Our
first view of New Orleans came as we raced across the broad back of
Lake Pontchartrain. Its
crowded skyline glimmered in the late afternoon haze and from that
distance it looked like any other major American city.
As we drove in closer, however, through the outer suburbs and
up and over the ugly industrial canal, the city began to display those
exotic aspects of its character for which it is so famous--a
historic brick church with arches, spires and stained glass windows
crowded close to the raised interstate, rows of frame shotgun houses
shoehorned onto tiny lots, their facades enlivened by elaborate sawn
filigree work and flourishing palm and live oak trees.
We
were running late for a dinner party at the home of our New Orleans’
hosts, however, and Frank wasn’t about to slow down for sightseeing.
We hurtled deep into the town and exited.
Frank knows New Orleans well, and in short order we arrived at
our weekend headquarters, the home of Katherine Clark and Brandon
Dorion. Katherine is a
dear friend and an occasional reviewer for the Register’s Books
page. Charming and
elegant, she is an intellectual racehorse, with a bachelor’s degree
from Harvard and a Ph.D. in Southern literature from Emory.
She teaches English at Dillard University and has written an
acclaimed oral history of a black Alabama midwife, Motherwit
(1991). She is currently at work on an oral biography of Mobile’s
own Eugene Walter. Her
husband, Brandon, is from an old New Orleans family and practices
medicine. He is boyishly
good-looking, a connoisseur of fine wine and deeply knowledgeable of
New Orleans’ many attractions.
They live uptown in an 1890s Victorian house, a block away from
Audubon Park, and two blocks from St. Charles Avenue.
Throughout our stay I was charmed by the periodic soft metallic
clickety-click of the streetcars, faintly audible from inside the
house.
The
guests were already assembled, and welcomed us warmly.
They included writer Tom Uskali, like Katherine a Harvard grad,
his friend Charles Gillis, a developer with interests in the Bahamas,
Don Noble, sans his trademark goatee, an English professor at the
University of Alabama and the host of Alabama Public Television’s
Bookmark; and his companion, Jennifer Horne, a poet, a former editor
at Alabama Heritage magazine and now working at the University of
Alabama Press. Tom and
Charles live in New Orleans, while Don and Jennifer were in town to
see the Degas exhibit.
Dinner
was an enchanting candlelit affair with lots of good food and
conversation. Brandon had
prepared a heaping dish of jambalaya, and Tom had brought a deep bowl
full of blueberry cobbler. Seated
before these riches, our talk was free and easy.
Plying forks we spoke of Hemingway, the Bahamas, Cuba, and
academe and chuckled over our shared memories of Eugene Walter.
Katherine related how she had once asked Eugene the difference
between Mobile and New Orleans. "Darling,"
he had said, "Mobile is at sea level and New Orleans is below."
Not satisfied with plain geographical fact, she pressed him for
more. "New Orleans has
more black magic," he finally declared, "Mobile has more white
magic."
Don
and Jennifer shared tales of their travels around the world to sites
associated with Hemmingway. Don
is an authority on the great American novelist, and is one of the
founders of the International Hemmingway Society.
His animated and passionate description of Hemmingway’s
physical travails, war wounds, crash injuries and all the rest, was
fascinating and moving.
Throughout
the evening, general discussions with all participating would break
off into smaller eddies of conversation among two or three
guests-Tom and me on Gay Republicans, Don and Lynn on Kosovo, Frank
and Jennifer on Eugene Walter, Charles and Katherine on publishing,
Brandon and Charles and Tom on old times--which then swelled back into
a hearty chorus with all talking together.
It was an energetic and stimulating evening, with a love of
books and writing at its core.
Before
the party broke up, we compiled a list of bookstores to visit the
following day. Well into
the wee hours the guests departed and we stumbled reluctantly to bed.
As I drifted into slumber, my last thoughts were of live oak
trees and moss and water and starving poets and the clickety-click of
streetcars in the humid air.
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Morning
dawned thundery and humid. Brandon
and I took an early stroll through Audubon Park, green and muddy,
after which the others were awake, dressed and ready for our
explorations of the city’s bookstores.
Our first stop was Maple Street Bookshop, not far from the
Tulane campus. This store is housed in a somewhat fashionably
down-at-the-heels shotgun house, its porch cluttered with literary
posters and laminated articles about books and writers.
Both Katherine and Frank are listed on a roll of "local
authors" nailed to the property’s side fence.
Throughout our weekend, in fact, I discovered to my delight
that the New Orleans literati think of themselves as part of a
pan-Gulf literary society. There
is no condescension towards the authors in smaller communities along
the littoral, like Mobile and Pensacola.
Far from it: All are embraced and promoted.
Inside,
Maple Street Bookshop is a wonderful warren of book jammed rooms, the
shelves almost too tightly arranged to squeeze between. The owner was pressed and too busy to talk.
"Call me later in the week," she said.
As I turned away, I nearly bumped into a smiling Ellen
Gilchrist, who was browsing the store with her grandson.
Gilchrist divides her time between Arkansas and her native
Mississippi Gulf Coast, where she typically spends the summers.
We had a nice chat, and she expressed her pleasure at the
Register’s coverage of her last book, "Flights of Angels."
I asked her what she was working on now.
"I’ve just finished a book," she replied, "a novella
and five stories." She
grinned and added that one of the tales "is a bitter, ugly story
about Hollywood." She
also raved about a new mystery writer she had found, Tony Hillerman. "These discoveries usually happen in summer," she said.
After
departing Maple Street Bookshop, we drove over to Constantinople
Street and picked up an old friend of Frank’s, Wade Welch, a native
Alabamian "gone New Orleans," and a well-known cartoonist and
illustrator in his adopted city.
Wade had illustrated Frank’s novel a few years before and is
himself the author/illustrator of an outrageously funny book of
Louisiana anecdotes, Ballooning Alligators (1990).
On our way out to the car, Wade regaled us with the true and
fantastic tale: In 1858, as reported in the New Orleans Bee, a pair of
daring aeronauts soared over the French Quarter astride live, eleven
foot alligators suspended from balloons.
This seems proof enough that New Orleans’ particular brand of
lunacy is age old.
As
thunder rumbled and a few raindrops spattered the ground, we made our
way into the heart of the French Quarter to visit Faulkner House
Books, located on Pirate’s Alley opposite the rear garden of St.
Louis Cathedral. William
Faulkner lived here during the 1920s, and ran with a crowd of poets
and writers that included Sherwood Anderson.
He wrote his first novel here in 1926, Soldier’s Pay.
The store consists of one room with elegant, darkly stained
wooden shelves from floor to high ceiling.
Inside,
several patrons were clustered around the radio, listening to news of
John Kennedy, Jr.’s crash at sea.
The store’s owners had taken off for a weekend on the Alabama
coast, so I talked to the clerk, a pleasant young woman named Anne
Gisleson. "It’s a
great job," she said. "I
sit and read a lot of books." Faulkner
House specializes in high quality, signed, first editions of Southern
authors. Gisleson went on
to inform me that Faulkner House enjoys a "very loyal client base
from across the South." She
indicated that the Internet was not a serious problem for Faulkner
House Books, because most of their customers value the personal
attention and camaraderie to be found in small bookstores.
Before we departed, Frank and Wade signed a copy of Isle of
Joy, which was on display. One
of the owners of the store, Joseph DeSalvo, later e-mailed me some
information about his business. According
to DeSalvo, during 1998 Faulkner House Books sold 10,000 volumes and
grossed $250,000. DeSalvo
wrote that he expected a "moderate increase" this year.
"I feel very lucky to be doing what I love most in the
world," the message continued, "playing with books and making a
good living at it."
Our
last stop was Kaboom Books, located at 915 Barracks Street, opposite a
small and somewhat scruffy city park.
Kaboom is a secondhand bookshop owned by John Dillman, a former
construction worker. Dillman
has been in the used book business for over twenty years, and he holds
court, there is no other way to describe it, from behind his cash
register. "I enjoy the
social friction of buying and selling books," he told me.
Dillman’s store generates a great deal of friction with its
68,000 volumes on two and a half miles of shelving.
The prices are hard to beat: half the current cover price
"minus whatever flaws there are." Throughout our interview, Dillman fielded phone calls and
inquiries from customers with an easy confidence. "My customers are uniformly intelligent and interesting,"
he declared at one point. His
knowledge of literature is vast, and I would not be surprised if he
has read everything in his store.
Everyone
in our party found something wonderful in Kaboom: Frank the memoirs of
Arthur Koestler, Brandon some Balzac, Lynn a trove of children’s
books, Katherine a volume by native Mobilian William March with an
introduction by none other than Allister Cooke (turns out March was
one of his favorite authors), and myself some Henry James.
Despite the low-budget surroundings, concrete floors and
unpainted shelves, Kaboom Books and its garrulous proprietor hold
infinite delights for the bibliophile.
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By
the end of our expedition, I was cheered that the flourishing
independent book trade in New Orleans is yet another aspect of the
city that breaks the American mould.
As in the realms of food, music, and speech, New Orleans’
literary culture is a thing apart.
The city’s small bookstores have survived by aggressively
promoting local authors and bringing them in for readings and
signings, and by offering a stirring brio of culture and
"friction" not available on a computer screen or in a mall.
The Crescent City’s independent bookstores are as much about
civilization as they are about product.
As with so much else in New Orleans, that is something worth
celebrating.