But the central theme of forgiving writers who have changed the world--Alice Munro, Anne Sexton, Raymond Carver, Flannery O'Connor, Cormac McCarthy--seems a manageable subject for an essay.
Forgiveness isn't the precise word. Only the person who suffered damage can do that. At the very least, we can ignore the media shock banners and read some of the greatest books. We should pace ourselves in the rate we are throwing away our best writers.
Low Pay, Far Away
Teaching ESL is often regarded as a loser's job. Many seem to imagine teachers barking out the alphabet in hot crowded rooms for minimum wage. It's true the positions are often low pay. But my ELS jobs were among my very best.
In 1994 I taught in Naxos, Greece in the main town, above a bakery, so that the smell of bread crept into the French doors of my classroom all morning.
My boss, Thalia, and I drove around the island to teach in villages in the afternoons. There was much stucco and glimpses of the ocean, as promised by the tourist guides.
But I wasn't a tourist anymore. I was a respected teacher from London. That was my boss's fiction. I taught using Cambridge guides, so of course I had to be English.
These students in the photo lived in a village by the ocean. I didn't know what I was doing as a teacher then, but I loved the job, communicated care and interest to the kids, and got better.
Thalia always had a reason for withholding the full amount--already a pittance. She either had to buy chicken feed or wood for her porch, something like that. Most payments were one-quarter of what was owed.
"You'll get your full pay, Ryan. We'll arrange it."
One day we went to a different village, on a high plateau, and a bell sounded that upset the children. My boss said it meant that one of the fishermen had died. We paused the class. Some of the kids were crying. A few others were noisy and spastic, as if to trick the panic that was in them. They had to wait to find out if the drowned one was one of their dads. It turned out that someone in another village had drowned.
Once, I went to Easter dinner at my boss's house. Her husband, strong, hairy, and friendly, cut a goat's throat in the yard. She directed me to stay in the living room with the men while the women cooked and enjoyed each other's company.
Soon I drifted into the kitchen. My boss said, "I told you to stay with the men!"
"Nobody speaks English in there."
"It doesn't matter. Are you a man or a little boy? You have to at least try to act like a man in my house."
I didn't mind her scolding. This was Naxos, Greece, not Eugene, Oregon. But later Thalia adopted a sullen and secretive posture that seemed related to all the money she wasn't giving me. She was unmoved that my roommate was covering my rent.
I was no longer her smart British teacher. Now she called me American, since I wanted her money, all of her money, and quite unfairly.
"You want to take what is mine. That may be American, but it's not fair."
When I got a job in Prague, I asked her to pay me what she owed. She said no, and reminded me that she'd grown up with all of the police in town.
Two officers knocked at my door and informed me that my travel visa had expired. It seemed likely that Thalia wanted me out, since I had demanded money, and might tell people what she'd done. I explained to the police I was leaving in a week.
My parents had sent me some money against my savings account in Oregon, and I waited for that. It's always unpleasant to leave a place when there was a bad taste at the end, as if I was running away.
I boarded a ferry where herds of goats stood in holding areas on the main deck, and felt lucky that I was allowed to climb to higher decks with all the German tourists. Thalia would've lodged me with the goats if she was able to.
"Keep him with the goats, and charge him extra. You will arrange it."
The island floated away, and I felt fine. People who do you harm often end up giving you more than they knew, in this case, the opportunity to know the Greeks up close. It wasn't employment. It was compelling experience, and I got my money's worth.
Smith Family Bookstore
When I was thirteen, I bought a copy of The Catcher in the Rye at Smith Family Bookstore on campus. This book featuring eccentric individuality was the right choice for this store. Books were everywhere. They were in the tall shelves, and they were stacked in the aisles--an overflow of knowledge and imagination waiting for you to seize it.
I knew I wanted to read a lot of the books one day. It was a fun place to wander and think who I might become.
By the time I was about to graduate from the university, Smith Family opened a bookstore across the street from the post office downtown. I was an English major, reading a lot of James Joyce, and was a touch pretentious, but inspired.
My girlfriend and I were planning a trip to Europe. My dad wanted me to go to law school. He was in his chair in front of the TV. I lay on the couch with my legs crossed, and said, like Stephan Dedalus in "Portrait," "Now that my sights are extended across the Atlantic, I'm afraid I could never endure staying here and studying the law."
My dad was a little concerned about the the dainty scribbler I'd become, but he told me to keep writing, if that was what I wanted to do.
At this time, there was a cafe in the Smith Family Bookstore downtown. My girlfriend and I bought our Hemingway, Dostoevsky, and Anais Nin books, etc., and we commanded a table with tragic seriousness, with coffee, and read like devils. She later became my wife. She had a fierce positivity, an insistence that whatever we were doing was okay.
We read the books. We were learning things about how people were, and how the world was. We believed it was the 1920s or 30s, when it was the 90s. But the 90s were a good time for identity and escape.
We moved to Salamanca, Spain, and it wasn't a perfect trip. But we did a lot of reading. We escaped in books when we were lonely and couldn't find any friends. Our best friends were books.
That romance in books is largely gone now, but for those who still feel that way, Smith Family Bookstore remains open for business.
Eugene Family YMCA
I'm writing a story set at the local Eugene Family YMCA. The director is my protagonist's brother, who's indifferent to his own children but insists that safety is his first concern. That's made up, of course. I don't know anything about the director.
William Gass said his motive in writing fiction was revenge. I don't feel that way overall. But I might start with revenge. You can tap into some intensity right away, then make improvements later, when you feel more at peace about it.
I wrote out a rough draft of the story on paper. I won't share that with you, but I'll tell you a couple of things that happened at Eugene Family YMCA.
One day I went to pick up my son at camp. They said he was coming on the bus, but he wasn't on that bus. Then they said he'd be on the next bus, but he wasn't. They seemed to have lost my kid. No one at the outdoor tables had any ideas about finding him.
In the main building, I talked to a very young staff member who said maybe he just walked away. He also said they have way too many kids to know where an individual kid is. Others on staff said this too.
I wandered the building which stampeded with as many new members as they could cram in the joint. Then later I found my son walking around in there.
The camp takes in way too many kids, too, and they can't keep track of them. Sometimes it seems dangerous.
The Eugene Family YMCA is "bursting at its seams," writes Mark Baker in Lookout magazine.
On a different day, many kids were in a field under the hot sun with no shade. There was a tent, but it was crowded with toddlers, so my son couldn't get in there. He got water at the table by the entrance, but found it was just too hot out, and he ended up slumped on the ground feeling sick, and nobody said anything to him. He sat in the hot sun for an hour and a half.
I ended up withdrawing him from that camp. There were soulful listeners on management staff, but nothing really changed. The youth team were indifferent. An older woman in HR said she couldn't imagine anyone having complaints about this location. She assured me they all work together to make it a positive experience for everyone.
I told her I always liked the YMCA by South Eugene High School. "Oh! We're exactly the same here," she said. "It's the same place."
"Do you think there are too many people?"
"Oh, not at all, not at all. Thanks so much for calling."
I'm a complainer when it comes to family and serious things. I'm surprised that others let those concerns go. The YMCA dropped my review. Some people there seem to perceive me as someone who entered heaven and, instead of gushing at the facilities, criticized the intolerable crowds.
Heavenly organizations can't be criticized. Administrators will deny your evaluation and sail away on perfect wings.
Last year my son and his friend played together in the Creation Station. They both used bad language sometimes, nothing so awful. The kid's mom worked there. One day, my son's friend told him he couldn't see him anymore, because of "language." This twelve-year-old had a seven-o'clock bedtime.
His mom reminded me of Idaho church people--adolescents penned up, quarantined, and put to bed early. Severe restrictions in childhood often create fearful adults. And she's a youth leader!
So, I start my story in the mood for revenge. But I won't stay in that place. Nor will I name anyone.
When I started writing fiction, I intended to write an exposé of the church people we knew in Lewiston, Idaho. But the final draft explored individuals, good and bad.
Revenge was the starting point, but I found their fictional selves interesting and occasionally sympathetic. Even the worst ones emerged as real people.