Memories of Me and the Tangerine Man

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On the ominous date of September 11, the Most Important Person and I will be in my home town of Northfield, Minnesota for the—groan—fiftieth reunion of my high school graduation. The classmates arranging it all have suggested I send them a few words about what I’ve been doing this last half century, but for brevity’s safe let me stick to one small but revealing encounter from right after I left high school. It was in the fall of 1959, and I was a lanky, still-pimply teenager with big ideas.

I had proceeded from high school to become a freshman at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, where I wasted no time beginning a relationship with a lovely, very smart girl named Sheila, who would later became my first wife. Sheila had just come to the U. of M. from New York, hoping to continue studying with Saul Bellow, who’d already been her teacher at Bard College in the Hudson Valley. And we decided our souls could mingle.

At the same time, another kid arrived at the Minneapolis campus. Another kid with big ideas. He came from Hibbing, Minnesota, and his name was Bobby Zimmerman.

And I couldn’t stand him. Not that I knew him, exactly. I just saw him around everywhere. He annoyed me to a disturbing degree. He was just so insufferably cool. So, uh…impressive in a way I was far from sure I was. There was that Harvard book bag slung on his shoulder, the very last word. Dark glasses.  His Chesterfield cigarettes were rolled up in the left sleeve of his black tee shirt. Black. Solid black. Not white or some normal color. Black.

You could puke.

At that moment, the arty coffee shop near campus was a place about the size of a largish dorm room and called “The Ten O’Clock Scholar.” (Some of the rock-history books reverently refer to it, mistakenly in my opinion, as just “The Scholar.” ) Anyway, the place was tiny, and it too was pretty cool. Every chance we got, Sheila and I installed ourselves behind a rattan screen that separated the rear table from the space in front and discussed, at length, Great Things. In front there was a dazzlingly ornate Italian coffee machine, complete with bronze eagles and all kinds of immaculate little tubes that steamed and hissed. There was a stereo on which was played either Vivaldi or folk music of the utmost refinement, like—say–Cynthia Gooding. Occasionally we’d slum with the inauthentic-but-fun Weavers. Sheila had once met one of the Weavers. She said he was a jerk. But talented.

And then came Bobby.

Somehow Bobby Zimmerman—who had started calling himself Bob Dylan— talked the manager into letting him use “The Ten O’Clock Scholar” for his very first singing engagement—maybe ever, maybe anywhere. And the night he began, Sheila and I happened to be behind the rattan screen, discussing, (let’s say), ecstasy. Our kind of subject.  Context: John Donne. Vivaldi on the stereo.

And then Bobby arrived with his guitar, a Folger’s coffee can, and those damn Chesterfields rolled up in his sleeve. First he turned the stereo off. I barely noticed because I was explaining ecstasy to Sheila. But then, the singing began.

I paused in mid-ecstasy. What the HELL was going ON? That wavering, tuneless, whining …sound. That awful… noise. Who was making it? And WHY?  I looked past the rattan screen. There sat Mr. Cigarettes in his sleeve, performing for a seemingly content audience of maybe six or seven people.

I managed enough decency to sit still through three songs. My speech on ecstasy was shot, but I ground my teeth and waited. I rolled my eyes. I closed my eyes. I hated it. Finally, after the third song, I decided somebody had to do something. I walked out front, got myself another cup of mulled cider, and then walked up to the kid who would  become the foremost American musician of my generation and told him that we had been listening very patiently while he sang, but he’d been singing a long time now, so would he mind calling it quits for a while so we could turn the stereo back on?

Bob Dylan’s anger is legendary, and I am here to tell you that it is totally genuine. My request left the eighteen year old singer quite literally strangling, gagging with fury. Horrible sounds came from his throat. Luckily, rage paralyzed him, because if he could have done anything, he would have gladly killed me. I sauntered back to Sheila, and as we started talking again, I could hear the sounds of angry pacing and a coffee can being slammed around. But the stereo was back on.

Looking back, I don’t know whether to laugh at my callow, competitive, self-absorbed snottiness, or blush with shame. Dylan kept singing at the Ten O’Clock Scholar, though not (as I recall) when I was there. On campus, he and I would shoot hate-rays at each other whenever we crossed paths.

Within months, Sheila and I were out of there, on a bus to New York, leaving Minnesota behind for destiny.

And so was Dylan.

Book World Goodbye

Journalism

 

 

 

Book lovers who are convinced that civilization is coming to an end got one more reason to pound the table last week when the Washington Post announced that it will shut down its freestanding book supplement, Book World, and fold its reviews and coverage into other parts of the paper. That is not good news, and when I heard it I gave that well-pounded table a couple of good, solid whacks myself. I began my career writing reviews; I have often reviewed and been reviewed in Book World. I count as a friend the dynamic Michael Dirda, who was for many years the force behind the supplement. (Happily, Michael will keep on writing his wonderful book column for the Post; the paper will continue to publish an abundance of reviews; and—very revealingly—Book World will appear as usual on line.)  The National Books Critic’s Circle has greeted the news of Book World’s demise with an orchestrated chorus of outrage, to which I join my voice, which only yesterday cursed the closing of the New York Sun and the end of what was—hands-down—the best coverage of the arts I have ever encountered in any newspaper. Morning coffee will never again reach the heights it knew with Adam Kirsch and Francis Morrone and Eric Ormsby were on my breakfast table.

Yet I for one do not see civilization coming to an end quite yet.

Is it too banal to point out that all journalism—certainly including literary journalism—is right now in the process of transformation? Is it complacent to notice that this is not necessarily all bad?  The truth is that journalism’s two prime tasks in civil society—disseminating information and shaping opinion—have never been more lively in this country than they are at this moment.   To cite my old classmate and contemporary Bob Dylan, (if anybody wants to hear, someday I’ll fill you in on Dylan and me) whatever’s not busy being born is busy dying. People are coming to books very differently than they did in 1975, or 1995, but they are coming to books, and through changes in technology and the critical vocabulary that represent a vast democratization of the discourse that nothing can stop. It’s true, we don’t know where we’re going, and most what’s done swims in a shore-less and smelly sea of mediocrity. But speaking as somebody who was around in 1975, take it from me, the sea of mediocrity was also shore-less in the good old days, and it didn’t smell one bit sweeter.

Meanwhile, much is much better. I can get to a Michael Dirda column (and his archives) in seconds. There was a time when months would pass between American publication of a piece or review by the superb Clive James—for my money, the best all-round cultural journalist now writing in English. I can now check in with Clive James—see, hear and read him—any time I want. I have his books endlessly to reread; but I also have his delicious television interviews, and his current commentary, not just the stuff from the big guns but easy throwaways like his recent musing on K.D. Lang and Roy Orbison. I count easy access to www.clivejames.com  as something less than the end of civilization.

Journalism is dying right now because it is being reborn. This is as it should be.  Some of the changes make me sick and others make my heart leap with anticipation. Any transformation is both a birth and a death. That can be scary, and sometimes I’m scared too. Just remember: Longinus—who was appraising books even before me—understood that fear is an aspect of the sublime.

So-Book World, (print version), fond farewell. We saw some sweet times together, didn’t we?

Mike Dirda—don’t miss a pitch.

Clive James—take it to the limit one more time.

And everyone else, repeat after me: There were no good old days.