Art by Dr. Seuss--they soon forgot who had a star on their belly and who didn't.
Before I met my woman of the day, I ran the gamut of Books, Publishers, and Journals at the AWP (American Writers and Publishers
Conference and Book fair) located in Portland Oregon.
I wanted to meet my publisher so I preregistered
for the conference, and come Thursday morning I got my butt out of bed, and
into the car and drove the hour and a half to Portland—that with two stops took
three hours.
When I got to the Regal Publishing table the number of which had been sent to me, she was not there.
She was busy getting a book out and
sent her cohorts instead.
She was on the East Coast, I was in
the West.
Rats.
Oh well, no problem, I was here for
some reason and happy that she is so conscientious and on target in getting her
books out—mine will be happening in May. I love that woman.
And then I saw something that lightened
my heart and gave me a good chuckle. A creative soul had tacked a huge sign
behind their booth. “Come share your meniscus injury with us.”
Until a few
months ago, I wouldn’t have known what a meniscus
was. When mine folded over and tore into bits it gave me a good reason to learn about it. The meniscus is the cartilage pad in the joint of the knee.
The publisher said a
meniscus tear is common in
writers.
Really?
Maybe we sit too long at a computer, abruptly stand, and whamo, a crunch. I don’t know what causes that
cartilage to slip from its joint, sometimes it’s an athletic injury,
sometimes age, sometimes arthritis, maybe a lightning bolt from the sky.
Whatever their cause, their sign got
my attention.
Another vendor said to give them a
magic act—I don’t remember what they would pay in return. (I'm sure it wasn't a publishing contract.)
As I walked the aisles of AWP where
writers displayed their books, publishers advertised themselves, one thing
surprised me—that Universities were promoting their journals and their MFA programs.
(Masters of Fine Arts in Writing.)
MFA’s were another thing I didn’t know
about until recently when I read an article titled, “Will an MFA get you
published?’
The answer: Not necessarily, but it will make you $19,000
to $48,000 poorer.
Oh my.
That rather colored my decision not
to stay for the keynote address that night, as it was sponsored by the Oregon
State University’s MFA in Creative Writing.
The speaker might have been
wonderful. But I’m sure he wasn’t a Bill Clinton.
You see I attended such a Book Fair
the year Bill Clinton’s book, My Life,
came out. And that masterful speaker gave the keynote address. He spoke about
writing his book, and was motivational. I
remember him saying that his publisher admonished him, “Bill, you don’t have to
mention every person you have ever met in your book.”
Okay, back to the AWP floor:
I walked along dousing the people and
the vendors. You know what I mean by dousing, you are attracted to this one,
that one, to certain people, not so much with others. I was drawn to a
live-wire beautiful young woman promoting her book, To Black Parents Visiting Earth.
I so believed in (author) Janet Stickmon’s,
premise, “If black parents from outer space visited earth what advice would she
give them?” I bought her book on the spot.
When my legs felt like rubber from
all the walking I sat and began to read her book. When I read this, “To Black parents planning to visit Earth, it is not safe for you to come
here. Now now.” My heart sank, I wanted to go back, find her booth, hug her
and ask if she felt safe.”
Alas, I missed my chance, so I will
write to her, and write a good review on Amazon.
I have said,
that if I were Black I would be afraid to walk down the street by myself, and here was a woman
affirming my fears.
She told the story of her husband seeing a little black boy about twelve get his
face slammed to the ground when his skateboard slipped from beneath him and hit the rear passenger tire of a police car. Her
husband went over to the officers attempting to explain that it was an
accident. One officer asked, if he, “wanted some,” and unbuttoned the holster
to his pistol. Luckily two more officers approached, and one knew her husband.
All ended well for her husband and the boy.
Except that night, she, her husband,
and little daughter stood in their home holding each other and crying thankful
that Daddy was still alive.
I want to quote her for she is an astounding woman.
“I want Baby girl—my firecracker, my spark plug” wrote Stickmon, “to
continue being the compassionate, talkative ,quick-witted, feisty, funny, smart
child that she’s always been. Thought we’re not experts. I think my husband and
I are doing a great job making this happen, especially considering all we’ve
exposed her to, all the conversations we’ve had, and all the laughs we’ve
shared.
“But I must admit that I’m tired. Molding counterhegemonic armour for a
6-year-old child, making sure it is small and light enough for her to wear, is
some kind of sick, warped task Black parents perform daily without exploding.
Meanwhile, the white world remains clueless about how our time is spent. There
are many hours in my day when I resent the burden of this task. But I will
continue to do it for my daughter’s protection, especially if it means my work
will preserve her silly laugh and bright eyes.”
And then OMG I was hit again with her fears. She explained
that with the Obama administration she felt that great strides had been taken,
and she enumerates them, but when Trump was elected she felt betrayed like a
slap in the face.
But more than she feared Trump, she
feared his supporters. People that had been hating silently were now given
permission to hate publicly.
She wondered why her tax dollars
should go to a country that allows a sexist, Islamophobic, KKK-endorsed raciest,
one who wants to build a wall between the US and Mexico to stop illegal
immigration, who thinks climate change is a hoax made up by the Chinese, to become
president of the United States.
The Dr. Seuss's characters are from the book The Sneeches, where the Sneeches with stars on the bellies thought they were the best Sneeches on the beaches, but soon an enterprising entrepreneur put stars of the bellies of the ones without. Then the ones with stars had them removed. Soon nobody knew who started with stars and who ended with them. The entrepreneur left with their money, and The Sneeches got it, that it made no difference whether they had stars on their bellies or not.
The Dr. Seuss's characters are from the book The Sneeches, where the Sneeches with stars on the bellies thought they were the best Sneeches on the beaches, but soon an enterprising entrepreneur put stars of the bellies of the ones without. Then the ones with stars had them removed. Soon nobody knew who started with stars and who ended with them. The entrepreneur left with their money, and The Sneeches got it, that it made no difference whether they had stars on their bellies or not.