My Favorite Racists: 1910 Fruitgum Company tribute band

As a Pollstar subscriber, I do get a lot of spam from smalltime labels and agents about their projects. I had never heard the 1968 novelty single “Indian Giver” until the agent, “Flashback Mgmt” out of Tampa, FL used “Indian Giver” as their email tag on Yahoo.

I could be wrong. I’m not indigenous, First World or Native American. And I do defend the use of the name “Nigger Jim” in Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”. But, over the course of 300 pages or half a million words, and thousands of ideas, it is revealed that Huck loves Jim and the name is authentic but does not encapsulate a racist hatred of Jim.

Here, you have no idea what these guys think beyond the fact that they don’t know jack shit about the value systems of the people who lived on this continent before their families got here, and that is okay to profit off of other people’s bigotry.

If this touring band played the Bay Area it would be picketed. I believe in the first amendment — you have the right to express your hate — short of threats of violence — but people will talk back.

Maybe they can re-write the hook. (Doubt it).

racist duches fro antoher dimension

fickle finger of fate says ‘fuck off!’

It seems they’ve never played anywhere but New Jersey and Staten Island.

Another comp: after Cat Stevens said he supported the fatwa and calls to murder the author of “Satanic Verses” Natalie Merchant and Ten Thousand Maniacs stopped playing their version of “Peace Train” — I actually wrote to their fan site and said the song could be independent of the author (who has since made a comeback).

There are a list of phrases in English that have dubious origins and are best deleted from polite speech.

Not sure its actually true but I did call out Cory Wohlbach the Palo Alto Council member about his use of the term “calling a spade a spade” — some say it is racist, some say gardening.

Again: racists speech is protected by First Amendment. But if you think of yourselves are artists or entertainers and your act is built on being callous or hurting others, be preparef for a backlash.

(See also: I have a project with Santa Clara visual artist and potter Jody Naranjo called The Pueblo Girls).

In the discussions I’ve found, on NPR for example, archived on internet on the phrase, I think it misses the point that native peoples had very different views on property. I took Michael Dorris’ class at Dartmouth.

Coinkydinky I think, I bought the new Louise Erdrich book, at Books Inc.

I have not heard from Mateo Romero in many moons, but he is the plaintiff for the suit challenging the trademark of the Washington football team.

This hardly goes here: but yesterday I reacted to a story about China censoring the Queen Biopic, “Bohemian Rhapsody” — I wrote a parody of “I’m in Love with My Car” I said:

I’m in love with my Czar/

Got a feel for my auto de feel.

which is nonsensical or insipird and plays on the facts of the Spanish Inquisiton and the auto de fe which is prove your faith or be tortured.

fuck yeah im jewish

in the age of chimpanzees I was a jew (and Beck Hanson despite being part of that mind control cult is also Jewish)

see also: The Negro Problem, The Chinkees.

Also: what does Ben Fong Torres think of that song? or Bonnie Simmons?

someone pointed out that the singer and keyboardist of the touring band are not original members.

I also found something about The Frogs “I’m White” song, and the suicide of a founding member (of a band that was on Homestead when Cosloy was there and the guy was eulogized on Matador site; if you write a racist song, that’s all you might be known for; also, I wanted to write something about the dancer and front man from The Prodigy Flinn I think who passed but came to feel that the backlash about his song was out of context. even the Kool Keith or Kool Herc or whoever original I was listening to and then appleloaded and is less offensvie in context.

I think PC can go too far, but how many people are you willing to offend for your so called art.

Another data point: I befriended a Totsi from Uganda and Belgium and then started tracing the song or dance “the watusi” and she said she was not at all offended.

I also clipped from Stanford Daily student pub there coverage of Trump announcing he is for First Amendment on campus: how can you claim to be pro First Amendment freedom of Speech yet you want to try journalists for treason? the trump “first amendment” campaign is pro-Right Wing.  Let Dinesh speak but stand up during the Q&A and tell him to fuck off.

I bought SpiderMan SpiderVerse and still think it is empowering to young people and people of color, I think.

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Unitas, Matte…Strausser

J0BC691F0-B7F5-4419-B240-A18B72C07752.jpegerry Sorenson mentioned to me that our mutual friend Chris Strausser had joined the Colts.

I sent the Colts webmaster a note about the fact that in 1981 Chris was co-offensive player of the year in the Santa Clara Valley Athletic League (SCVAL) with Jim Harbaugh. I thought of that apropos of the fact that Jim, who most consider a Bear, or a Wolverine, was also a Colt for a spell, in fact arguably his finest season (minus the gratuitous and grating “Jesus played a fine today, blocking out evil” stuff). 

Chris has been my friend since 7th grade. I remember him telling me about the difference between Palo Alto Pop Warner tackle football and the flag football most of his classmates were playing at Gunn (Aside, or digression: And I was circulating a photo of the 7th grade C Team from Terman — I weighed about 5’7, 105 — that showed me, Ross Eltherington, Greg Logan and Bill McGlashan, now famous for both his hedge funding acumen and for joking about photoshopping his son’s face on a actual high school kicking stud to fool college recruiters, this to a guy who had already pleaded out and was wearing a wire. (Flash to: the Wire, not to be confusing, takes place in Baltimore, but I’m getting word play head of myself).

Kudos to Strausser, I’m saying.

I would go to a game, home or away  — meaning Indy (never been), Oakland or Santa Clara. Actually I wouldn’t mind checking out the new Rams digs. Especially since they have four of my Dartmouth home boys on their front office. (That, and I had both Goff and Gurley on my fantasy team).

Which sent me fumbling but not flipping thru a box or two on my desk in my new man cave for Colts football cards. I was thinking “Tom Matte” and “Johnny Unitas” but forget where I had stored my vintage cards, the ones I retrieved somewhat recently – but before The Move — from my mother’s John Attig, so to speak (Gunn history teacher and longtime Palo Altan).

But instead a found a more recent lode of heroes including…um…Jack Troudeau — quarterback…something Something….a skill position guy…and That Guy that guy…likewise, probably touches the ball or defends the pass. 

Which begat a column idea pretty for from the Post — hey, Ghost to the Post — that’s Oakland versus Baltimore in a very exciting game from my youth, a playoff, with Dave Casper of Notre Dame scoring the winning touchdown from Stabler against the Bert Jones Colts. Actually my first GFL team was the Blue Oyster Colts. Not to Everlast jump around.

I do not have it straight and had to think about it a sec: 

The Colts moved from Baltimore to Indianapolis in 1984 or so.

The Browns moved to Baltimore.

A new team formed in Cleveland.

So, I read, after texting Chris something about meeting Tom Matte, that he and Unitas were disowning the Colts over the move. Confusing times, or very pomo. I wonder what happens if, in Cleveland or Baltimore someone is talking about the time Jim Brown ran over Mike Curtis. 

I recall and sometimes retell that my dad, the classic Libra, cut the Oakland patch off his Raiders knit cap —we were fans and attended about a dozen games 1974-1980. (Before jumping on the 49ers bandwagon, with Joe Montana, although we did some Steve DeBerg and Steve Spurrier, but not John Brodie). 

Tom Matte, of Ohio State and Cleveland area (like Chris Strausser, tho his dad went to and maybe played for Michigan – -he grew up liking Art Schilchter, speaking of buckeyed Colts, scored I read but would not have seem 3 touchdowns in the NFC Championship game, which landed him on cover of Sports Illustrated, which I think I’ve seen at the Old Pro. I hope Chris Strausser gets to meet both Art S and Tom M — he’s certain to meet Tom Rathman ex-49er and Cornhusker who is on the same staff of Frank Reich. 

And for the record, Bill McGlashan is innocent unless proven guilty and has the money to hire the attorneys who can beat the Feds. But I do say I was surprised to learn he had gotten into Princeton. The story was that when his family took a sabbatical of sorts to Israel, and his dad quit tech to co-found Beyond War that he said he decided to take school more seriously. And I recall that when Terry, TMW, and I went to Seatte to install her show at Wing Luke the Times had a feature on Bill McG and how hot his hedge fund was. So conceivable he made tens of milllions or more, and maybe that makes you think you are that much smarter than an admissions officer. (Especially the kind — in a completely unrelated story — or is it — take LSD then stab their friends). 

And this is a perfectly acceptable place to say, like Robert Reich in “Saving Capitalism” we should be taxing the endowments of Stanford, Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth, especially if we are using public funds to help clean up their admissions pr. 

So instead I have this big pile of trading cards on my table and one liners about each card, or some cognitive kibbutz. Kibbitz. 

And I never finish this type of post. I have a slew of unfinished or misleading “75 of my favorite Thoughts” posts.

I admit is kind of decadent to be eating $7 meatballs and $13 cocktail at a sidewalk cafe (Local Union 271 — not to be confused with Thinking Fellers Union 272 or 252).

Ray Sadecki,  Cardinals

Jim Harbeck, Colts

Albert Bentley, Cots RB, Miami, 27 touchdowns

Jack Trudeau, I want to say Purdue, (Illinois , I was confused by Jim Everett) 35 TDs thrown

Jerry Rice, 49ers 1991 Fleers, has a price tag that says $1.00, in a plastic sheath

Eugene Robinson, Seahawks

Matt Williams, 1990 Topps

Matt Williams, 1990 Topps I have two of them

Charlie Prosek Williams, the guy traded for Willie Mays, SPCA I mean SSPC — he was before his time otherwise his nickname would have been Prozac. Apparently he was born in Flushing, New York, near Mets Stadium, but presumably pre-dating such. 

Trevor Wilson

Donnell Nixon

Ken Oberkfell

Ernie Riles (2x)(no, 3x)

Don Robinson

Chris Speier, from Alameda, CA like Willie Stargell, who has a monument — so should Chris — aha, my next cause celebre, quite literally. And I recently bought the memoir of U.S. Rep Jackie Speier and determined that they are not related

(I was walking around with a stack of football and baseball trading cards and then forgot to finish this, but here it is as a draft..earlier today I wrote about Alan Eagle, the former voice of Dartmouth football, having written about former Columbia linebacker Bill Campbell. Bill’s brother Jim played two or three sports at Navy with Roger Staubach…anyhow, good luck to Chris Strausser of the Indy Colts)

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Did you mention that your childhood name was ‘Mac’?

Today I learned that my former Gunn and Dartmouth schoolmate Alan Eagle ‘83 has cowritten a book about the great Bill Campbell, “Coach”.   I’ve written a couple times briefly about Bill Campbell here based on our chance meeting the week he moved to California and I was selling cars at my father’s Cupertino lot.  Actually I semi-seriously sent a query to a literary contest about wanting to write about Coach, “the man who shaped five billion cell phones”.  I definitely talk him up, probably once every week or two it comes up; I love the part about people think Columbia sucks in football but when he was there they were champs;  I mean as a player not as a coach.  Or that his brother Jim “soupy” Campbell was arguably the better athlete and that there is a shrine to him at the Old Pro bar

Alan Eagle might still  be best known as the voice of Dartmouth football from the WDCR broadcasts, in those circles.

When I was visiting colleges with my father in the spring of 1981 Alan showed me around Dartmouth which sort of sealed the deal as  it was the only school I had an actual host.  We had hamburgers at his house, fraternity, I guess I didn’t realize I was invited to come back later for late night beers. I remember freshman year playing some basketball with he and his brothers including Michael Golub who works for the NBA but is not very tall.

I don’t really see Alan that much these days,  pretty rarely.  I remember seeing his name in the New York Times about the fact that he wouldn’t let his kids use computers even though he was a high-tech executive.

This is probably a little bit off the mark but my recollection of high school was that Alan was a little higher in the pecking order than Jon Rosenberg.  Rosenberg I think had a growth spurt after graduating and eventually became a  very good pick-up basketball player   I am pretty sure that after Alan got an MBA and worked for a few start -ups Jon recruited him for Google and they have worked together in communications for years which is why this book is not surprising. Stacey Savides between Mac and I at Gunn, the tennis champ, though #2 in her family, was another early Googler and now is an angel investor in pediatric dentistry— owns the candy store, the former Mini Mart behind Terman (now Fletcher) .

My Campbell stories are quaint and fairly trivial— I was certainly not a high-tech exec but I look forward to seeing Alan and gauging his reaction to my story.

In my 10 weeks selling cars – compared to my father doing so for 40 years – and my grandfather for 44 years* – I sold to Bill Campbell, Nolan Bushnell, Neil Brownstein, Curt and Carl Hatton —  Los Altos and Stanford intermural football legends. Neil was a classmate of Bill and when I told him the story we dug up the deal so that they could re-connect he got on the phone and said “Bill,  it’s Neil!”

“Last time I saw Campbell it was at the old Pro and I reminded him how we knew each other and I mentioned that the football coach Ben Parks had died and I thought there should be some kind of a tribute to him and he nodded but obviously he had a lot on his plate already and maybe knew he was dying himself  Ben Parks who used to run 50 laps and his 50th birthday

It’s possible that the very day I met Alan eagle known as Mac or Mack was in 1975 the day it snowed and Nathan Shedroff and Daniel Shedroff and I were in a snowball fight with Alan Eagle and Michael Brownrigg, the one running for assembly whose nickname was “Ferbs”.

I’m probably repeating myself from other posts here but Allen also was famous for writing little clips to sports illustrated in the one about when Maccabi swing the bat it was like the SF earthquake over again or that sing the swimsuit issue was like getting a letter from home   I followed suit years later by claiming that Sean Green was going to make me convert. Joc Pederson  almost has actually. Plus there’s something about Clay Kershaw iPhone interesting to watch his little hitch.  That plus the fact I first noticed it while sitting in dead mountains living room Dan who was once Terry is my neighbor and Dan who was the Howard Gossage award winner the year I really really wanted to be in advertising. I sent Jeff could be a mock award with goose Gossage.

 

I tried to fly like an eagle but instead read my story about Peking lame duck my friend. (“ i’m in love with my czar “).

The last time I saw a Mac was at a city of Palo Alto Tuesday night in the parks Tuesday not  Saturday do note  And they ended up selling his friend Sue or Debbie a share of my 49ers tickets before I eventually just Abandoned them.  Although I do have a pretty good offer to buy my way back in for a partial series this year.

Campbell worked on Wall Street, coached at Columbia, was at Kodiak and then came to Apple as a VP in marketing in 1983 the year eagle graduated from Dartmouth —he spun off to found Claris software and was also chairman of Intuit TurboTax before also coaching numerous CEOs.  Alcor in Lee Bullinger eulogized at his week which was at the old Pro and Phyllis and I watched from the sidewalk   I exchanged a greeting with gore as he hopped into his limo after his little speck.

I said “good luck sir “and he said “good luck to you “.

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Getty image of Alan Eagle at the 92Y posing with Joc Pederson maybe

* this cannot possibly be true but is apocryphal: my father sold cars from 1944 to 1988 and my grandfather and namesake Morton B Weiss sold from 1919 to 1963 each exactly 44 years! Or that’s my story and I’m sticking to it, in plastic alto.

edit to add, or NB:  our guest muse this morning is Alan and my fellow Dartmouth alumnus or alumna Keshia Naurana Badalge ‘14, The essayist and editor (she and Mac were both in the DAM authors column).

and1:

this calls to mind Hilleary Hoskinson the former lacrosse captain who co-wrote a book about Joe Montana and business strategy or mindset:

D3CFEF9F-D33B-4F38-A25C-BA3CBE436185.jpeg

Andand, weeks later: Mac, Jon and the Google CEO named Schmidt  we’re on the radio with my literature professor Dr. Michael Krasny and missed your cries many red part of my email on the air; John later rift off of it plugging “the old pro”. It was not a parent that Mac connected the dots back to me although how many people would he have known with Chevy dealerships in Cupertino? Here is an exciting vine mostly audio:

 

Holy quit digging!! Alan Eagle was also known in our circle for letters to Sports Illustrated; one was about how to a California boy in New Hampshire winter the swimsuit issue was like a letter from home; the other was something about Willie McCovey’s swing being like an earthquake.

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Chicken Katchadourian

BCF1A90B-1624-4CCF-94C1-2BC714877BD3.jpegServed medium rare

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I’m in love with my czar: Queen biopic recut as Peking lame duck

taking tiger mountain by force

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A special projector saves Chinese pure viewers from having to see Freddy Mercury below the waste; in the censored version the singer does not die of AIDS but retreats to a monastery where he is making progress on the Ream Men hypotheses.

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Marika Anthony-Shaw of Arcade Fire spoke at Pollstar about her activism

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Social change no strings attached

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Talking Cree in the crease

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Who owns Renty?

Screen Shot 2019-03-26 at 6.59.10 AM

The Laniers claim to be descendents of the Congolese man depicted in a 1850 daguerreotype owned and proliferated by Harvard, the $40 billion endowment college

edita:

Steal this book:

banta

Banta

b/w

Robert Johnson

rji’m not the one to talk

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pinetopperkins-mbw.jpgw

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‘Bemsha Swing’ by 86 different artists including Charlie Hunter, TJ Kirk and MMW– but I learned it from my then-client Jack Walrath, at the Octopus Lounge in Pacifica, on October 5, 2004

 

And I once wrote about it to a Penn grad student Bethany Klein, who apparently had different ideas of what is “our song”.bethanyklein

The song of course is by Thelonius Monk and Denzil Best. It’s a pigeon of “Bimshire”. Allmusic lists covers by 86 artists.

I actually, now that I think about it, wrote and heard back from Bethany five years later, nine years ago:

Ok, what’s weird, and drives me nuts about the internet and computers, is that my letter to Bethany popped up as I was seeking something else, and I tried to forward to myself at  top of heap, but it did not go thru and now I cannot find it at all, and does not pop up when I suss “bethany”.
Wired Magazine says that anyone who has run for public office here — as I have — three times — is likely being hacked by the Ruskies. If that explains it.
and:
Ok, it pops up again for “bemsha”.
But how do I get rid of the weird links?
Here’s the entire missive to Ms. Klein, who went on to Leeds.
mmwfrance

on the MMW website there’s an hour video of 2011 France; maybe I’m doing this as prep for my Wil Blades show!

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A short memoir about Louise Erdrich (occassioned by The New York Times Book Review section, interview with author and memoirist Laurie Halse Anderson)

BLUF: Six minutes into the Glenn Close Jon Pryce thingy about a fake Philip Roth and I sort of want to switch to the Fred Rogers doc while I make a pork stir fry for my wifey; the jumping (not humping) the bed thingy got to me. What about a list of movies about authors? And by the way the fake Gerhard Richter film “Never Look Away” is top notch!

tvisking

Earlier today i wrote a cheap post about Erdrich, based on the fact that I was reading the Times — but then updated because my wife had rented “The Wife” — get it?

 

1. Louise Erdrich and I are both alumni of Dartmouth College, she 10 years ahead of me;  in the years it was going co-ed.

2. I took a course from her husband, Michael Dorris, NAS 1 — I guess you have to be quite careful mentioning Dorris while discussing Erdrich; he was once her professor, too; they were married a number of years and raised many children together; he wrote a book on fetal alcohol syndrome, then a work of fiction that he said was aided greatly by her editorship, then cowrote with her another work of fiction that was famously optioned for big money by Hollywood but I don’t think ever produced; Yellow Raft, something about Columbus — unless that’s the director who optioned the film rights.

3. I am not sure if I’m using the term “memoir” correctly; yes, as David Shields suggests, when I write about Louise Erdrich I am writing about myself, but strictly speaking this seems more of an essay about her and less about me; notwithstanding the digression into MD.

4. I’ve probably covered this ground before, here in Plastic Alto;

5. When I was an assignment editor of The D, I rang her in nearby Claremont, New Hampshire and asked if we could send a writer by to chat her up and write about her books; his name was Rob Fields; he was a year ahead, but not really leadership of the newspaper — the ’85s were loaded; I think he was from South Carolina, unless I am confusing him with Adam Seesal; he did work at least briefly for a daily paper in a small city post-Hanover; nice guy, thin, smooth features. Handsome; Maybe we should for reference suss up his actual article. I think it was either sophomore summer or junior spring. So my memoir as it were would be limited to that phone call, which would have been less than 5 minutes in duration, and pro forma.

6. Louise has a sister in my class, maybe there were two sisters — Angie and Heidi. Heidi is now known as Heid E. Erdrich — I purchased two of her collections recently — poetry — but have not made much of a foray into their leaflettings

7. Famously, but not empirically, she has a book store Birchback in Minneapolis. I guess if you really wanted to interact you could maybe call there. (I have or had a cousin or the ex-wife of a cousin, RR, who lives in St. Paul and rich memories of visits there, starting with their wedding, to MB, at the Walker, or the reception and dance was. I later visited a friend of theirs, a agricultural activist, named BB, in Chapel Hill area. She gave me a raki massage, I think. I remember straining my shoulder while playing soccer, goalie, right before that trip. I took Amtrak to Raleigh and flew back; there was also a millinery fashion show, for a artist named Mary Michele Little. Unless I am conflating. Beyond digressing

8. Laurie Halse Anderson, according to the Times, has a memoir “Shout” and says on page 6 of the section that Louise would be the first guest at a hypothetical and mythical dinner party, with  Phyllis Wheatley I don’t know and Emily Dickinson. (I’m a horrible person but I — while fact-checking the spelling of that poet — came up with a dirty male-centric slur, then flashed to Joan Didion, whom we read, or some of them, at least, in Lynn Stegner’s recent great — “late great” — class at Stanford on memoir. Speaking of “Slouching to Bedlam” my Sparta pants hand held likes to suggest “Bethlehem” for the name of my synagogue which is “Beth Am” means “House Of The People”.

9. Like Louise Erdrich, Lynn Stegner both married her teacher and has now buried her husband. (OK I admit that’s a little bit sharp; Page Stegner died about a year ago at age 80; Dorris took his own life in 1990 at age 52

10. This came up partly because my wife, TMW, Terry Acebo Davis the artist and arts commissioner, saw a movie about Glenn Close playing a wife who ghost-wrote her fictional husband’s Nobel Prize-winnning work. At Left Bank, last night — between bites of: duck, rice, wild rice rather, french fries, with truffle and cheese, ketchup, some red wine, pinot, from Santa Barbara area but that’s not the precise area, escargot which they called “escargots” sic on the bill at least — more Terry’s thing than mine; green salad which Hugo the waiter bartender did not recognize as a cognate to “Salad Vert” — okay maybe that is “true salad” — as compared to “word salad” a term I used about an hour ago while chatting up a chance new acquaintance named Tim Steele of Stanford athletics alumni, who is about 80 and has a dog that Duffy barked at, but sparking the meeting — at the loss of half a bran muffin — long story — and this guy went by saying “Steve Jobs is Jewish….” and I said that when Greg Scharff and Karen Holman and Liz Kniss were stepping ceremoniously down from council I was going to give a benediction or memoir or little speak– sic — something about Greg and basketball, Karen and dogs and Liz and maybe hula, but that same guy spoke before me and I got cold feet because I thought they would mistake this kind of thing — shaggy dog — self-possessed — rambling- not weel edited –for actual thought disturbances or illness — unless he’s an all/ world method actor like a charactor out of Tom Robbins is it Skinny Legs and All, the guy who spins very slowly near world trade center and people see him as standing still — not Another Roadside Attraction  I don’t think, Or Beet Juice is it — compared to LE’s “The Beet Queen” as compared to Lew Welch, Joyce Johnson, Jack Kerouac, Lawrence Ferlinghetti (100!); some green beans; I also thought of “zydeco” but that’s just me. My juice. My tea.

11. Mateo Romero — I was just semi-describing to someone calling himself “Indian Giver” and an agent for has been bands — is a Dartmouth contemporary, a father, husband, activist, painter — I think we are friends at least I’m his collector — the last few calls have gone unreturned and unanswered — and he once wrote a group email with Louise’s apparent address. I wrote her three times, semi-seriously and she never responded.

12. Also the recent DAM has a list of top 40 or so all time Dartmouth thinkers in 250 years (1769-2019) and Louise Erdrich is #14 or so and the top distaff if that’s a word.

So to sum up:

I called her once and chatted for five minutes to set up an inverview for someone else.

I sent her two emails that were not responded to (I sent her two emails to which she has not responded, something out over which I refuse to freak).

Lynn Stegner is not obligated to respond to this, and was never oblligated to respond to such but nicely did.

Maybe I am just jerk enough to send this to Louise. (i.e. strike 3)

Better would be to read more Erdrichs’s of every stripe or ACGT.

Lynn stressed I should wipe out all the “atdual”s et al. (My spelling of “actual” that I let me published in first draft

But who else has compared Lynn/Page to Louise/Michael? (or was prompted by Glenn Close let alone Laurie Halse Anderson: I will edita to describe slightly better-like “Shout”.

I was writing someone earlier about giving Maya Ford of The Donnas “Rat Girl” by Kristin Hirsch

edit to add: Dartmouth alumni magazine recently named Erdrich #13 most influential alumnus in the 250 year history of the college. To wit:

Erdrich arrived auspiciously at Dartmouth in red cowboy boots as a member of its first coed class and first modern indigenous cohort, and she graduated in a pair of refurbished moccasins. She worked odd jobs—waiting tables, editing a newspaper, teaching poetry to inmates—while establishing herself as a poet, then as a short story writer, and, finally, in 1984 as a bestselling author with her debut novel Love Medicine, whose “beauty…keeps us from being devastated by its power,” raved Toni Morrison.

Erdrich’s stories blend the hyper-realistic with the mystical and the apocalyptic with the mundane to remind readers how bizarre reality can be. In her universe, a violin lost for decades washes ashore in an abandoned canoe. A woman enters into a marriage pact with a lake spirit. Her recurring characters—Indian boarding school survivors, German immigrants, and veterans-turned-priests—draw on shared memories and ancestral geography, and each new chapter in her saga feels bracingly original and brutally since.

2. “Shout” it turns out is about sexual violence. I found and semi-circulated a link to a Times story, to some of fellow writers from the Stegner class.

3 as proven in the following graphic Dorris was indeed 52 at the time of his 1997 death. With 6 children.

 

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