By Fred Owens
I
mailed a check to the new editor. Then I will send her several
manuscripts, short ones and long ones. She will read what I send her and
then we will have a discussion as to their worth and ultimate
destiny....... this could be fun..... One manuscript is a memoir of
30,000 words called the Falcon Journal. I wrote this in 2005 in two
weeks at a campsite in Falcon State Park, located in Starr County,
Texas, on the banks of the Rio Grande River.... My girlfriend Laurie
read the Falcon Journal and said she liked it a lot........ Another
manuscript is a novel of 41,000 words called Push the Bus which I wrote
in 2007 but did not complete until last year. The novel takes place in
the same campground where I wrote the Falcon Journal, so we have a
connection -- a short novel and a short memoir, both set on the banks of
the Rio Grande River in Texas.
Mabel,
the old woman who lives across the street, likes to read every thing I
send her. I print out a manuscript and walk across the street and give
it to her and she reads it. She likes me, but she doesn't like me that
much, so her opinion has a degree of detachment..... Well she liked Push
the Bus quite a bit and she told me so two times. I had been concerned
that she would be offended by the salty language. There is one character
in the novel who is named Tucson and he cusses a blue streak from
morning until night. You get used to it after a while.
Mabel grew up on a ranch on Montana and she said she had heard that kind of language before, so it was no account to her.
Talking with Stuart Welch, former owner of the Rexville Store near LaConner
Stuart
Welch, my good friend, is an expert on everything. The words "I don't
know" never pass his lips. If I ask him a question, he will have a ready
answer and he is often right. We discussed the upcoming World Series.
In a previous conversation, more than one month ago, Stuart stated that
the World Series would be between the Houston Astros and the Los Angeles
Dodgers. "Stuart, you were right about that!"
Stuart
and I discussed the World Series because it is "normal." Normal is
getting to be important because the world is getting very weird -- fires
and hurricanes and the fury of potential wars. The weirdest thing of
all is that man in the White House. You can say a lot of things about
Donald Trump, but nobody thinks he's normal.
I
miss normal. I need normal. I'm a Democrat but I wish Dwight Eisenhower
was President. He wasn't the greatest President of all time, but he was
normal and he had a good smile.
Some
of the world is still normal, like the Santa Barbara Kiwanis Club. The
Santa Barbara Kiwanis Club has been meeting every week for lunch since
1922. It used to be all men, now it's about half women. The club has
evolved over the years, but it is quite normal. I belong to the club and
all the members are more normal than me and I like that.
And
my girlfriend Laurie is having new vinyl windows installed in her home.
Six new windows and two sliding doors. Getting the whole house done.
Using a local contractor. Installing new vinyl windows is a good thing
and very normal.
So
maybe the world isn't going crazy, although Ireland got struck by a
hurricane and the woods are on fire in Santa Rosa in northern
California....... Santa Barbara is safe so far, and has been spared the
wildfires, but it is bad luck to even say that, so erase that thought.
You
can drive only two miles from Laurie's house and see the charred black
scars on the old palm trees where the Painted Cave wildfire leapt the
freeway in the high winds and destroyed 427 buildings. That was in 1990,
but you don't forget something like that.
And we are not lucky in Santa Barbara because the fire could strike anytime and everywhere you look it is dry and combustible.
Unfortunately,
wild fires in October are normal, although many people would dispute
that and declare a connection with increased drought as a result of
climate change. I'm not getting into that discussion.
To repeat:
The World Series is normal.
The Santa Barbara Kiwanis Club is normal.
Wildfires in October in California are normal.
Donald Trump is not normal. Definitely not normal.
Blowing Hot and Cold
I'm
blowing hot and cold on this manuscript. It's a memoir I wrote in 2005
called the Falcon Journal, because I wrote it at Falcon Dam on the Rio
Grande River in South Texas. I had a winter camp site right on the banks
of the river. I could see Mexico on the other side of the water. I
could see the twinkling lights of the little village in Mexico.
I
wrote about the birds, because South Texas is a big winter attraction
for birdwatching folk. The tropical birds come this far north. The
northern birds come this far south. There are more species of birds in
South Texas than any other place in the country, and the birds
congregate along the banks of the river.
I
didn't even have binoculars or a guide book. I just liked camping there
under the acacia tree. I left out crackers for the road runners.
I
wrote the journal -- about my second grade teacher, Sister Virgina. I
had a crush on her. I wrote about the Roman philosopher Marcus Aurelius.
I wrote about my girl friend Gail Murphy and the trip we took to Mexico
in 1970.
The
journal is spare and strong and rooted in a place -- Falcon Dam -- that
made me whole. That's why Laurie and Mabel liked reading it.
I
said I was blowing hot and cold on this manuscript while I am reviewing
it. I always feel that way. Why would anybody want to read it? I ask
myself that question.
I prefer the living room
I
sit on the couch in the living room with my laptop. I keep it plugged
in because my battery is iffy. I set the laptop down on the coffee
table when I need to stand up and do something.The coffee table was
custom made by Laurie's grandfather, made from maple or ash -- she's not
sure about that -- but it is a very sturdy coffee table and not
cluttered with magazines and old fishing reels and ceramic what-nots. A
very uncluttered coffee table, I would say. A very tranquil, un-busy
coffee table.
I
have imagined writing in a proper writer's study, with a desk and a
lamp and a bookshelf lined with treasured volumes. A window to look out
of, or an aquarium. A radio. An easy chair. A door that closes and shuts
out the world so that I might focus on my writing.
But
the truth is that I don't really like to work in a quiet, austere
environment. I prefer the living room, which has a front door, so I can
leave. I prefer the living room because my three housemates are coming
and going and I might say hello and have a brief chat. I prefer the
living room because it has the TV and the radio. And it's near the
kitchen where there is food and coffee.
I
like the sound of traffic, so I keep the front door open. I can hear
the crows cawing this time of year, they are busy feeding on the pecan
tree in the back yard.
In short I prefer working in a sea of distractions. I had ADD before it was cool. I have the attention span of a gnat in heat.
thank you for reading this,
Fred
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