For the rest of the night, staff traded their amazing faces for frowns, looks of shocked disappointment, or awkwardness. They seemed unable to shake the mental pictures of their nice educated author stocking freezers with Hungry Man dinners or cleaning up spills on aisle seven.
It would be no use telling them that Thom Jones was a high school janitor and Janet Frame tended a cafeteria counter.
My first Barnes and Noble reading was in Boise twelve years ago. I taught creative writing to seniors at BSU. It seemed that my status as an adjunct professor trumped my accomplishments as a writer. Staff and others asked me more about my job than my writing.
Becca was thirty-six and I was forty-three, older parents, but we had a baby and a book, and it was the best time. Becca had recently been chosen for the Mayor's Art Show in Eugene. There was an article about her painting in the Register-Guard before we left for Boise.
Before those Eugene days and Boise days, when I was in Portland around 2010, most of the creative people I knew worked at pizza joints or cafes. Others were janitors, etc. Portland was changing, due to California development and influence, but there was still a blue-collar ethos to hipster and creative life in Portland.
It was your life, your art, that mattered, not your job. If anything made a person suspect in old Portland, it was sweating for another man's dream while neglecting to have any dreams of his own.
I lived there in the 90s as well--started writing in '95--and I knew writers, musicians, artists, and a young film-maker. Elliot Smith, Katherine Dunn, Bob Pollard, and Chuck Palahniuk were a few of our gods, urging us forward to touch the sun.
By 2019, half of Los Angeles County moved to Portland. Our fine city transformed. Many Californians were already here, but they had Portland values. The newcomers were all business.
Almost no one discussed books and films in bars anymore. It was all about money or jobs. People might discuss some computer system for two hours.
It seemed creative people were suddenly icky types, especially poor ones who worked low jobs so that they could have the mental ease to do their real work.
So, most people I knew quit writing and went to work in tech. It's true they had to pay higher rents, but I sensed the real reason was to remedy the sudden shame they felt about carrying a food stamps card.
But there's often more adventure in blue-collar jobs, or, at least, the people you work with are more raw and interesting. Cormac McCarthy said you should work at places where your characters might work.
I worked on a barge on the Ohio River recently, and was a lead at a cannery in Alaska for three seasons. I carried a hose on a mop-up crew in the Oregon forest. Picked pears in Eastern Oregon two years ago. Worked with old men in the layout department at the Oregonian. At all of these jobs I had good friends. It was always interesting.
I taught ESL in Naxos, Greece, Salamanca, Spain, and Atlanta, and worked in natural food stores in Boston and San Francisco.
I have served time in Housing at the University of Oregon--manned by the nastiest, Trump-loving creeps. Managers actually made fun of the way a deaf woman talked. HR took no interest: Parents and donors weren't ever going to see what happened in those basements.
My best college teaching jobs were well-paid and enjoyable, but most were unpleasant, low-respect, and practically volunteer. My year at the employment department saw good money. But in the end, it was a headache punctuated by a thousand "Blessed" signs, and no one to talk to.
It is painful to endure all the people you meet, those whose greatest human goal is to become an office manager. I know office managers with more inspiring goals. The creative people have gone away, or gone down, or turned political the way some turn born-again.
It's great to want to manage a particular office you care about, but too often the goal amounts to entering some void of recognition that doesn't speak to a person's soul. When you consider how many gave up their dreams to go to work in offices, it endures, by my lights, as a season of defeat.
But maybe there's a romance to existing as the only person of your kind in town. At any rate, you have to find some way to trick yourself into living in a manner that accommodates writing.
On Remodeling the Writing Factory. Log Cabin Literary, 2006.
When I started writing twenty-five years ago, I had the discipline of a German factory foreman. Every morning at six, I leapt into my work boots and began slapping keys, writing in furious labor seven, eight, ten hours, breaking only to smoke, gulp coffee, and brood. I shouted at sentences, as if the words were lazy employees. Of course, the more I abused the words on the page, the more they refused to function, and the door to creativity was often locked.
Now and then, as if against my will, I slipped into the gentle trance of art.
But much of my time was spent in this factory, noisy with the clatter of fast machines, the sound of will, ambition, and control. I worked in frustrated insistence that a convincing world appear on the page now. It's a miracle such a "work ethic" finally produced a book. There was a price to clocking hours in a cold, noisy place: prematurely gray hair, a breakdown, and a constant scowl.
I altered my work habits. The new, calmer method was more promising, and it was certainly more fun.
Now when I sat down to work, I didn't touch the keys for thirty minutes or so. I sipped coffee and looked out the window--waiting, listening, sitting still. The factory knew I had come to work, and it would wake to its task in due time. There was no hurry, no clock to punch anymore. The tools were silence, calm, patience. I trusted the unconscious to do its slow work.
Soon the factory lights flickered on, the conveyor belts rattled to motion. I glimpsed pieces of my deepest self riding the belts, memories, hallucinations: a sun-faded beach ball, a package of cellophane-wrapped hamburger, a snapshot of my father barbecuing.
When I was in that deeper place, I began to write. Soon recognizable shapes appeared on the page. The gray, still world began to turn, colors emerged. Hazy characters from my past and from my dreams, unconvincing in sketch form, stood and walked, moving and talking like people.
I'd like to say my writing comes faster now, that this slowness has accelerated my production. But that would be more bottom-line nonsense. What's needed is better work, enjoyable work, not faster production.
In literature, better means truer. And it's very hard to transfer emotional and psychological realities to the page. We'll fail most of the time, and knowing about this failure is good: Experiencing the pain of close but not quite, after so much effort, implies that we have a standard, and that our work will improve.
Henry James wrote a careful first draft simply in order to glimpse the germ of his novel's direction and possibilities. The real world moves too fast to see it clearly, and meaningfully, at first glance. Since the most perceptive of us humans are half-blind, groping creatures, we simply can't conjure a true world on the page now. A page a day! A book a year! Ten easy plots!
I left assembly-line writing behind me, and slowed down. Only the dreamy way will get me there, eventually. Writers need a lot of time to decide the simplest of things. Is this bright beach ball of my childhood a sweet, nostalgic thing? Is it an object of menace?
Don Quixote is my lead-man at the factory. Together we run a perfectly useless operation that produces an occasional object of beauty that we couldn't ever sell, and I rejoice. We're not creating romance novels or thrillers. We work for free over here.
I still go to the factory and work hard every day. Good writing needs form and shape, hard work, discipline. But I've remodeled the factory. There are smashed holes in the walls to let in the air, light, and birds. There are indoor gardens and a mysteriously pure stream. The machines are fixed to work at a slow, comfortable speed; they are fixed to quit often and, finally, to lie still, scattered with cowboy boots, whiskey bottles, old socks.
I'm a neglectful, diligent foreman, and it's a good job. The only rule is that I have to sit in the chair during operating hours, and yet I get to stare into space whenever I feel like it. Stretch my legs out, dream, and enjoy the work.