
Tuesday, April 23, 1991
5 PM. After his long workday yesterday, Grant was too tired to join us last evening, so he watched the baby while Libby, Lindsay and I went out to Lido Pizza on Victory Boulevard and had whole wheat rigatoni with meatless sauce. It was a pleasant dinner, and Libby and I talked about old friends from Brooklyn and other stuff.
When Yolanda arrived to take care of the baby, Libby and I dropped Lindsay off at school – the parents are all our age, as are the teachers – and left Libby’s old violin for the kids to look at and play with. Living with the Fletchers
Libby and I drove out west via the Ventura Freeway, seeing magnificent mountains and canyons and new developments that looked like those in Florida.
We went south on Las Virgenes to the Pacific Coast Highway at Malibu, where the Pacific meets beautiful beachfront homes and high palisades. (No wonder those mudslides keep
I loved the drive to Santa Monica, where we stopped for breakfast at the Pioneer Boulangerie, a neat place where birds fly free indoors.
From Santa Monica, we went to the Venice fishing pier. There, Libby and I walked along the beach, which is tacky and honkytonk, a look that I of course love.
Then we drove around Marina del Rey, where Dad stays during his sales meetings,
Lindsay and I played in my car and we sat in the tree out front for a while before moving to the backyard, where we played various games of her devising, most of which involved dirt.
Lindsay just came in to tell me we’re going out to dinner in five minutes, so I’ll stop here and get ready.
*
After I managed to get Lindsay to go to Libby and take her nap, I took off on my own and went to downtown Hollywood, where I walked around Sunset, Vine, Hollywood Boulevard and the skeevy neighborhood featuring the Walk of Stars, homeless bums, cheap stores, and various film industry businesses and banks.
Naturally, no Florida law school made the list, but they quoted a University of Florida prof and author who’s in the forefront of reforming the curriculum; I do remember UF allowed lots of electives.
The Times had a feature article on short stories, stressing what I said in my workshop, that the vast majority of American short fiction appears in little magazines and makes no money for writers.
We all went out for dinner at this neat little outdoor taco stand, Henry’s, on a
They both work so hard. In three days I can see how raising two little kids can be exhausting. At home, I watched videotapes of Lindsay (at five months old, she looked exactly like her grandmother Rose Judson) and played with her and the baby.
Although he’s a vegetarian, Grant is overweight, and I worry he’s jeopardizing his health. Nobody in this house eats very nutritiously except maybe the kids. Of course, I’m a bit of a
I called Dad to tell him my flight number, and he said that my bankruptcy discharge notice arrived in today’s mail. It says none of my creditors can try to collect their debts now, so I’m officially out of debt except for my in-abeyance student loans.
I called Wesley and Marla but got a message about a new number, and when I tried that one, Wes said they had company at the moment but asked me to come over tomorrow to their new house in the Hollywood Hills.
What’s also odd is that driving around this last week or so in Los Angeles, I’ve had the feeling that I always somehow knew I’d be here, that I’d actually been to L.A. before and felt comfortable here.
Pumping gas at an Arco station the other day, I thought: I feel more like me here in California. Whatever that means.
Once again, I feel inarticulate, and it’s taking me a long time to write these California diary entries because I keep pausing to muse and reflect. I know this trip turned out better than I ever could have expected, and it has taught me to keep on taking risks.
Wednesday, April 24, 1991
It’s Jack LaLanne’s old house, high up in the Hollywood Hills; it’s like a movie-star house from the 1930s. God, it must have cost a million dollars.
While I knew Wes was a successful screenwriter, I didn’t realize how big the payoffs could be. Naturally, I can’t help comparing myself to him, and I think my anxiety about it caused my vertigo and insomnia last night.
And I suspect I must look like pretty much of a super-failure from Wesley’s vantage
I spotted Wes from the narrow, winding La Presa Drive as I parked the car.
At first he didn’t recognize me; he remarked that I’d gotten so thin and changed so
He introduced me to his kids, Jake, 4½, and Sam, 3, and the inevitable Hispanic maid. And Marla came out on the way to spend more of Wesley’s money (so he said); we kissed and said hi. Both of them still look very young.
There were about 25 workers all over the house, which clearly needs a lot of fixing up and which is getting it. All of the details of remodeling are lost on me, but even
The house was grand but kitschy, and Wes said they were trying to do away with the nouveau riche effects. Hell, I don’t even have the vocabulary to describe this stuff.
The views from the terraces and windows and lawns and pools were breathtaking: on a clear day, Wes said, you can see the Pacific (people are always saying that, I
Anyway, for a couple of hours, we sat out by the pool, where you can actually look down at Hollywood sign.
I had absolutely no idea that Wes and the family were in Fort Lauderdale for four months this winter. He’s the screenwriter for Cape Fear, and he said if only he’d known I lived there, we could have gotten together.
They even filmed scenes, of course, at the building I work in at BCC; I’d known
Actually, I’m glad he didn’t know I was living with my parents; then I’d really seem pathetic.
Of course, Wes said he himself was depressed lately. The very first script he wrote was going into production in San Francisco today, and he’d been taken off the film by a snotty kid director.
I can’t remember the name of the movie, but Wes said Richard Gere and Kim
Wes not only wrote True Believer and Arachnophobia but also fixed up D.O.A. and other films.
The whole problem in the film industry seems to be control, and Wes wants to avoid getting the blame for stuff the director did – the way critics skewered his screenwriter friend
Let me just freewrite here. Wesley was hard to read. Obviously he likes me and wanted me to hook up with him as an old friend, but I have no inkling of the kind of world he moves in, and I have a horror of anyone thinking that I’d want something from a successful friend.
I’ve never been interested in writing for Hollywood, though of course it’s very glamorous to be interrupted – as we were by the pool – by a phone call from Marty Scorsese. I couldn’t really tell if Wes was trying to impress me or to do the opposite, be down to earth.
And, to be honest, I have no idea if his final “See you soon” meant just that or “Don’t ever call me again.”
Stuff I can make use of: As we looked at the view, Wes remarked that it was a good incentive to keep him from divorcing Marla,
He said that Jake, the older boy, is very attached to Marla and totally Oedipal.
While I was there, Jake hurt himself and started crying and saying, “I want my mommy.”
Trying to help, Wes went over to him and asked, “What’s wrong with Daddy?”
Jake screamed at him, “Go away, you stupid old man!” and Wes just stood there, stunned.
Howard told Wes to forget about New York book publishing, where people are always thinking up reasons to turn you down, and to come out to Hollywood, where they need people who can tell a story even just reasonably well.
So Wes and Marla came out here to stay with Howard and they saw Jack LaLanne’s house on sale and loved it. Three houses and several years later, they bought it
Wes also told me that his father retired but got bored and is now touting some electronic keyboard artist I think Lou is managing.
When I mentioned to Wes that the former mayor of Gainesville told me he liked Wes’s work and that the guy wanted to be a screenwriter, he said, “Don’t give him my number.” I had hoped Wes would know me better and know I’d never think of
Naturally, despite what I told Tom, I never intended to show Wes Tom’s little screenplay and at this point I don’t think I’ll tell any other people that I even know Wesley Strick.
––Lindsay just came in to play with me, and I’ve got to pack and get ready for dinner.
*
5:30 PM. Well, it turns out we’re not going out to dinner but eating here at home, which is fine with me, as I slept only four hours last night because I was so dizzy. (I just realized I never took my Triavil.)
Rachel, the Israeli girl across the street who wants to be a writer and who’s read some of my stories, came over to say hello.
We talked about my writing and her writing, and when she said goodbye, she added, “Good luck with. . .” and I jokingly finished, “. . . my pathetic career.”
And so my little trip to California comes to a close. What with rush hour traffic tomorrow and the car rental return, I have to be out of the house by 5:30 AM if I’m
If I can get five hours of good sleep, I’ll be happy. Bonine and Drixoral seem to have alleviated my worst vertigo.
Hey, look: I’m a success just because I have great friends and have been able to make this trip to be with them. It’s really been an interesting experience for me.
Whether it’s in Tallahassee or Gainesville, now I think I can handle going to law school on my own. I know I’ve got a unique life and a unique perspective.
Friday, April 26, 1991
5 PM. I really did have jet lag, and I’m still exhausted right now. I have twenty CLAST essays to grade for the Saturday class at South Campus tomorrow, and I’ll either grade them early in the morning or during the night if I have insomnia.
Today I didn’t do much more than chat with my students at Central Campus. Having been in California, I feel even less a part of Broward Community College than I did before, and that wasn’t much.
I have made a big decision.
It may not be such a good idea, considering the jet lag, but I’m going to attend the
Gainesville is a much older, more competitive, and better law school: the best in the state. My one English 102 student who wants to be a lawyer was really impressed I got into UF because he knows how many applicants they reject.
Gainesville probably isn’t as nice as Tallahassee, but it’s closer to transportation: it’s at least an hour or two closer to South Florida by car, and it’s just a couple of hours from Orlando, Jacksonville and Tampa. Compared to Tally, it’s more Florida-like, less Southern.
And I xeroxed my final discharge from bankruptcy and applied for a deferment on my MHT student loan.
Dad and I cleaned out the warehouse, throwing out lots of cartons of With Hitler in New York and keeping a dozen cartons in the new, smaller warehouse space.
I bought a videocassette player and exercised. By the way, it turned out I didn’t gain any weight on my trip.
Aunt Sydelle called Dad early today and wanted to come here because Will beat her up. He’s a louse and a compulsive gambler.
He’d said that she looked like an old hag, and Sydelle retorted, “Oh, your first wife,
Will went bananas and started hitting her. He threw the photo of Grandpa Nat and Grandma Sylvia out the window because, he said, he hates them for creating Aunt Sydelle.
Sydelle wanted to come here, which put Mom in a panic, but of course Sydelle later ended up forgiving Will. The members of my family are sick, sick, sick.
Saturday, April 27, 1991
9 PM. It will be nice to have the option of sleeping in tomorrow morning. Actually, I have to be up early for morning classes only on Monday and Wednesday and then
These ten days in Florida between Los Angeles and New York City are an odd time and a busy time. I graded all the Saturday papers last night or this morning. Although it’s been over 90° every day since I’ve been back, we had no air conditioning at South Campus today.
I gave my students the option of taking a final (writing an essay) either this week or
On Monday morning I’ll get the 8 AM class’s research papers, which should be abominable, and at noon I’ll give the option of an English 102 final to the students who don’t want to come in for the scheduled exam from 12:20-2:20 PM on Friday.
Tuesday night I’ll have my final American Lit class and collect their take-home
I know I’m grading too leniently, but I don’t care; I won’t be back at BCC – even if I don’t quite believe that yet.
This afternoon I worked out and read newspapers and magazines and left a birthday message for Teresa. I also called Tom, who’d written that he sold an option to Head in a Box. There’s new interest in the novel now, and if the book is published, Tom will get more money for the script, but it’s all Hollywood dickering
I’ve applied to the Writers’ Film Project, but of course I don’t expect to get a fellowship. If I did, however, I’d take it – because it would mean getting $16,000 and living in L.A. without working, so I’d feel it was fate.
At this point, that’s the only thing that would keep me from going to UF law school.
Tom is in a bad way emotionally because he’s being forced to choose between Debra and Jessica.
Debra, unhappy in grad school at Princeton yet academically ambitious, has offered to quit her $12,000 fellowship and come home if Tom will stop seeing Jessica.
For the moment Tom has put both of them on hold and is very conflicted.
I’m not sure Tom believes I can go to law school – but I’m certain I can and will.
Monday, April 29, 1991
6 PM. Again, I slept heavily. At BCC this morning, I graded the few English 101 papers I hadn’t gotten to and I printed out my finals and letters to FSU (telling
I felt sleepy, but I didn’t have much to do today except grade papers; however, that’s a tiring business. Most of my 8 AM English 101 class handed in their research papers, and I’ll try to have them done by their final on Wednesday.
All but a few of the noon English 102 class took their final today – I let them collaborate, and the essay questions got them to use creativity – so I won’t have to
The noon class was a nice group, and I’ll miss them. I probably won’t grade anyone lower than a B, which is my parting gift to BCC students. On the other hand, I’ll be hard-pressed to hand out as many as two A’s in the 8 AM class.
I brought copies of Hitler to school and autographed books for Phyllis, Eleanor and Gordon. Later in the day, after I picked up my boarding pass for next week’s flight to New York on Delta, I went to the Sunrise and Lauderhill branch libraries and deposited copies of my books there.
I remember my pleasant daily routines in the first apartment I had in South Florida and how, just about nine years ago, Sean would come over nearly every day. We were so close then.
It’s odd that I’m going to live in Gainesville, where Sean moved when he left South Florida. I have the feeling I’m going to get involved with someone up there.
Donahue finally aired Alice and Peter’s reappearance, along with other couples from previous shows. By now, Alice and Peter appear as comfortable on TV as they do with each other, and watching the show, I felt proud that I’m their friend.
I exercised at 3:30 PM and then read the papers: I still don’t see signs of an
Elihu sent a revised list of the group of our friends from LaGuardia Hall and wrote that he’s got the new Brooklyn College Alumni Directory; I’ll call Elihu when I get to New York.
It will be odd telling some friends I’m going to law school, and I expect an especially hard time from attorneys like Mikey and Scott.
A week from now I’ll be in New York, and a week ago I was in Los Angeles. I do like
Yesterday I read that some babies seem to be born with predispositions against dealing effectively with novelty. Even if my problem is genetic as well as psychological, I still know I can overcome it.
Since seeing Wesley last week, I’ve had to think a great deal about my own success or lack of success. It hurts that I’ve never made money or had my own family, but on the other hand, I feel that, considering where I started out, I’ve done very well.
Well, tomorrow April ends. This year, it was for me the kindest and not the cruelest month. Yes, I was lucky, but I also helped to engineer my own luck.
God, I must seem nauseatingly self-congratulatory – but then, self-castigation and self-hatred are even more nauseating.
Tuesday, April 30, 1991
We ended our look at twentieth century American literature by comparing Hemingway (“The Snows of Kilimanjaro”) and Hurston (two chapters of Their Eyes Were Watching God): the white male writer who’s the 800-pound gorilla in the literary jungle, and a black female writer who did her best work when she had no audience and who died unknown and poor. At least Hemingway was a rich and famous suicide.
I love all the people who ask me why I’m going to be a lawyer when there are so many lawyers: “Won’t the competition be too tough for you?”
Baby, you should know how few people get to even where I’ve gotten as a fiction writer, with my books published and reviewed in decent places. The odds against that are a lot worse than trying to get a partner’s slot at Dewey Ballantine or Sullivan & Cromwell.
Wes has had five screenplays become films, but he couldn’t sell any of his books of fiction. And I don’t think 600 attorneys apply for a job that pays $23,000, as I did – and was a finalist for – at Rockland Community College.
If only I’d known, I would have applied to law school decades ago, when I first came to Florida. Sometimes I think getting those 1981 jobs at BCC were bad luck, not good luck.
And Bill should get the job, because he’s a fine teacher and BCC needs black faculty. Unfortunately, Adrienne is in the same position she was a year ago, with her yearlong temporary full-time position ending. At least she’s got summer work; I advised her to apply for unemployment the day after the summer term ends.
Today the Fed cut the discount rate to 5½%. The economy is bad.
