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January 09, 2005

Mr. Vertigo

I first read Paul Auster in High School. At the time Auster published a collection of autobiographical essays in a book called "Hand to Mouth." It was the story of his life. How he had become a writer. It was just the kind of handbook I was looking for. I was 16 or close to it, I was certain I was going to be a writer. If not a writer than an upholsterer, either way I was going to change the world.
Auster's book gave me a means to justify my irrational actions and thoughts. It also made me think it is OK for a writer to stand on the societal water tower and piss all over the place. I missed the elemental emptiness the pee shivers leave you with when your standing in the empty blue sky. Auster wrote the misery in there, but I was too young to absorb it all. I saw the flash but not the burn.
In "Mr. Vertigo" he proves, once again, that he knows how to put together a story. This story is about a kid (Walter) who is in a way kidnapped and tortured until he learns how fly. Walt is a semi-willing participant because he wants to do something great. If he learns how to fly the Euro-trash kidnapper and Walt will get black-rapper rich. Of course the book is set in a time when blacks were still slaves, but thatÂ’s not as important as a good metaphor. It is an adventure novel, a travel narrative and one hell of a strange tale. The best part of the books is that Auster never tells the reader how Walter learned, or is taught, how to fly. Since I haven't learned the secret I can't tell you anything more than what I learned about flying in high school. I know for a fact it has something to do with a handful of pain medication, a Dr. Pepper, two half-eaten cucumbers and fairy dust.

January 04, 2005

The Pat Hobby Stories

F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote these stories in the last two or three years of his life. They were cracked out on Saturday and Sunday afternoons to pay for his daughter's college education. Fitzgerald spent Monday through Friday writing shit for Hollywood. It was shit because that is the way Hollywood has always wanted it.
The Pat Hobby Stories are short, maybe 3,000 words each. And they are published in book form in the same order they orginally appeared in the men's journal. Fitzgerald put them in order. He put the best up front and the crap in the back. Knowing this made the book difficult to finish. I read them in one sitting and I just kept thinking "Fitzgerald was right. They are getting progressively less interesting."
The stories are about a washed-up screenwriter and his adventures in Hollywood. Pat Hobby is a loveable idiot who can't seem to get it together enough to write another script. He spends his days at the studios looking for a break. Turns out Pat Hobby, not unlike Fitzgerald, used up his mojo in his youth. Pat Hobby was the industry's genius until the first "talkies" were made. Orson Welles has nothing on Hobby, except a lot more money, booty and all-around-I-want-to-be-seen-with-that-hot-shot prestige.