In Praise Of The Memoir

It wasn’t even a memoir that got me interested in writing a memoir. It was a book that read like a memoir: White Oleander by Janet Fitch. I read White Oleander and I thought “I can do this, only my story will be true, not fiction.” I read it again a few days later and I thought “No, I most likely cannot do this. I cannot write with nearly as much eloquence and skill as Janet Fitch, but who can? Again I told myself, I can do this, to a certain extent. Yes I can.”

That was going on ten years ago. The seed was planted. I was a teenager then, sixteen, and I didn’t feel very comfortable telling people I was planning on writing a book. My wisdom told me that nobody cares if you’re planning on writing a book, that people only care when you are writing a book. I now know that even that is only partially true. Too, I had a feeling that some of the things I was going through at the time…really needed to be in the book. I decided to ride those things out, and planned to write about them later. Plus I was too busy partying and having emotional breakdowns and sleeping off all-night coke binges to do any writing.

My second wave of inspiration came from Jeannette Walls The Glass Castle. My. Favorite. Memoir. By far. And yes, it’s a memoir, it’s not fictional like the Janet Fitch book mentioned prior. It’s embarrassing, but at twenty-three years old or so, I still had very little knowledge about what a memoir was, as opposed to an autobiography, for example. A simple interpretation is that where an autobiography is an author’s life story, often presented chronologically, a memoir can focus on just one main event in a person’s life (such as divorce), or one time period (such as childhood) and does not need to be (nor is it recommended) chronological. However, many memoirs do touch on the author’s childhood even though the story is mainly about her divorce at age forty or will encompass several themes such as divorce, abuse, addiction and manic depression all in one. The Glass Castle, for example, is a story about poverty, alcoholism, sexual abuse, and, ultimately, forgiveness. Forgiveness is the main theme, see, the focus of a memoir isn’t all “poor me, poor me”. In fact, I do believe Jeannette Walls had to literally write this book in order to forgive her parents. Her parent’s are very deserving of forgiveness. Everyone is. See, it all worked out for everyone in the end. When people write about their parents, their grandparents, their siblings and nasty things come up: that’s just life, nasty things come up. The stories are not often intended to target or blame anybody. You can bet your bottom dollar the author is revealing all the nasty things he or she has done too (and then some, if they’re truly conscious). A story without any character’s wouldn’t make it to Chapter 2. And a character without any problems would read like a glass of water in front of a person lookin’ to get real drunk. Remember that before you question memoirists about their airing the family’s dirty laundry. I think for most of us (aspiring memoirists): it just comes naturally.  As naturally as an imperfect parent. Jeannette Wall’s mother was portrayed as a lazy, unrealistic dreamer who condoned physical and sexual abuse against her children and ended up a greasy homeless woman (with a mean mustache) living on the streets of New York City. When Jeanette published the book, her mother’s only comments seemed to be how absolutely proud she was of her daughter. I hope it works out that way for me. My father doesn’t have a computer. I showed him my blog for the first time the other day and he barely lifted a brow. He changed the subject in fact…I don’t think he gets it.

Today, I’m reading The Chronology of Water by Lidia Yuknavitch. So far, it’s a memoir that’s vastly unchronological and very poetically and intriguingly describes scenes of drug-use and sex while a young woman tries to accomplish something, anything, in her life. I ABSOLUTELY love the book at this point and I’m only a sliver deep. I have a feeling it will be right up there with White Oleander and The Glass Castle, books I consider my “model memoirs”, but of course, it’s too early to tell.

Of the twenty plus memoirs I’ve read since The Glass Castle, there are about ten I consider pure gold. I’d like to share that list with you. Perhaps you’ll enjoy the books as much as I did. In addition, please, please, please share with me the titles of your favorite memoirs! (Note: I am particularly interested in the following topics: rural America, womanhood, addiction, poverty, and sexual abuse) In fact, I very strictly do not read material that is too detached from the things I am writing about, which are the topics mentioned above. This may sound ignorant to you, it is not, this is a strategy. I am very focused on writing this memoir right now. I am eating and breathing these things. I’ll read a memoir about English high-society later. I really will.

Okay, here’s the list (sans the books that were already mentioned):

A Piece of Cake by Cupcake Brown
Another Bullshit Night in Suck City by Nick Flynn
Promiscuity by Kerry Cohen
Tweek by Nic Sheff
A Beautiful Boy by David Sheff
Some Girls: My Life in a Harem by Jullian Lauren
Expecting to Fly by Martha Tod Dudman
Running With Scissors by Augusten Burroughs
I’m Down by Mishna Wolfe
Scar Tissue by Anthony Kiedis (technically an autobio, but whatever)

Poems By A Horny Update & 1st Month Sales

Craigslist. That’s how this all started. By this, I’m referring to my fulfilling my lifelong dream of publishing a book! But I’m not sure if “fulfilling” is the right word. See, this book may never make it to my coffee table, this book may never make it to the shelf of a library, this book may very well remain trapped in a computer, never examined closely for any words between the lines, but rather scanned quickly and then forgotten perhaps without its tangibility serving as a reminder of its worth.

But I did it, I published a book. Surprisingly, I compiled the book in a little over one week! It started when I instinctively searched the Craigslist “jobs” section one morning. I like to look under “writing jobs” just for fun even though I am satisfied with the full-time job I already have. I came across the title “Looking to Publish a Book?” or something similar. I emailed the person, who turned out to be a man named Gordon from in Bend, Oregon, and directed him to my blog. Gordon called or emailed me back, I don’t recall, and told me about the Amazon Select Program, otherwise known as KDP or Kindle Direct Publishing. You’ve heard of it.

Gordon asked me how soon I could have a book ready. I told him that my memoir wasn’t completed yet (not sure that I would even take this route with the memoir) but that I was interested in compiling a book of poetry. “Great” he said, “when can you have it ready?”

I scanned my blog, journals, and stash of paper napkin poems for a theme. Relationships, that’s what kept coming up. Desperate poems. So be it, I thought, and started to make a list of poems that would go into the book. I quickly researched how to compile a book of poems and came up with a couple hard-fast rules: long poem, short poem, long poem, short poem (that’s so the reader doesn’t feel that all of the poems are the same) and, start with a strong poem, end with a strong poem, or meaningful poem, or whatever. There were some other rules too, but I like to keep poetry free.

I put together the draft, skipping the prologue, feeling like I had nothing to say that wasn’t already said in the poems themselves, or addressed in my bio at the end of the book. My boyfriend, Forrest, helped me design the book cover after I rejected the one the publisher’s “people” made which was of a cosmopolitan-looking woman sitting on a lazy boy in a field. No. When I sent the book in, cover and all, I worried, of course, that it wasn’t up to par (that was it? But I self-edited!?!) I was, however, left with a feeling of total control: I wrote the book, I edited the book, I designed the book cover, I even wrote the book description! Wow!

When it was all said and done, I posted the good news on my blog, my relatives posted the Amazon link on their Facebook pages, and I announced the book on Craigslist once or twice in the “artists” section. I also created a flyer but I haven’t distributed it yet (will a few flyers posted in Eugene really make a difference when the people who are downloading my book are from Afghanistan and Canada?) I still plan to put up the flyer–knowing it can bring in a sell or two–but otherwise, with the exception of rants like you are reading now, my work here is done. Gordon wants to know when I’m planning to submit another book for publishing, but I’d like to see how things go with Poems by a Horny first. Let me summarize for you my first month of sales:

I’ve sold 7 books (waa-waa-waaaa), however, on my free promotional days, I gave away 108 (yippie!) Gordon says the first month is always the worst for sales. We’ll have to just wait and see (what about momentum?)

The purpose of this post was to 1) Inform my 27 (I love you) readers about the success (in my opinion!) of Poems by a Horny Small-Town Gal, 2) Initiate discussion and provide information about KDP, as I know of at least a couple of people who are in the process of trying it out and, of course, 3) Promote my book Poems by a Horny Small-Town Gal.

Thanks for reading, I encourage comments especially regarding other authors and their experiences with Kindle Direct Publishing. Cheers.

Top Of The Tree

I’m remembering those girls from high school
No, not those girls,
the other ones
The few who were untouchable.
The girls who were so incredibly
beautiful the guys didn’t even talk about them
It was as if they weren’t even there.
The guys didn’t elbow each other, point and say,
Hey, look at her, it must be cold out today, haha,
She’s a human thermometer,
like they said about me
No, they kept their mouths shut about these ones,
Looked at them in secrecy

These girls were in theatre,
They hid behind books,
They had long, Rapunzel hair and wool
knee-high socks they wore in the
middle of the desert
These girls were my fantasy,
In fact sometimes I wondered if
I were the only one who could see them
as I watched the boys
chase cheerleaders, man-eaters,
and the football coach’s daughter

Weenies

You hire a man to landscape your yard
What do you have to show for?
What does he?
Forty bucks at the end of the day
You think he’ll walk his children past and point?
Look what daddy did
Daddy didn’t do that
Yes he did

as the motion light turns on

You have a party and the people
walk to the front door, impressed with
the Japanese yew and lovely yellow roses at their hips
You brush off their compliments, taking credit
by saying nothing
as the worker slithers back to
his apartment for a meal of mac n’ cheese n’ weenies

Help

Rage
More and more
Rage
Exposing itself
Black rage
Hanging in the air

I know the neighbors
can hear me
I wail and cry at night
They hear books,
coffee mugs,
milk jugs,
hitting the walls
They hear
my boyfriend’s big feet
shuffling, picking up after me
It only lasts a minute
But I know they hear it

When I see the neighbors
I’m all smiles and pleasantries
I know it isn’t fair,
to my boyfriend
to my neighbors
If only my walls
My Walls
weren’t so thin
If only I showed my
BLACKNESS
to the one who deserves it
If only I kept it to myself
It’s just that until now, I didn’t
have anyone to show it to
I’ve kept the blackness here inside
of me for    so     long     and I haven’t a clue
why it’s coming out now.
Do you?

Promo Day 5/15

Amazon.com is promoting my book, Poems by a Horny Small-Town Gal, by offering a “free day”. Readers can download the book at no cost on Tuesday, May 15th (that’s tomorrow!)

I will post a reminder announcement tomorrow. I encourage you to download the book and write a review! This is 2 of 5 promotional days. On the first promo day, 78 readers downloaded my book. I was delighted, of course, but I would love to see higher numbers this time around! Cheers!

Happy Mother’s Day, Dad

I love my father.

Over the past three years, as I’ve been writing my memoir, I’ve mentioned my father a great deal. My memoir is intended to be a father-daughter story after all. It’s too early to tell, as I look over the draft, if I’ve captured that or not. In fact I look at the draft and have a hard time seeing it for what it is: a book. All I see is my life looking back at me, but for the first time in the form of words and pictures and arrows. It’s still missing some of the best parts. It’s cut short, not yet complete. It’s so hard for me to tell if my father is there, if the reader can see him standing under the shade of a cedar tree, whispering prayers into the wind, looking over at his daughter with his bright blue eyes, sheepishly feeling into his pocket for his rusty sneak-a-toke. On Mother’s Day, I usually try to get in touch with my dad. He’s likely to be out in the woods but eventually he’ll hear my message wishing him a Happy Mother’s Day, dad.

It was just me and my dad living up on the river in that little red cabin. Around town, people always called me “Robby’s daughter”, as if that was enough. And it was. I didn’t need to be Terah. With my hair and skin tones mimicking my father’s, “Robby’s daughter” just worked.

People often told me how lucky I was. Lucky to be Robby’s daughter. My cousin Cevin, who was a year older than me, told me this once and I really listened because Cevin wasn’t the sensitive type. That day, I felt like he really wanted me to know just how good I had it. I felt like he wanted me to never forget that, that I had a good father. And, I haven’t Cevin, I haven’t forgotten it.

Cevin’s dad was locked up in a California state penitentiary. He got out at one point and I remember him running to meet Cevin at the front door, hoisting him into his big, prison-built arms and then, with Cevin in tow, climbing up to the top branches of a fir tree. He had just gotten out but I think he was already back on the drugs. Even my Dad didn’t climb to the top of a tree with a kid in his arms. Cevin’s dad was gone within a week and I remembered again what he had said about my dad and I felt for him. My dad would always just be Cevin’s uncle, never his dad. Nobody could ever be his dad but his dad. There were step-dad’s but they were all cuckoo.

My dad made mistakes. You’ll read all about ’em in the memoir. Some of those mistakes were downright chilling, I’m not gonna lie. But I’d like to take a moment to focus on all the good my father did for me, his only child:

1. Kept me after my mother left. He didn’t pawn me off on an aunt or try to track down my mom and give me back.

2. Found a good job to support us.

3. Joined a church in a desperate attempt to free us from the drug culture that surrounded our home.

4. Built us the little red cabin.

5. Took me baw-hawin’, hiking, beach-combing, and gold panning.

6. Never complained about his parents who both drank wayyyy too much and were highly neglectful to him and his siblings.

7. Never really complained about anyone.

8. Never hit me.

9. Answered questions I asked him as a child honestly.

10. Has always accepted me and allowed me to be myself, no matter how pathetic my self became.

I look forward to sharing more stories about my father, Robby, a dad whom I always call to wish a Happy Mother’s Day.

My father recently filled out a lengthy interview I sent him in the mail. I asked him to do this so that it might assist me in my memoir writing. I asked him all sorts of questions about what he remembers from his childhood, and what he remembers from mine. I asked him to talk about his marriages and his memory of a significant life-death experience he had at age 9. He filled it out and provided me many insights. He also stumbled upon an old journal of his that spans from his adolescent years to the year 2000–the year my father and I went our separate ways. He gave it to me. I was amazed when I read it, amazed that a 22 year-old boy (my dad nonetheless) would journal about the birth of his child, and falling in love. I’m hoping these words and memories he has recorded and provided me with will help me to better share with you the very essence of my father. My father is different.

Read My Book For Free!

Today, Saturday, May 5th, Poems By A Horny Small-Town Gal is 100% free for Kindle owners. This is 1 of 5 days that the book will be offered for free. The next free day is TBA. Download my little ditty today, at no cost, on Amazon.com.

Additionally, I invite you to read a book review of Poems by a Horny written by fellow WordPress.com blogger Zen and the Art of Borderline Maintenance. Thanks Zen!