or me in the center of the focus. I'll ask him to look at our surroundings - the pictures on the walls, the leaves on the trees, the food on the tables. I'll ask him if he thinks that the people in the photos were happy when the photos were taken. Were they wearing false masks? What does he think is really going on in the photo - does the photo represent that instant accurately?
I'll do this to stimulate his imagination and to fill in the holes of our history. I'll tell him stories of those photos and give him details of my life, our life before and after they were taken.
It will be a wonderful experience for him to see our lives as individuals...so far apart...joined...and told in a story that he'll soon tire of hearing...but one that he'll repeat one day.
And he'll also look at his life someday, collected in photos...almost a photo a day - and not see the changes that one can only recognize in photos taken at monthly intervals- will he notice the changes?
The yellow tinted photos of the 70s, the overly color saturated photos of the 80s and the glossy deep rich photos of the 90s. The near perfect processed hard copy photos of the digitally manipulated shots that I tuned before sending off to the drugstore – existent - but a noticeable smaller collection as most live in hard drives.
The photo albums that W will be able to glance through will be so different that what his mother and I once thumbed through in our younger years.
In my albums, no doubt, he will find old hard copy photos of M and I dutifully ordered by our parents many years ago swiped from their albums to fill our own. He will be able to look back through old photos of M and I – and recreate our lives in his mind before he was born.
He'll be able to see us before our marriage, before we met each other, before I left home and traveled to that town in southeastern Europe He'll be able to fill in the gaps with his imagination and over time piece together stories from the stories we tell him...someday relying on his own memory of our fractured memories.
He will see himself in my baby pictures, as a boy of 2. He'll see me as a scared and awkward boy of 10, and then a teenager struggling with teenage problems. He'll see me in photos with girls that aren't his mother. He'll see me with friends that he'll never meet. He’ll see me with my parents - grandparents that he may recognize in their physical form but who are something different in who they present themselves as today. He'll see me in a uniform. He'll see me with a beard and long hair. He'll see me in distant countries, with strange looking people. He'll see me living in his mother's village...but in photos without her.
And then he'll begin to see her appear in my photos. He'll see us as friends, co-workers and then the shots of our marriage. Celebrations with a family so far away.
He'll see two young people boarding an airplane looking brave, hiding their fears and insecurities about their future together. He'll see their lives develop together over the years, trips with family and friends...and then with the turn of a page, he'll appear.
If he finds his mother’s small book of photos, flipping through the pages, he’ll see his eyes in his mother's eyes as she stands in her little "young pioneer's" kindergarten uniform. Photos of her playing with her two brothers. Black and white images not taken not in the 40s...but the 80s...poor Romania.
He'll see her as a student with friends and boys that aren't his father. He'll see her happy at family gatherings and at dances. And then he'll see the two books become one as he begins to recognize images from my photo albums.
I have seen a few...5 or 6 at the most, photos of my mother and father when they were young. I don't ever remember seeing photos of them starting school, attending dances, graduating from high school or college. There are a couple of the two of them before I was born...but the real photos start flooding into the pages of albums once I arrived. As a child, I viewed the photos, I placed myself at the center of my focus. I've since shifted that focus to what surrounds me in those photos in an effort to understand the two of them a bit more.
Their relationship intrigues me and I have a long term assignment to learn from it. I no longer trust either of their memories - obviously not my father’s due to his disease, but my mother's memory has started to shift towards invention. She also has tainted her memories with those leaning towards only the good aspects of their time together - forgiving him for what he did, and not holding him accountable for the life he gave us after he left.
I will teach W to look at these photos without placing himself our M or me in the center of the focus. I'll ask him to look at our surroundings - the pictures on the walls, the leaves on the trees, the food on the tables. I'll ask him if he thinks that the people in the photos were happy when the photos were taken. Were they wearing false masks? What does he think is really going on in the photo - does the photo represent that instant accurately?
I'll do this to stimulate his imagination and to fill in the holes of our history. I'll tell him stories of those photos and give him details of my life, our life before and after they were taken.
It will be a wonderful experience for him to see our lives as individuals...so far apart...joined...and told in a story that he'll soon tire of hearing...but one that he'll repeat one day.
And he'll also look at his life someday, collected in photos...almost a photo a day - and not see the changes that one can only recognize in photos taken at monthly intervals- will he notice the changes?
Smorgasbord – Tobias Wolff
Before I even reached this story, I had a reader that
provided me with a bit of education in my comments section on the introductory
post of this volume of BASS. The comment
linked here provided me with a little “head’s up” and I absolutely love the engagement
of a reader. I love that these little
words that I am shooting out into space make their way onto someone’s screen
and are then digested and are such that they prompt a response…and even a bit
of information that I may not have been aware of make’s its way back into the
post! Truly a wonderful feature of the
internet (how I love to love and hate you!).
I think I have shown my appreciation for Wolff in the past –
I really dig the guy and I needn't restate my appreciation again.
In the contributor’s notes of this volume, Wolff writes “This
story wanted to be written for years before I gave in and wrote it. Part memory, part invention, I can no longer
tell where one ends and the other begins.
The very act of writing has transformed the original experience into
another experience, more “real” to me than what I started with.”
I appreciate this little tidbit. When by buddies from Norwich and I get
together – the stories start to flow and the old line “The
older I get the further from reality our stories become” is stated as we remember
our days on “The Hill”.
So where did this story take me?
Back to college naturally!
Having attended military college I have a special relationship to some
of the short stories Wolff writes – specifically stories birthed from incidents
at “The Hill School” (no relation to Norwich).
It was my freshman year at Norwich and my father decided to drop
by for a visit. I think he was in the
New England region so a quick trip to Vermont was easy. He wanted to take me out to dinner and asked
if there was anyone that I’d like to bring along (when I read Smorgasbord this
is where my mind drifted back to the story I am now relating).
I decided that I’d like my friend Todd to dinner. It was a bit of an odd choice because Todd
was a year my senior and was also my assistant squad leader and my Cadre during
my freshman year. We were into similar
music and had the same outlook on the world so we became friends once my class
was accepted into the corps. Todd wasn't the muscle-head mil-dog type and he (and I suppose I) never really fit into the
military mold.
So the three of us headed out for dinner at an inn in
Vermont on a cool spring evening in 1991 and dad allowed us to order what we
wanted from the menu. My dad ratcheted
me a few notches in the small social world of our company by pulling out
several very old bottles of single malt scotch to share with Todd and me. I wasn't of age, and I’m pretty sure Todd was
by this time old enough to drink, and conveniently the wait staff looked the
other way as my dad poured us drinks.
Part of my father’s ceremony with scotch is introducing and
educating people as to the finer points of single malt. This was lost on me but it made quite an
impression on Todd. We all enjoyed our
drinks and after dinner my dad safely deposited us back at school.
There were a couple mentions of that dinner with my father
over the months that followed, and Todd asked several times about my father as
his time at Norwich came closer to ending in the years following.
Todd and I were good friends.
The late spring of 1993 found Todd and I celebrating the
last week of school for him. We sat in his room and shared a small bottle of
tequila and rolled our own cigarettes. It
was of course against university regulations , but our reputation as being untouchable
had been set (more on that some other day).
I remember the hazy conversation we had. Girls, hazing, drinking…stories of mutual
friends, plans for our futures.
I remember his suitcases and boxes of books ready to be
loaded into his car. U2, his favorite
group was on the stereo.
I called Todd once or twice after college. I don’t remember the conversations. I called him once after I returned to the
states. I vaguely remember that
conversation. And then on May 14, 2002,
this arrived in my email inbox (being a quasi-librarian, I seem to keep
everything).
hey jakon -
hope all is going well for you. just wanted to touch
base and find out where you are and what you're up to
these days.
i'm living in new mexico right now. but only for
about another month and a half. on my way to england.
we'll be living about an hour north of london.
i won't bore you with too much info right now. hell,
i'm not even sure if this will reach you. let me know
if it does.
todd
hope all is going well for you. just wanted to touch
base and find out where you are and what you're up to
these days.
i'm living in new mexico right now. but only for
about another month and a half. on my way to england.
we'll be living about an hour north of london.
i won't bore you with too much info right now. hell,
i'm not even sure if this will reach you. let me know
if it does.
todd
I remember reading this
and was so happy to hear from him .
I wrote back immediately.
A little information about
Todd and where he found himself in life after school.
As you can see by the date,
we were well into the post 9/11 world.
Todd mentioned that he was moving to England. He said that he didn’t want to bore me with
the details because he couldn't bore me with the details. Todd is a Special Forces Pilot.
I didn't hear from Todd
after that quick little email exchange.
He was pretty busy with…you know… flying missions.
I drifted back to our
conversation over the tequila – I never imagined these years later that Todd
would be landing in some of the hottest zones where our troops needed to be. I was pretty tripped out.
And then, on April 1, 2005,
his name appeared in the subject line of an email from a person that shared his
last name.
It was from his wife.
Here is that email:
I am sending out this email to let you all know that we don't
have any "official" word on Todd as of yet. However, as I am
sure all of you have seen the news, they are saying otherwise. Todd took
off for a scheduled training flight in Albania and then never returned.
The Air Force is doing all they can to help me and make sure that the closest
of family members are flown out here to England to be with me and the two
girls. Todd's body will more than likely be sent via Air Force plane to
Dover, from there I'm not sure what we will do with him. Please continue
to pray for each of us. You all were important to Todd and I in so many
ways. Please feel free to email me or even call if you need to
talk. I can be reached at 011-XXXXXXXXX. I do have people here with
me at all times so don't worry about that. Right now we are waiting for
the "official" word and awaiting family to fly in to help me and the
girls. I am sorry to notify you all via such a cold medium, but as you can
imagine, I do not have the strength to call each of you like I would
like. If you look at my list and feel that I may have missed someone
(this list is mine, I don't have acess to Todd's) PLEASE forward it on to
them. Todd would want EVERYONE to know. Please pray for us.
Todd crashed into a mountainside in Albania.
Three days later this email arrived.
I wanted to give you a little more information about Todd and
what is going on here. It seems that the plane crashed into a pretty
precarious spot, so there is some delay with getting the bodies out of the
plane. There were live ammunition on board as well, so these must be
removed before they can safely remove the bodies. The plan is to take all
the remains of all the bodies to Dover (in the States) and do the DNA testing
there to confirm their identities. After this is accomplished, then we
will be having a funeral at Arlington National Cemetery. Since there is
no way of knowing when his remains will be identified there is as yet no date
for the funeral. I will update you as soon as we have more news.
You are ALL invited to attend this service. I feel we would be honoring
Todd's life if you could attend. Thank you all for your prayers and
support of us during this incredibly difficult time.
I have no idea how his wife wrote this. Her strength is incredible.
M and I went to Arlington for Todd’s funeral. It was tough.
That’s all I’m going to say about that.
This short story, about two boys, joining a classmate and his
step-mother for dinner took me back 20 years to an inn in Vermont.
And it took me back 19 years to a shared bottle of
tequila.
And finally, it took me back 7 years to the death of a good
friend.
The story let me honor him by remembering him and placing this
little bit of him out there into the universe.
Todd and I are good friends.
That's Todd on the left leading our platoon. I'm behind him carrying the guidon.
I'm right behind you brother. -Never forget-
No Friends, All Strangers – Lucy Honig
If you’ve had the chance to ride in a train, subway, trolley or
crowded bus, this little short could bring some memories back of your time
spent traveling on that mode of mass transit.
I have been lucky enough to experience this –in other countries
and in conditions that I could have never imagined myself.
The last time I had the chance to sit on a subway, to look at my
fellow commuters, was several months ago. I was on a day trip up to
DC. I was there to interview and I decided that it would be smarter to
park in northern Virginia and make the trip into the District via
train/subway.
It was a good choice, landing me right in the heart of DC with
plenty of time before my interview. I was able to ride the train for
a good 45 minutes observing my fellow travelers and of course making stories up
for selected people that caught my interest.
I have no doubt that there could have been a couple that looked
back at me doing exactly the same.
I felt good on that train – like I belonged there. I conveyed
that to M as I sat in the subway station eating a banana before the
interview.
The interview went very well, I felt good about how I presented
myself, and all sorts of thoughts concerning our future move to this area
flooded into my head as I rode the train back to northern Virginia to jump into
our car and make my way home.
But it was not to be. I received a short 3 sentence email
from the HR department of the company I interviewed with and then a couple days
after that a somewhat longer (still only one paragraph) email from the
supervisor in the department I interviewed for.
But my little 12 hour trip and my ride on the train/subway left
its mark – a beautiful one that I won’t forget. I remember faces. I
remember the beautiful business woman reading a book on her ipad and so lovingly
cleaning the screen as her stop approached.
I remember the men in military uniforms with their various unit
patches getting on and off at the Pentagon. The group of students
hustling on with their bags stuffed with books at the Georgetown stop.
Tourists with their bright tie-dyed t-shirts and fanny packs sun burnt cheeks
and thick middles – comfortable walking shoes and freckled forearms – all
getting off near the Capitol building.
Another beautiful woman, pale skin with a shadow cast
across her face from a large floppy hat, whispery thin white fabric dress, not
doing anything at all to conceal the shape of her body – the dress no doubt
selected not only for its comfort on a hot day, but also because it did show
off her body.
All of these people caught my eye and left enough of an
impression that I can call them up in my memory today.
When I lived in Romania, travel between cities was done by
train, car and bus. We/I would wait on the outskirts of town for a car
that was going in my direction and I would attempt to catch the driver’s
attention as they sped down the road out of town. If they had a seat or
two, we would jump in and pay the driver enough to cover gas at the end of our
trip. We would meet some interesting characters- and by the end of the
trip there really wasn’t much left to image about our companions or
driver.
When fate had us jumping onto a bus that traveled between the
smaller cities, we were transported from rural Romania to a cramped 30 year old
Soviet autobus that had somehow been transported to India…meaning that we were
stuffed in there with chickens, sheep, luggage, instruments, kitchen and
construction supplies, raw meat, cooked meat GARLIC and the lovely breath of
countless individuals who didn’t feel the need to brush their teeth or use
deodorant…and it was lovely.
One thing that this story reminded me to do, is something that I
think I have forgotten – something that is important to a person that needs to
be creative, something that will be fun to pass on to W.
I need to start using my imagination more – to tap into the
creative side that I once had. I’m
feeling a new surge of this energy could be coming on. I welcome it and will try to exploit it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Before I dive into this wonderful little story, I’ll do what I always seem to do in these entries and wander down a path that has absolute...
-
Stanley Elkin May 11, 1930 – May 31, 1995 Half way through the Best American Short Stories 1978, I find my favorite. A story that ...
-
In the contributors notes Louie writes that this story is about his own displacement. I really enjoy what he has to say about the de...
-
Grace Paley Dec. 11, 1922 – August 22 2007 To begin with, it was pleasant to see a story in this volume with the focus on a group of wo...