Wednesday, November 23, 2011

ritual

Yesterday was my mother's birthday. She would have been - let's see - she would have been 64. This upcoming spring it will be 10 years she has been gone. At some point it becomes more difficult to keep count. Although I always know she was almost exactly 30 years older than me, just like my paternal grandmother was almost exactly 60 years older than me. And they're gone now. As well as my father's identical twin, my favorite uncle, a more recent soreness. It seems that almost everyone is gone now. It feels sometimes, in late fall especially, that I have become way too acquainted with loss.

Yesterday to commemorate I biked out to the community market, and bought a slice of (vegan) apple pie which they put on a tiny paper plate for me, that I heated up for too long in the communal microwave, and I ate that outside with a cup of coffee, even applying darker lipstick in the bathroom before so I could see the traces of lipstick on the cup, like hers, and I thought of my mother. That is how I memorialize her, by eating a slice of apple pie. My rail-thin mother who inhaled anything sweet, wouldn't eat real food most of the time, but nothing she liked better than a diner, a bowl of soup, a piece of pie out of the case.

About the lipstick: the memories of stealing into my mother's bathroom, and it was stealing, it was an inner sanctum, the bedroom, and opening up the mirrored doors and inhaling the smell of her Clinique loose powder, running my finger along the curve of her coral lipstick. I used to think writing about these experiences were cliche, these girl-experiences, but I am realizing we have been taught to be embarassed about these rituals between daughter and mother, or between sisters, these sense-memories of girlhood. They are not cliche. They are communally felt.

Yesterday I thought again about The Book of Mutter, where I attempt to somehow exorcise the trauma of my mother, my childhood, and the idea of the American orphan. In some ways it is my favorite book, but it remains, still, mostly private, except for the chunk published online. Perhaps it will never be published in book form. Or I could make, I don't know, an art project out of it, too bad I'm really piss-poor at actually making anything.

At the Mutter Museum they had a small exhibit of books bound in human skin. The collection they had were made by two doctors in Vermont (?) who used the skin of patients who donated their bodies for their research, as a form of memoriam. Although John tells me that this was also an occurrence in France, after criminals gave their confession before execution, their confessions would often be bound in their skin. He told me that he thought the criminals volunteered their skin for this use, as a form of purging. Maybe I'm getting this all wrong. Maybe Book of Mutter should be bound in human skin. A strange thought from a strict vegetarian. But perhaps it's already bound in human skin - this book of the body. The Mutter Museum already is in the book - I use an image of two fetal skeleton Siamese twins from the collection as an important repetition. 

I am beginning to worry about my career, for lack of a better word, as a writer. This is coming now at the end of this fall tour trying to thrust Green Girl out into the world, at times succeeding, at other times failing. Also because as I'm ending rewriting the essay book I'm really hit in a dull way with the fact that I am totally unemployed, and I have no classes offered to me for the spring, and I have to find some ways to support us, to support myself. In some ways this worry that has evolved into a constant nag, a fearfulness in the night that might be perceived as laughable, as I got my copy of Bookforum yesterday, and my name was on the front cover as a book reviewed, almost like I was someone, was a known, right next to Ben Marcus, lower right hand bottom (Ben Marcus muttering to himself: Who?) But there are still such moments of amateur-abjection lately, like when John and I went into McNally Jackson, a bookstore downtown in New York, and since I've never actually seen any of my books in a New York bookstore, and I love this bookstore, me asking the person at the front desk whether I could leave a free copy of Green Girl for the fiction buyer, to consider to stock my book, me mumbling, it's been reviewed in some places, and the person behind the counter treating me like I'm self-published, not that there's anything wrong with being self-published, and John becoming lawyer-partner, and saying, "She has a large review in Bookforum this month" and then the person saying something like, Well, if the buyer wanted to buy the book, they would have, or something, and my face all enflamed, I mumbled a thanks and left. I'm beginning to realize perhaps I will always be outside - of the institutions. Like with Book of Mutter - I tried so so intensely to get that book published, even placing as a finalist in a big contest, but to no avail. I cannot even get someone in a position of power to really speak to me of the book. But this isn't about the book. I mean, I've come to terms with the fact that it might never get published. Perhaps it was more important, I mean, that it was written.

My orphans.

Now I must work on Heroines - I said it was done and I lied. I read Part Two and I thought - this is terrible. I can do better. I must do better. So I must do better. I am trying. Sometimes I feel entirely inept as a writer. Maybe that's part of the process of writing. Like everyone, the ineptness, and then pushing, laboring to communicate. Or do others feel quicksilver on their fingers like on their tongues? Do the words, the rhythms, come easier? Perhaps that's what it feels like to be a poet. I don't know. I'm not a poet.

16 comments:

  1. No I do not feel quicksilver. I wish. I'm moved by your ritual--I wish I had something so sweetly touching to do to observe the loss. I'm always searching for it, for something that marks it. Apple pie sounds right.

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  2. Bakery before cemeteries or churches. More girly. Also: the shopping mall. The feel of leather purses. The smell of coffee. I think when I was in London I was still experiencing really intense amounts of grief (it had only been a year and a half then), and in some ways all the rapturous department store scenes in GG were in memory of my mother.

    My next cupcake will be in honor of you, Repat. I wish we were in the same city, so we could drink a toast to each other.

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  3. Kate, that forbidden bedroom and smell and feel of Mother's cosmetics always brought my nerves to attention. I still fetishize lipstick dark and in gold tubes that spiral up. Don't worry about your career. They grow odd not like children or trees. They grow slow as does the writing drudging drudging all that fucking practice. But it will all pay off for you. It took me two years to start getting reviews for my last two books. Just take it easy be healthy and keep up the drudge. I don't trust writers whose work falls like quicksilver or whose work comes from Jesus. I trust writers who do the work. I'm glad you had your ritual for your mother yesterday. It sounds necessary.

    love,
    Rebecca

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  4. Love you Rebecca. I don't know why I'm all of a sudden thinking about The Book of Mutter, wanting to see it in the world, wondering about this private practice - the work - versus having readers. Perhaps it's a way to procrastinate from doing the work, more work. Or perhaps it's because of the time of year.

    I have been lucky to get reviews, and have been happy for them. But lately - I have wondered - with a sort of alarm thump in the night - oh my god - what am I doing with my life? I never wanted to get a "break". I never have tried to write commercial forms. But absent teaching work I am realizing something has to happen for me to continue writing. Or perhaps one writes still amidst panic. You Rebecca write so marvelously well with your full-time job and music lessons. Perhaps I need to just become more disciplined.

    I don't mean to be yapping.

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  5. The idea of career for us - for writers of poetry, or anything outside of the mainstream - is a little tenuous. I mean, I think you've had some great success compared to a lot of people - really good reviews, good readings, and that you have to consider "success." Most bookstores these days don't even carry mainstream literary fiction that gets written up in PW or Elle or whatever - they just carry bestsellers, it's a reality. Selling them through independent bookstores, through the publisher, through Amazon, through our own web sites - I think that's the new "normal" for most small press writers, even midlist writers. (I thought this was just the case with poets, but I've been talking to more fiction writers with impressive resumes but similar stories...)

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  6. Jeannine - Absolutely. I absolutely think I have been successful thus far in beginning stages of being a small-press/university-press writer. When I speak of career, I am actually thinking, literally - how am I going to earn more than $8-$12,000 a year, which I was adjuncting, and which I haven't been making even since we moved to NC. So many writers depend on teaching, either full-time gigs if they're really lucky, or adjunct gigs, hopefully quality ones. Deprived of that, here, in this setting, I do wonder how I am going to support myself as a writer. I will figure it out. Many writers do, they carry on. I just have never been someone who was able to write around a 9-5ish job. I have always needed time off days in a row to pursue projects. It's the only time I've ever been able to dig into anything.

    So the question I'm asking myself lately - do I attempt to go more mainstream, and if that's possible, and by that I mean I guess being published by a major house - or or...I can't figure out the other thing, I guess.

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  7. Kate --
    I'm sorry McNally Jackson was so hostile to you! I'm a buyer at a bookstore in Chicago, & I haven't read Green Girl yet but have been meaning to. Could I buy a copy from you to read and then we could talk about getting it into my store? Please email me if you're interested! hannah@semcoop.com
    --Hannah

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  8. i took my mother's tube of lipstick out of the little ceramic jar in the bathroom the day she was dying. the last day she was alive. i started needing lipstick after that. i wear it pretty much every day now. the brighter the better. at work i am pleased by the fact that everyone knows which coffee cup is mine: lipstick smeared all over the sipper lid. this is the first time in my life i can boast making such a mark. :)

    tomorrow, i am making a dump cake in her honor. one of my favorite treats she'd make. one of her favorites too. i am coming up on the Awful Anniversary. year one.

    i don't know what the fuck i'm doing with my life either.

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  9. Hannah -Hi! Oh, I don't think they were hostile to me, at all. They just hadn't heard from me. Chicago bookstores have been on the whole so supportive of stocking my book - maybe because I'm from there. But NYC bookstores - harder to crack. And yes! I'd love for you to stock Green Girl at Seminary Co-op! I had been in contact with Jack Cella before, who I believe stocked O Fallen Angel there! (I'm actually a member of the Co-op, from my U of C days! It's one of my favorite all-time bookstores). But the book's available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and I believe the distributor is Ingram's...I would love love for you to stock it. Of course. That's so great you're a buyer there - what a dream job. I miss working at a quality bookstore.

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  10. Angela - Love you. The one-year anniversary is hard. I was really shocked to find myself slowed and paused around my mother's birthday this year, mostly because I thought so much of the grief had passed in a way, although in a way, I welcomed it, I think I had missed, mourned, my grief if that makes sense. It will be a decade soon. It's so hard to believe. How much it's changed me. How long it's been. Although sometimes I feel it's not the official anniversaries are hard, it's the small moments that turn around and kind of smack you in the face.

    Remembering, rituals - so important.

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  11. Oh and Hannah and I meant they hadn't heard "of me" not "from me." Ha!

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  12. Kate-- the Chicago bookstore world is really wonderful. Green Girl is showing as weirdly out of stock or print on demand at Ingram, but I'll do my best to get some in the store!

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  13. Hi Hannah-I think this has something to do with EPs publishing model. Don't know though. Definitely email the publisher Bryan at btomasovich@emergencypress.org and hopefully he'll get right back to you. Or you can email me your info and I'll have him contact you. Would love for GG to be carried at the Coop-would love too to be considered for a review on the site if you like it!

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  14. Hey, I just want to let you know that I got a copy of "Green Girl" at Housing Works bookstore in Manhattan. I work there, so I snagged it immediately. If you want to get it in more bookstores in NYC, I suggest Unnameable Books in Brooklyn, and Bluestockings and St. Mark's Bookstore in Manhattan. They love/love to sell quality indie stuff. BTW, I'm half-way through Green Girl -- I love it so much! I'm especially tickled by the Plath references -- since I'm a Plath fanatic.

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  15. Oh that's great Christine! Thanks for the davice about the others. I'm so glad you like Green Girl - and hope that Housing Works will continue to stock it!

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