‘When William T. Vollmann was 22 years old, he decided that he would write a book about the plight of the Afghan people, who were then engaged in battle against the Soviets. He planned to travel to Pakistan and document the misery of Afghan refugees, then sneak across the border and photograph the courageous deeds of the mujahideen struggling to repel the invaders. In addition to the written account of his journey, he would produce a slide show and present it at fundraising events back home in California: Vollmann’s neighbors would be so affected by the wretchedness of his subjects and the righteousness of their cause that they would open up their check books right then and there (and later place calls to their local representatives). Before leaving, Vollmann wrote former U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who had been one of the primary architects of the Vietnam War, for advice.
‘“How might I best, in your opinion, increase our understanding and sympathy for people of Asia and the Third World in general?” he asked. “What things will I see in Pakistan (and along the Afghanistan border), the significance of which I as an American might miss?” less than a week later, McNamara wrote a terse response on the same page Vollmann had sent him, and mailed it back to the would-be author. “Show how much the peoples of Asia are doing to help themselves,” McNamara said, and therefore “how much they deserve and will benefit from the small amounts of assistance we send to them.”
‘And so Vollmann set out for Peshawar, where he took photographs and conducted interviews, seeking information that could determine the most deserving candidates for American aid. After much wrangling, he foisted himself upon a group of mujahideen heading for the front lines, and though he came down with dysentery and had to be dragged and carried through the Hindu Kush mountains, he eventually tasted battle. In that virginal experience of combat – the commencement of a decades-long obsession with the ways in which we kill each other – Vollmann finally recognized the yawning, insuperable gap between these Muslim soldiers and himself. “They were fighting and I was not,” he writes in An Afghanistan Picture Show: Or, How I Saved the World, which was published ten years after his journey. “They were accomplishing the purpose of their lives in those endless night moments of happiness near death.”
‘What did Vollmann accomplish in Afghanistan? And in the years since – during which he has written nine novels, three short-story collections, and five works of nonfiction (including Rising Up and Rising Down, a 3,500-page treatise on violence published in 2003) – what has Vollmann seen that the less intrepid, less reckless, and less painstakingly observant among us might have otherwise missed? Rather than returning home with a slide show for muhajideen sympathizers, Vollmann brought with him a clear sense of his own ignorance. The presumption that he could go to a place, gain some understanding of the people there, and represent them in such a way as to provoke sympathy for them among perfect strangers, had proved ridiculous. In An Afghanistan Picture Show, he writes of beholding a photograph he took of a woman he interviewed in an Afghan refugee camp, and remarks on his failure: “I can’t forget her, but she isn’t alive.”
‘The mark of that experience has animated Vollmann’s writing ever since, whether in his sprawling novels, epic works of nonfiction, or relatively reined-in articles for magazines like Harper’s, The New Yorker, Spin, Playboy, and Esquire. He has chased the shadow of his failure across thousands of pages and scores of countries, from San Francisco whorehouses (his haunt of choice) to Arctic Inuk villages to Calexico drug dens to Kazakh oil towns to Yemeni fishing villages. He has become renowned for doing what writers tend not, or ought not, to do: communing with the wretched of the earth, plying them with questions, riding the rails with them, getting drunk with them, shooting guns with them, smoking crack with them, having sex with them, and oftentimes paying them for their time. Vollmann lurks insistently, whether asking alcoholic mothers in the shantytowns of Bangkok why they are poor, as he does in Poor People (2007), or nearly freezing to death in order to replicate the experience of doomed Arctic explorer Sir John Franklin, as he does in his novel The Rifles (1994). Through all this, Vollmann has not just laid bare the relationship between a writer and his subjects, but also made an art of unsettling, perverting – and occasionally perfecting – that bond.
‘The risks Vollmann has taken – both in life and literature – in order to do so have been duly rewarded: he received a national Book Award in 2005 for his novel Europe Central, and was named a finalist for the national Book Critics Circle Award, among other accolades; and before he had entered middle age (he’s now 50), he was often hailed as the most “promising” young writer in the U.S. But these risks are at times maddening, their logic elusive, their contribution to the story at hand unclear. There are baroque bursts of prose that go on for pages, great accumulations of data, narratives that meander to the point of dissolution. There are the gut- wrenching, cringe-inducing scenes of Vollmann – who, despite his affinity for handguns, battlefields, and the Arctic wilderness, maintains the persona of an overly eager, sometimes heedless, man-child – abducting a juvenile sex-slave from her Thai pimps, or taking fire in the streets of Mogadishu. The characters in his novels are almost always fashioned from historical personages or people he has met in his travels, and he approaches them with the same weird combination of attention and abandon. While writing The Rifles, one of three completed volumes in his “Seven Dreams” septet – a rewriting of the history of north American colonial encounters and their legacy – Vollmann frequented an Inuk village where he befriended a destitute alcoholic girl named Reepah, who appears as one of the story’s main characters (and is reconfigured as an Inuk goddess over the course of the novel). In the book, Vollmann himself takes on the moniker William the Blind, whose travels among the Inuit mirror those of Franklin and his party. In order to better understand Franklin’s misguided 1845 effort to find the Northwest Passage, Vollmann moved to the magnetic North Pole for two weeks. There he inhabited a forsaken weather station, hoping to “learn something about loneliness and fear.” He succeeded: The cold turned the fur fringe of his hood into Brillo, splintered the plastic of his face mask, rendered his sleeping bag useless. He began to hallucinate from lack of sleep, and eventually incinerated his sleeping bag while trying to dry it. Unlike Franklin, Vollmann was saved by a rescue plane before he died. Similarly perilous episodes populate Rising Up and Rising Down, including an incident in Bosnia when a land mine exploded under his car, killing his two companions. “I’m … trying to come up with some sort of moral calculus for [violence],” he explained pithily when the book – the culmination of 20 years of heavy reading and personal endangerment – was in its infancy. “The best way to do that is to have some case studies of wars. So I want to keep seeing them.” — Alexander Provan
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Further
The Vollmann Club
William T. Vollmann, The Art of Fiction No. 163
William Vollmann @ goodreads
William T. Vollmann: The Self Images of a Cross-Dresser
William Vollman interviewed @ Bookslut
THE LUSH LIFE OF WILLIAM T. VOLLMANN
The Sympathetic Guide to William T. Vollmann
[Report] | Life as a Terrorist, by William T. Vollmann
A MODEST IMPERIALIST: William T. Vollmann
20 years after Unabomber’s arrest, William Vollmann case reminds us how mystified FBI was
William T. Vollmann: The dispassionate chronicler
Podcast: The Adventurous Life of William T. Vollmann, Writer
William T. Vollmann on Writing Poverty
Writer Without Borders (Extended)
Why You Should Know Who William T. Vollmann Is, and Go Out and Read Him Immediately
William T. Vollmann is a man of many words
Paul Slovak on the Paradoxical Task of Editing William T. Vollmann
Buy ‘The Rainbow Stories’
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Extras
William Vollmann Reads From His Work in 2005
The Best Way to Smoke Crack, Artist Book by William T. Vollmann
Bernard Radfar & William T. Vollmann
Susan Meiselas & William T. Vollmann
032c Issue #19: William T. Vollmann
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Interview
from The Review of Contemporary Fiction
Larry McCaffrey: You Bright and Risen Angels is a long, difficult, obsessive work. Were you aware when you were writing it that it was going to be difficult for this book to attract a large audience? In other words, is audience much of a consideration for you when you’re starting out with something, or do you just write the book you feel compelled to write?
William Vollmann: I just make the best book that I can and try to not worry about audience or if it will sell. The odds are against you, so why abuse your talent for the sake of a chimera? The only real pleasure for me in writing comes from pleasing myself. What readers think is interesting and illuminating (and it may even be correct), but that is nothing compared to the excitement of seeing a world develop. Besides, even though I like most individuals I meet, I have a pretty low opinion of people in general. So if I were to write for people in general, I would have to drastically lower my estimation of the intelligence of my reader. Rather than doing that, I write the way it seems the book has to appear. I don’t think that’s egotistic. There are often things I would like to include in my books—things about me personally and other materials—that I feel I have to leave out because they aren’t relevant to the book. I’m fairly ruthless along those lines, because I try to let nothing come in the way of what’s best for the book. If that means that the book won’t sell or that a publisher won’t buy it, then that’s my problem. I’ll suffer for that, but I won’t let the book suffer for it.
LM: Obviously there are a lot of differences between The Rainbow Stories and You Bright and Risen Angels, not so much thematically but in the more straightforward manner of exposition you use in The Rainbow Stories. Was that a conscious shift?
WV: Somewhat so. In The Rainbow Stories I was aware of not wanting to use pyrotechnics when they weren’t appropriate, whereas in Angels, particularly in the first half, pyrotechnics was the whole purpose of the book. I wrote Angels to enjoy myself by letting myself go to invent whatever I could come up with. That pyrotechnic or improvisational approach created the book’s own structure, in effect—although, of course, once I let things loose, I would then go back and try and impose some kind of a story structure on it. But with Rainbow most of the time I was working at something which had a predefined structure, not just something that was creating its own form. For instance, since I was working from a structure of fact with the documentary pieces (which for some reason the reviews have generally focused on) then I wanted to present the fact in a certain way; and I couldn’t take such liberties as to obscure the fact. Even the non documentary stories were also more focused and limited simply because they were stories. The reason I wanted to write The Rainbow Stories after Angels was partly a matter of my wanting to create these discrete artifacts as opposed to something like Angels, which used a sort of “writing by-the-yard” approach and could easily have been ten thousand pages longer.
LM: In all of your books so far you transport readers fluidly from different worlds, times, and reality zones. It’s almost as if you want readers to recognize that their own worlds are more open-ended and more fluid, temporally and spatially, than they realize—that they’re not just sealed off.
WV: People would be better off if they realized that their own particular world is not privileged. Everyone’s world is no more and no less important than everyone else’s. To have as many worlds as possible that are invested with interest or meaning is a way of making that point. I’ve gradually begun to see that I can use even my footnotes and glossaries and other sorts of materials to create some of this sense.
LM: This idea of forcing people to recognize that their worlds aren’t the only ones—and of creating contexts that bring together different perspectives and world views—seems like one of the underlying impulses behind The Rainbow Stories. That is, nearly all the stories deal with people who have been radically marginalized in one way or another (prostitutes, homeless alcoholics, murderers, underground guerilla artists like Mark Pauline and the Survival Research Lab, and so on).
WV: In The Rainbow Stories I wanted to create a context so that people in these different worlds could see each other. I originally had more hope about that than I do today. Now the most I would hope is that people reading the stories would have a moment of thinking, “Oh, they’re people too, and this is kind of nice.” I’d hoped originally that somehow maybe if I described them well enough, then a few people would say, “Oh, they’re people and maybe I should even talk to them.” But I don’t really have that belief or hope anymore that any work of literature can do that.
LM: No matter how well it was written?
WV: No.
LM: What changed your mind?
WV: Getting a bit more experienced. Seeing the way people treat each other. Younger people like to hope that maybe somehow they can change the world—and not just change it in the sense of moving it from one random state to another (which is what is always going to happen), but somehow to make the world better. But at a certain point you see more clearly that the world is obviously no better now than it ever was. My current thinking is that literature isn’t enough to bring people together to produce real understanding. Some sort of action is required, but right now I don’t know what that action might be or how it would work. In fact, I’m pretty sure that it’ll never be any better than it is now. Given that, all anyone can ever hope to do is either change a few specific things in a few specific ways (which will probably change again after you finish tinkering with them), or else help yourself and other people accept the fundamental viciousness and inertia of things. Religion does that, for example. Literature can too.
LM: It’s a little like psychotherapy—sometimes it isn’t able to help you change the way you are, but it helps you accept the way you are or at least know yourself, so you don’t feel so bad about it.
WV: And that’s all you can ask really. Being able to change yourself isn’t necessarily going to make you happy. You might be less happy if you could change, who knows? The people in The Ice-Shirt aren’t necessarily happier when they have the power to change from human to animal. King Ingjald wants to be manly so they give him the wolf’s heart to eat; even though that experience changes him, he ends up being this terrible, horrible person. He probably would have been better off if he’d just said, “Well, nothing I can do will ever make me be manly—but that’s all right.”
LM: Even if literature can’t really change the situations you’re describing, or even produce a deep understanding between people, isn’t there some real value in simply opening a window on these other worlds?
WV: If literature is valuable in and of itself (which is something I’m not sure of) then opening windows is one of the most valuable things that it can do.
LM: But of course, these aren’t just any worlds you’ve chosen to open windows onto—most of these realms are going to strike your readers as being particularly grotesque, violent, disturbing. Do you think there’s something particularly useful about confronting readers with things that aren’t just unfamiliar to them but which will likely seem ugly or repellant?
WV: Absolutely. Because in doing that, you’re raising the stakes. Just getting people to accept anything that’s different without being disturbed is a step forward. But it’s a far braver step to accept the presence of dignity and beauty and most of all likeness or kinship in something that is ugly. If more people could do that the world would be a better place.
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Book
William T. Vollmann The Rainbow Stories
Penguin Books
‘From a writer who has won comparison with Thomas Pynchon and William S. Burroughs comes thirteen unnerving and often breathtaking stories populated by punks and angels, skinheads and religious assassins, streetwalkers and fetishists–people who live outside the law and and the clear light of the every day. Set in landscapes as diverse as ancient Babylon, India, and the seamy underbelly of San Francisco, these daring and innovative tales are laced with Vollman’s fertile imagination. The Rainbow Stories ushers us into a world that bears an awful yet hypnotic resemblance to that of our deepest nightmares, confirming Vollman’s reputation as a dark visionary of contemporary fiction.’ — Penguin Books
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Excerpt
Saint Catherine of Siena
They say she was broken on spiked wheels, and then, since she remained miraculously alive, they decapitated her with an axe. When I see her in the paintings, studying at her Book of Devotions with such sweet concentration, it is hard for me to understand why anybody would have wanted to interrupt her. Of course I cannot ask her; nor can I ask her persecutors, since they died in the desert long ago and thorns have grown up on their graves. Therefore I have chosen to record the tale of Catherine O’Day, who is also a martyr; and if I fail to achieve my purpose may God have mercy upon my soul.
Saint Catherine of San Diego
Catherine had violet hair. The sun wanted to tell Catherine something golden, but since she had such violet hair she could not hear any other color even in the might of summer when dark green tree-shadows cooled the emerald grass, and other women wore white summer dresses because they knew the meaning of summer which even the dogs knew in their tongue-lolling ambles and waggy-tailed sprints which made music with the clinking of their identification tags like ice in cocktail glasses, and everyone else under the sun was caught in summer immensities which made their morning shadows strong and faithful as the shadows ran at their heels and swerved through enormous angles unimpeded by houses or walls or the scorching gleam of silver mica stars in the sidewalks, because summertime is above all immunity from pain. Summer was in the Berkeley T-shirts with clouds and colored music-notes on them, and it was in the tanned milky-smooth faces of the lovers skipping down the sidewalk hand in hand, and summer could be perceived (in its deficient mode of Being)2 in the prances of the gawky freckled girls who wore shorts and had big round glasses that made them resemble summer owls trying to be happy and forgetting the cruel needs of moonlit nights when they had to swoop down onto desperate mice and bear them high and devour them in their horrible beaks while watching them with their big expressionless eyes, which were painted on their feather-masked faces out of the same evil trickery that makes cosmic rays shoot across the sun’s face like the bars of a visor so that summer is dimmed and confused by entities which want to keep the sun’s true nature hidden—except to the Elect, which included Catherine, and that was why the sun was trying to reach out to her, but Catherine would have none of it because she was not a summer person. Summer people did not know that pretty soon they would turn their backs on everything that they now thought was so important. It was not that they were hypocritical; it was simply that someday summer would be over. Meanwhile the new Berkeley students streamed across the concrete, offering each other string cheese, turning their class schedules round and round in their hands, saying “Okay okay okay,” and the freshman boys told the freshman girls how primordially they needed them at their parties, and the freshmen girls said they would see what they could do, and Asian girls sat cliquishly on the steps, tapping the toes of their silver shoes, and Catherine in San Diego lay on the bed reading Heidegger as she had been doing for almost seven years.
Her Earthly Unearthliness
Much of her life, Catherine had been reading, sometimes taking her book to visit me in Heaven where it is cold and foggy and she must lie on the couch wrapped in a thick Canadian-Indian sweater and a reindeer skin. Sometimes she rested her temple against two fingers and stared straight ahead at her book or manuscript with the same strenuous fixation of gaze as a competition shooter; in truth her thought traveled like bullets along the violet beams of her gaze, exploding every concept she met into a plasma of minute distinctions, and her silky hair seemed to be three different colors of violet. The strands of Catherine’s violet hair lived together in beautiful braids or beautiful tangles, as Catherine dictated, and they visited each other when the wind blew; and although her lips were pinkly lovely, like the customary pink-streaked rose-petals to which so many other describers of lips have rightly resorted, her hair was even holier than her lips, being violet, since violet light will cause potassium metal to fling its electrons out in worshipful offerings, which no amount of red light can ever do. (Violet has the highest frequency in the visible spectrum.) Catherine’s hair was a violet meadow that laughed at the rigid violet bars of mercury’s and cadmium’s emission spectra; in this violet place Catherine’s spirit waved like a searing wind which made hearts ache. Her hair was almost translucent in the sunlight. It was persistent and inescapable.
The Boundaries of the Catherine-Horizon
It is known that holiness is localized. Thus, a weaker ectoplasmic field is reported to exist on automated ranches, whose green alfalfa-beds are enlightened only by the random rainbow dews of sprinklers, than in desert ghost towns where tall thin phantoms hoot in chimneys like apes of justice, laboriously attempting to imitate their mentors and masters, the summer owls of whom I have already spoken, and although they scarcely possess the resonance of flesh, which would be of value to them in achieving their dark-livered endeavors (actually they do not have livers either), their reedy efforts are indulgently applauded by the owls in feathery wing-beats; thus encouraged, fat ghosts now roll tumbleweeds back and forth on Main Street with translucent smiles of vacuous delight; if the owls are amused then they will clap their claws together in mid-air with the savage elegance of clashing antlers, in the process, perhaps, letting slip some squeaking dying rodent-ball whose bloody dews the ghosts can inhale, but since this happens no more than every hundred years, if at all, it is fortunate for these freeze-dried souls that they have no tibial collateral ligaments to shrink or spasm, and can therefore flex their shimmering knees all night in the pursuit of their summer sport, vainly hoping to incite the owls’ beaked praise. The truth is that they cannot propel a real thing a single inch, nor could ten thousand ghosts united (be happy that you are not yet a ghost!); it is only wind that blows the tumbleweeds about, whistling through their weed-bones while the stagnant ghosts swirl in the night-dust behind, indefatigably pretending to push them, not only to propitiate the owls, but also to keep from considering themselves even more superannuated than they already do when, knowing the outcome and hence snarling in such despair that they expose their clacking teeth, which resemble those icicle-like fangs of the deep sea-fishes, these revenants lay their heads upon each other’s breasts and listen for a heartbeat, as is customary at the termination of a deathbed scene; if even one soul were to have within his chest the pulpy mechanism which emits those dull and bloody thuds, they would be soothed, just as a puppy taken from his mother will stop whimpering when a loudly ticking clock is placed against his belly; but of course the ghosts hear nothing and furiously rake each other’s non-existent chests with their non-existent fingernails, and then, afraid of the owls, return with increased anxiety to their delusional project of the tumbleweeds; meanwhile, more mathematically-minded sprites play “Musical Chairs” between the tombstones, trying once and for all to solve the problem which eluded Leibniz: how do you put ten bodies in nine graves while adhering to that monodist doctrine of one body, one grave?—for they want privacy when they rest their cool cheeks against the cool cheek of the earth; and meanwhile young ghosts creak doors beautifully, ingeniously, as they are expected to do. Thus every spirit does its part—But turn your back and walk over the dunes for two dozen steps, and the night is depopulated.
So the holy presence of Catherine could be felt only from Tijuana, half an hour south of her, to Mount Shasta, 13 hours north of her. This point having been clarified like ectoplasmic butter, we will now enter the Catherine-horizon and begin the story.
A State of Grace
I am the Holy Ghost. As I descended from Heaven, I presently reached that violet-black sea of storm-tossed mortality, and at the bottom of the ocean was a little blue bubble, and I shrank my form into a discrete particularity in order to make myself available to the people there on a one-to-one basis, believing as I did in the religion of good manners, the trajectories of which are usually as carelessly plotted as those of champagne corks. As I continued to fall, the ontic world loomed bigger and bigger. It sparkled with cities and airplanes and fireflies. Presently it took up my entire field of view, and continued to enlarge, the horizon becoming less and less curved until at last it was the standard Being-horizon in its average every-nightness that we experience in our freeway relatedness, speeding southward toward Catherine in San Diego (or rather, to be more concrete, Solana Beach); and the smoggy moon got bigger and bigger every hour until it was like a beautiful yellow ball of super-processed glow-in-the-dark cheese. The air pollution smelled like coconut macaroons. The following morning, continuing south through Los Angeles, Long Beach, Seal Beach, Leisure World and other points upon this continuum, I found that the smell was like smoke, rusty metal, asphalt, and rotten eggs, in that order. This part of southern California was defined by its four-lane gas stations, its speeding blondes, and above all by its grey-white sky through which the desert mountains were hardly visible. Once I completed my journey through those low sea-passes, Catherine was attained.
However
Half an hour south of Catherine, in Tijuana, Beelzebub (whom we will see again) was buying a stiletto.—“How much?” he said.—“Twelve dollars.” said the man gently.—“How about ten?” said Beelzebub.—The man spread his hands sadly. “Okay,” he said. “I wrap it up for you.”
My Materialization
“I actually have this peculiar feeling that something in the air is trying to talk to me,” Catherine said.
“I’ve never been afraid of spirits, but I know that potentially you can be,” said her sister Stephanie. “For American Indians, fear’s a big thing. But one finds that the spirits are usually very strong and guiding.”
“Well, let me see,” Catherine said, hiding her mouth behind her hair.
“What comes to mind is that I’m very skittish about spirits. Extremely.”
“In the Ghost Dance religion it’s almost universal that people resist,” explained Stephanie. “They don’t want to go in to where the spirit takes them. It’s often the Elders that convince them to open themselves. The skepticism and resistance are really a part of the process.”
Catherine didn’t say anything.
“When you close your eyes, what does it look like?” asked Stephanie.
“I immediately got an image,” Catherine retorted, “but I don’t know if it’s a good one. It could be improved. Well, for some reason I just see a face—well, let me try to get a second one and then I’ll describe them both.”—She was still for a time.—“Well, okay,” she said finally. “I have two images now, and they’re very different. The first one . . . I was hesitant because I had a feeling that it’s from some memory of some painting that I’ve seen, so it’s a little suspect . . . I just see a face, and I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this face somewhere. It’s yellowish. No, the hair is yellowish. Pale yellow. Long face, long hair, sort of high cheekbones with . . .” She paused to think again. “Large features. Let’s see. I wouldn’t say . . . Sort of sad and somber. Okay, that was the first image. But again, I think that came from a painting I saw once.—The second one was very different, and . . . young, handsome, smiling.” She laughed a little embarrassedly. “Sort of sensual, and colorfully dressed, very colorfully dressed.—But it’s difficult to concentrate.”
“Do you think they’re two approximations of the same thing?” said Stephanie interestedly.
“Of the same thing?” said Catherine. “I think one’s the true one, and one’s the false one. I think the true one is the second one.”
“Just because it came later, or because it’s happier?” Stephanie said.
“Because it’s happier.”
“My first image of myself,” I announced, “was this sort of green clammy thing, a bunch of vapors with these two black eye-holes full of greyish fog. I’m the Holy Ghost, you see. I’m kind of a sad thing, but I’m not an evil thing.”
“Mmm hmm,” said Catherine cautiously. She had already begun to withdraw from the conversation. There were days when she was very very tense.
“How about you, Stephanie?” I said. “How do you see me?”
“Well, you know,” she said, “from the first time I became aware of you, I always got a visual image, and it was the same one. It’s grey smoke, in a sort of thick column that ripples the way water ripples if you toss a pebble in a lake. So you’re this sort of ripply column of grey vapor that I can’t quite see through. In my peripheral vision I can see what’s behind you, but if I look at any one spot I just see opaque smoke. But it’s funny; sometimes your image fades out, and there’s just this black shreddy raggedy tophat and a black cane appears below and beside it, and it doesn’t occur to me why that happens.”
“Do you want to talk to me, or are you afraid of me?” I said.
“As I said, I’ve never been afraid of spirits,” said Stephanie. “I personally have never experienced that. You spirits have always been a lot more powerful than I am, but you’re stronger and guiding, and it’s always very light and uplifting.”
“How about you, Cathy?”
“Am I afraid of you? Well, let me see. What comes to mind is no, I’m not afraid. However, I know I’m still a bit skittish. But if you want to stay over for a few days and it’s all right with Stephanie, I would certainly love to have you.”
*
p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Say what you want about Hard Rock Cafe, but they have great nachos. Funnily, Dangling Carrot’s Grisly Garden is actually the SoCal haunt that excites me the most. But since that’s your fave, I would also be very happy with Twisted Dreams because it was my very favorite amongst the 20-something home haunts I hit up last year. Thank you, love. Enjoy the time with your family, or I hope you did, I guess, by the time you see this. Love putting a push button on my bookshelves that make them grow new shelves, G. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi, David. Dusty Springfield plus haunted … what is there not to worship there. Thank you. ** _Black_Acrylic, Fairbrook Manor, hold on, oh yes, good choice. Oh, awesome, how was the class? That’s great, great news! ** Misanthrope, Thank you. Again. Well, I guess what I was saying is that realising TC is one of the unimaginative, shallow, dunderheaded people who think dating a Jenner is cool is some kind of final straw. That there are millions of said people only makes it worse. To me. Wow, your friend’s daughter won! And $1000 bucks, not bad. Sorry about your swamp. Or sorry that the swamp is composed of your job and not of fake alligators and fog machines. ** 🤺Darbi, Hi. I do understand the responsibility that comes with employing the word love. Oh, my god, Scully is completely incredible! He is so fucking cool. He looks amazing. You’re a total master of that medium, my friend. I predict that stop action will go so immensely viral if you make it. Thank you! I will, I will, re: the book if I can score it. No, I don’t mind the chain thing at all, of course. Nice about the gauges. So, they’re in and doing their stretchy thing? You don’t have security to taze anyone who would dare mangle one of your precious animatronics? What a selfish fucker. The link worked. I’m not on instagram but it let me look at them without hazing over the page and ordering me to depart. Thanks again, pal. ** Steve Erickson, Thanks for the Tribeca answer. It was suggested to us that we should submit our film there because we were told it’s an adventurous festival, and the deadline is next week, and we’re trying to decide whether to submit there or not. I’ll do some further investigation first. Matt Gaetz going viral is definitely not helping my state of mind either, if that helps. What you describe about the Costa does sound like the installation except the women were just gazing into the lens, not singing. Cool, I’ll try to find that Nick Pinkerton book, thank you. Yes, as I think you may already know, our film was funded almost entirely via the art world. ** Corey Heiferman, Good question. Wow, that video. I sure wish the Boy Scouts had been like that when I was in them That was a borderline Kennth Anger film right there. Thanks. Mm, in my experiences with home haunts it seems to be great family togetherness creator. And a way for parents to let their wild teens blow off their steam in house. I wouldn’t be surprised of a lot of the home haunt families make them specifically for that reason. Oh, that’s good to hear about Tribeca. Like I told Steve, we’re debating whether to submit our film there. Your I-80 trek sounds fun, but it’s good you survived. Nice plate of feet there. No doubt made of meat, but, hm, tofu would work. So now I’m semi-hungry. ** T, Hi! Well, let’s see, here’s my somewhat educated guess. Home haunts started in the US in, I think, the 1920s when parents wanted to find a way to keep their apparently overly rambunctious kids off the streets on Halloween. And since LA is basically a giant suburb and therefore contains endless houses even in the city center, home haunts were more doable there. And time passed, and it grew exponentially there more than elsewhere for said reason. Plus, Hollywood is there, and quite a few of the houses are put on by people who work in the film industry and who therefore have prop making skills and access to quality props and decor and stuff. So there are some possible reasons why SoCal is Halloween Mecca. You’re here! And unemployed, con … grats? Well, then, let’s hang and/or coffee or something. This weekend? I think I’m fairly film-unimpaired this weekend? It’s looking like I won’t get to LA for Halloween, which is seriously breaking my heart and mind. There’s just too much film work to do and a very early November deadline. Tragic. ** 2Moody, Yes, exactly. I made home haunts in the basement of my family home almost every Halloween starting at a very young age, so yeah. I am seriously not an enjoyer of camping. Hm, there used to be Haunted Hoochie videos out there. I’ll see if I can find any. I can’t say that I understand people’s fear of and/or within haunted houses at all. They’re such artificial concoctions, and, barring the odd ‘extreme’ haunt, they won’t even touch you, so … But I am not normal, just like you. No one over here is getting that booster shot. Maybe we’re being a little too c’est la vie. Oh, no, you watched ‘Teenage Werewolf’?! Crazy. Now I should. I was going o say I did a DeCoteau post, but you beat me to it. Tomorrow I’m restoring an old post about the granddaddy of awful/fun horror movies Mr. Hershell Gordon Lewis if you want to get really down and dirty but silly. ** Right. I decided to spotlight my favorite William Vollman book, and so I have. See you tomorrow.
Dennis, Hahaha. I agree. TC is getting on my last nerve. Well, kind of. If he does some good movies and plays some good roles, I’ll be all right with him, hahaha. It’s not the final straw, this, but it’s not helping.
Btw, I think you’re cooler than Kylie. 😀
She has 399 million followers on Instagram. Wth?
Yeah, my friend’s daughter, whom I’ve known since she was born, was really ecstatic. She struggles with other parts of life, so this was really good for her. Singing is her jam and it was good to see her have a little success and confirm that her hard work is paying off.
I’d much prefer fake alligators and fog machines, haha.
Three-day weekend this weekend because of Columbus Day. I hope yours is swell.
Unfortunately, the Neo-Decadents got some bad news yesterday. One of the first ones in the group died yesterday. A really cool guy called Rodrigo Moro. It’s sad, he was a really ace person and a very good poet. Only 32. RIP Rodrigo.
I worship Dusty 24/7
I’m new to Vollmann and am really intrigued. A scan of his Wikipedia page reveals that his influences closely tie up with my own, so will defo investigate further.
Last night’s Flash Fiction class was really good and I’m already looking forward to receiving this weeks homework. High praise indeed!
I’m taken with the idea of organising work according to a spectrum, or all potential values of a physical phenomenon like light or colours. Anyway, I’m not around this weekend or next unfortunately, travelling with my flatmate (currently writing to you from Cherbourg)… Free in the week but I guess you’d be tied down with film stuff, no? Failing that the weekend after next but then I guess it’s best I write you back closer the time… Anyway, have a weekend like the hot and greasy vegetarian chip sandwich with samouraï sauce that I’ve just consumed, xT
I missed out on Vollmann during my big and complicated American authors phase, don’t know when I’ll get around to him. I’m reading “Miracle of the Rose” now, my first Genet. I guess the point of similarity is writing from extreme experience? Starting with “Miracle…” rather than more famous Genet works because I stumbled upon an old paperback English translation at a leave-one-take-one outdoor library.
Are you playing the game of who do you want to promise your USA debut to because your film can give away its virginity only once in each country? Such a dumb fetish on the part of festival organizers, in my humble opinion.
The Israeli weekend is Friday-Saturday. I spent today on even more cleaning and re-organizing of my rooftop bachelor pad. A kind of necessary “waste” of a day off. I hope to very soon be at the point where I’m comfortable throwing parties and just have to maintain/tweak stuff rather than create it from scratch. What are your weekend plans?
Is April in Paris at least half of what the song makes it out to be? I’ve never been and next April looks like the most likely time I’ll get the chance.
Timmy’s stans are having a hard time coping with the fact that in real life, he’s a horny celebrity whose peers are folks like the Jenners rather than the sensitive twink of CALL ME BY YOUR NAME.
My first official remix, for DL Jeff Jackson’s band Julian Calendar, is now out. It’s the fourth track on their new ep: https://juliancalendar.bandcamp.com/album/swimming-lessons. I radically reworked the song, influenced by both ambient and industrial music.
The recent news about Bandcamp looks very grim. For the past several years, I’ve thought that musicians and listeners idealized the company too much and that there was a danger in granting one company something close to a monopoly on the distribution of independent music. The fact that their new owner wants to fire some, if not all, of the recently unionized staff is a horrible sign. The fucked-up thing is that Bandcamp’s business practices could get much more exploitative and they’d look better than the vast majority of the music industry.
Anyway, I’m enjoying my Bandcamp Friday purchase of Galaxie 500’s Peel sessions collection as I write this.
After you mentioned Haunted Hoochie, I found some videos by and about them, but they’re keeping the full experience secret (which makes sense.)
Any plans for the weekend? I’ll be seeing ANATOMY OF A FALL tomorrow evening, then rushing home to write a review.
I just want to make it clear that the comment about Timothee Chalamet was directed at strangers whose social media posts I’ve read, not meant as a dis of anyone here.
Never heard of Vollmann before but I love the video of him reading from his work in 2005, he looks totally casual like someone I’d see at a gas station, and then of course he’s totally philosophical and introspective in interviews. Another welcome addition to my to-read pile, Man this invisible book bag’s getting heavy !
Oh whaaat that’s awesome and, in retrospect, totally unsurprising that you and your family put on haunts. Did you have different themes every year? Any specific stand-out memories, creation or scare-wise? When will Musk do something useful for once and invent (or let’s be real, invest in) a time machine so I can go back and visit one, dammit! I liked your answer to T about SoCal being the center of home haunts. Have you ever considered writing a nonfiction book about home haunts, or some type of brief history article? I suppose you essentially do it on your blog, but I’d totally eat up a full-on book about it, too. I went camping once with my 2nd grade best friend and her family and the adults took us ‘snipe hunting’ one night. I came back from the trip all starry-eyed like “mom, dad! I went snipe-hunting!!” and they were like “oh really…” and I never really thought about it since because I just figured it was one of those childhood fever dreams that happens and maybe one day it’ll come up but of the most part it’s part of nostalgic scenery. It wasn’t until literally earlier this year that I found out what a crock of shit it all was. I laughed like a lunatic about it for a week straight. I saw a couple post-Haunted Hoochie reaction videos where these real southern-tough men are all sweaty and out-of-breath like “that was scary y’all!” and if that’s not a trustworthy & glowing stamp of approval, I don’t know what is. I think my friends’ reasonings are that haunted houses feels too real and immersive vs. thrill-seeking rides, but I’m like, you’re okay with dropping from hundreds of feet up in the air only held in place by a precarious rusty bar but monsters popping out at you is where you draw the line?? They’re the freaks, Dennis, not us!! I respect that c’est la vie approach, it probably leads to far less shot-induced headaches and sore arms. But I also don’t trust the shameless coughers and sneezers rubbing elbows with me at the grocery store, so Fine I’ll take the damn jabs.
Hell yeah I watched it, you think I was just asking for a recommendation to be nice? I take my werewolf screenings very seriously, and I thank you for expanding my repertoire! I’ve been meaning to watch Lewis flicks but he keeps slipping through the cracks somehow. There’s this Gore trio of films I always associate with him because of the names — Gorgasm, Gorotica, and Gore Whore by Hugh Gallagher. Unsure of the similarities thematically (aside from Gore, probably), but I’m thinking it’d be perfect to follow up The Gore Gore Girls with. Jesus, ‘gore’ doesn’t even sound like a real word anymore. GORE GORE GORE!!! Last night’s dreams featured a dog jumping on the dining table and biting my fingers, a failed in-person birthday celebration for an online friend, and lookalike stand-ins/imposters of my family members in my childhood home. It seemed really profound when I was all bleary-minded waking up, but now I think I just need to lay off the werewolf movies for awhile. Well, after tonight’s viewing of ‘Wolves of Wall Street’ by DeCoteau to seal the wolf-a-thon, of course. Have a sublime (and perhaps a little spooky/scandalous) first weekend of October! xoxo