I remember Goddard Graves as one of the most erudite people at my high school.
The
school had its own FM station, which broadcast from a strange room that
was the only one on the fifth floor, and I occasionally found myself
tuning in after school -- and often disagreeing with Goddard violently
but unable to help admire his wide ranging knowledge ( for instance, he
had one show on the first act Finale Ensembles of operas and he used an
example how Kurt Weill handled it in "The Threepenny Opera" as opposed
to something Mozart had done. It was pretty damn impressive and I
listened to it resentfully because of our disagreements but also with a
certain awe ).
I
have been back in touch with him for a while.. like a lot of my high
school classmates, he has had a rather incredibly rich and varied
Life...
I
have yet to read Goddard's book because he has sent it to me and it has
not arrived yet. I have been warned it is of formidable length..
So, here is Goddard about writing in his own words--
All-right, Larry. Since
you asked with such grace, and, since I'm weather-bound and ill, I guess
I had better redeem my pledge to answer your query
about "inspiration". Let me make it clear at the outset that I don't
think of myself as a writer, but rather as a person who writes. The
distinction should be pretty clear, but lest there be any doubt, I
regard a writer as one who puts writing at or near the top of his or
her life-tasks, whether for love or money. I have never thought I could
or should write for a living, and have a pretty strong suspicion of
those who do. Neither do I have that prophetic/messianic belief that I
am called to shower my golden words, like so much verbal manna, on a
word-starving world. I do, however, answer the call to write if
and when it comes, and regard with at-least as much if not more
seriousness as I would were I dependent on my scribbling to put bread
(and wine, and candles, and fresh fruit in season) on my table.
There have never been professional writers in my family, though my
Uncle Henry Tenney was a gifted amateur travel- and sports-writer,
beyond his considerable gifts in occasional compositions for various
business and fraternal purposes. His own father, Horace Kent Tenney was
likewise a gifted weekend writer whose two published books well repay
investigation by those industrious enough to find them. Between the
time you and I knew first each other and now, I have written
considerable political writing pro bono public, but also written ad-copy and arts reviews for money.
But all of that changed, qualitatively and quantitatively, in late
2003, when a priest-friend asked to work-up a Sunday school lesson based
on the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel. Given the prevailing
Biblical illiteracy of our times, sadly including many of the readers of
this blog, I should point-out that the actual episode in the Book of
Genesis is actually very brief, and just sort-of drops-off into
nowhere. Vividly recalling my own days as a nine-year-old, I knew I'd
better expand it a bit, if there were to be any hope of keeping the
young'ns' interest. The result was my kids' story "Fred and Floss
at the Big Job", attempting to tell the famous tale from the point of
view of the workers on that job, and offering some speculations on what
actually caused the Scriptural "confusion of tongues". Loved every
minute of it, but never thought to repeat the endeavor.
Right.
Four months later, or ten years from tomorrow as I write this, I
woke-up from a sound sleep, and in my head was the plot, with complete
cast of characters plus setting-details, of what I then naively thought
would make a dandy 64- to 96-page novella. Ha. First you commit
yourself, and then you see.
And now we get to the heart of the matter. It is obvious in retrospect
that I'd had a lot on my mind, and that this was the time to deal with
them. Some happy souls may know the wonderful song by The Osborne
Brothers, "These are just some things I'd like to sing about". I
understood that perfectly, and realized that I might not have my voice
forever. So I wrote, and wrote, and wrote. What emerged 5 1/2 years
later in my Harmony Junction is, then, a kind of spiritual
estate-sale -- without the painful necessity of my dying. It is also,
among many other things, a love-song to many people who richly deserve
it. My only regret is that some of those people didn't live long enough to savour the finished product.
Will there be more? There already is, but very different from the
aforementioned 688-page visionary prose work. I have a series of
light-hearted sketches, on a variety of subjects from bird-watchers to
that far-from light-hearted master-writer George Eliot (one called "Help
me, Deronda"). Will I write more? Certainly. Even simultaneously
with the writing of what became HJ, I was considering the
further adventures of Harry, Colin, and their friends, and indeed have
about 120 pages quietly ripening. I have some radically different
projects, including a speculative historical piece about the old Wobbly
Phil Engle, also a re-write of some earlier pieces, and maybe the
resurrection of some folklore-essays originally scattered like so many
thistle-seeds among obscure music--journals, record-collectors, and
harmless lost souls.
Since I have never intended to make money from any of this, I am in the
happy position of not worrying about editors, critics, or other
marginal life-forms. Call me -- call us -- egotistical, but
Stendhal had it right when he dedicated some of his work to "the happy
few". Naturally, if my stuff finds it way into more hands than less --
and I have print-readers from Australia to Serbia -- I am happy. But
without that, I'm still happy. When it stops being fun, or driven by
inner needs, I stop. Would that more writers did that too.
While it may not appear relevant, I cannot sign-off without mentioning
something here. I am pretty pessimistic about the state of the arts
today, and their embattled place in a broader society which is itself in
melt-down. From time to time one hears about the need to "defend the
arts". All too soon this spins off into a shoving-match for the best
teat on the grants or foundation udder. My take is simple: defend the
arts by doing them. I'm no Stendhal, or Goethe, or even Ed Doctorow,
but by golly, I experience genuine pleasure, and I don't
feel self-important reading my own stuff in preference to much that I
encounter from many living writers. Publishing is merely a way to share
the love, but like "real" love itself, I would loathe that it be
associated with guile, or falsity, or self-interest. End of sermon.
Thanks for your interest, Larry and blog-congregants. -- Goddard Graves
(E-mail to harmonyjunction@live.ca)
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