An inescapable truism.
You can never leave yourself (Read: your temperamental proclivities)
behind. Hence, the above title, which,
if you have to explain it, is probably not that spectacular.
You go to a place to slow down. And what happens? Instead of slowing down you, almost
perversely, speed up.
We went out eight nights in nine days. It would have been nine, but we had a
conflict with a lecture delivered by a woman who had escaped the clutches the
practice of Scientology and felt safe enough to spill the beans from the stage
of the (recently lamentably defunct) Dunes
Summer Theater, a quarter of a mile from our cabin and two thousand miles
from Tom Cruise. We came “this close” to
attending that lecture. But we visited a
local “Harvest Festival” instead, traveling thirty miles to say, “So that’s what rutabagas look like!”
We must be natural rebels.
“Don’t tell us to
relax! We’re doin’ more than usual!”
We must have
experienced some “down time” because
I also finished three books. (Reading,
not writing.) My favorite of these was Clea’s Moon, a nifty crime novel (with a
“B” western protagonist) written by the late former L.A. Times reporter Ed Wright, whom I once met at a friend’s party
and had enjoyed personally as much as I enjoyed reading Clea’s Moon.
My least favorite
was a dismissible gallstone I picked up at the discount book emporium in the
Michigan City Outlet Mall. I would never
have bought it, but it was marked down to “70% of the Publisher’s Price.” The “Publisher’s Price” was thirty bucks, so
the book cost me nine. It’s name?
“American Titan –
Searching For John Wayne.”
Don’t buy it.
Not even for nine dollars.
(Eleven-fifty, Canadian.)
Here’s the thing. I
was reading a history of the War of 1812 because I was curious about the War of
1812. Slogging through the tome’s voluminous ponderousness, however, I realized I was not that curious about the War of 1812.
(I’d have been fully satisfied with an authoritative War of 1812 comic
book.) Abandoning the endless
Congressional debate about “specie”, however, left a sudden opening in my
reading itinerary.
Hence, the nine-dollar John Wayne mistake.
Here’s the thing. (Wait,
didn’t I say that already? Well, here’s another thing.)
There is nobody in show business – or any other endeavor for that matter – whose private
life I am remotely interested in. Why
should I be? Would any of them read a
biography about me?
I have zero curiosity about “The Duke’s” troubled
marriages. What’s that got to do with She Wore A Yellow Ribbon and Red River (my favorite western of all
time)? Add to that the biographer’s
frequently pretentious writing style
“(Howard) Hawks’ films
are energized by the physical movement of its characters through space. While (John) Ford’s are enriched by their
emotional passage through time.”
blended with a “Look at me!” cleverosity
“The Outlaw – a quirky
retelling of Billy The Kid seen through the point of view of Jane Russell’s
chest.”
and I could hear my agonizingly impressed (as in, unwillingly
pressed into service) eyes screaming,
“Throw this book in the garbage!”
But I couldn’t.
Otherwise, it was back to the War of 1812. (Which, in fact, is where I originally
learned about “impressment”, one of the primary reasons America declared war
against England. Not that the British
forced American sailors to read books they would never voluntarily pick up. They “impressed” U.S. citizens into the
British Navy, and America went to war, to a substantial degree, to require them
to cease and desist. Which they did not
agree to in the ultimate peace treaty, making the war – and the book concerning
– a conspicuous waste of time.
Look at that. After
mentioning we went out seven of the nine nights we were away, I write some
seven-hundred-and-fifty words about the times when we didn’t.
I have this idea concerning writerly economy. I call it “Slicing the baloney (sic) thin”
(leaving ample content for subsequent
sandwiches.) The preceding was a
miscarriage of that writing principle.
This was slicing the air beside
the baloney.
Was the foregoing then entirely useless?
Not hardly. (As one
of my favorite cowboys used to say.)
You’ve learned that the War of 1812 was a tedious engagement
(both historically and literarily.) And
you’ve learned to steer clear of “American Titan.” At any
price.
If they tell you, “Just take it” – don’t!
Unless, of course, you savor the seamier stories of cultural
icons who brought delight to our lives but who you can now never look at the
same way again.
I know nobody’s perfect.
But do I really need to know the specifics?
Since you seemed to be limited to 2 books, I have to ask, didn't you take your Kindle with you? Orrrr, you have only 2 unread books on it? Just forgot to pack it!
ReplyDeleteI have other questions, but the answers are really none of my business.