Oxford Rogue--by Reb MacRath
The cover of my next book seemed appropriate...somehow.
LONG
MAY OXFORD R.I.P.
Oh
no, there I go again—where I swore I’d never swear I’d never go again. Time and
again I have said those same words. But be certain of one thing: I’ll never say
them of Oxford. The years I spent on that hallowed ground were the happiest
years of my life. Oxford transformed a quick-tempered, Fu-loving, potty-mouthed
Yank into a Classical scholar who learned to talk real pretty.
The
great change began one day when I was busy dusting the lonesome shelves of
Classics: Ovid, Tacitus, Horace, Virgil, Catullus…All so old and dead and dull.
Or so I thought. But on this day, after scanning one deathly drab version of
Ovid, I chanced on David R. Slavitt’s radical rendition. And I hollered, “Whoa,
there! This baby is alive!”
The man I’d once been left the building that
day. No longer did I skip off with the rest of my Rogue Scholars to shoot pool
at Stinky Bill’s or grab a drink at Hooters while we should have been on duty.
No! Those days were gone. And finding me became the great issue at Oxford. For I stole time in the same way that Butch
and Sundance once robbed banks. I needed time, and more time still, to read all
the different translations and learn why some worked and some did not. I hid
under my desk, in the bathroom, in the children’s or the cooking sections.
Hell, you could have found me anywhere I wasn’t meant to be. And my fellow
Rogues were my support team, texting me when anyone was after my Rogue butt.
I
wept like a child when dear Oxford closed and—
WHAT
THE HELL, somebody screams. OXFORD CLOSED? YOU IDIOT! THERE’S NO HOOTERS OR STINKY BILL’S ANYWHERE
NEAR OXFORD! CHILDREN’S AND COOKING SECTIONS?
Oh
wait. You thought I was talking about Oxford University? Oh, no, no, no. I
meant Atlanta’s Oxford Books—more simply known as Oxford—the great indie
bookstore that closed in ’97. I worked there as Fiction Manager.
RAINBOWING THE GRAY ZONE: A QUIZ
1)
On my Curriculum Vitae, can I say I
studied at Oxford?
Obviously,
no. Way outside the gray zone, this claim would be fraudulent and would
certainly backfire in time. And ‘I never meant Oxford U’ would make a pathetic defense.
2)
Must I always tell the truth?
What we do tell must be true. But we can still
rainbow the gray zone by deciding what we tell and how we present it.
Example 1:
in revamping my CV for Amazon, I list a successful practice as a freelance
journalist in Toronto, with a syndicated series. I omit the dates, which would
antiquate me. And I leave out the downbeat ratio: nine years of begging, one
year of success before I returned to the States. Nice and easy does it. Throw in book reviews done through the years, then make the scattered credits all seem to be cut from one
glorious cloth. A small trick of perception containing no lies.
Example 2:
My first book, The Suiting, was profiled in Success Magazine as well as The
Toronto Sun, the Atlanta Journal and several other papers. But, years before
The Suiting, I was profiled in the New York Times and the Toronto Star in
connection with my status then as stateless person. Rainbowing the gray zone, I piggyback with a clear conscience and claim: I’ve been profiled in Success,
The New York Times, The Toronto Sun, the Toronto Star, etc. Again, no need to
mention that the NYT and Toronto Star pieces were not about my book. After all, being featured in the NYT for anything is no mean achievement.
3)
What is this thing that you call Logan’s Gift?
John
Logan rainbowed the gray zone heroically last year with The Survival of Thomas
Ford. When this first of five novels that no one would buy became an online hit,
he listed the names of his other four books as proudly as if they’d been
published. In essence, Logan’s Gift declares that we really own our work when we
say it’s finished…not when a contract is signed. Now, many readers may assume
that JL’s other four titles were published. But in rainbowing the gray zone we
needn’t be saints. JL claimed nothing except artistic ownership. And if he
planted a small seed of subtle misdirection, I tip my hat and say a splendid
flower bloomed.
Caveat:
Thanks to Logan’s Gift, I was freed to claim my four books as Kelley Wilde and
the eight books I wrote in The Desert after 1993. I became not the failed
author of four books but the veteran author of twelve. Still, I am not free to
claim the thousands of poems I churned out in college when I first started to
write. Heck, I can’t even list The Sensuous Assassin, a disastrous early novel
based on The Happy Hooker...the three plays I wrote/directed/produced and starred in--all of those in college, running for one night apiece...or the 50 short stories I wrote before confessing I couldn't write stories. The line may be fine but it's simple enough: We're free to list works that were published or which are in the pipeline now for ebook publication. Anything less than that is an...untruth.
4) Can I use snippets of print quotes in a misleading way to convey a glowing impression?
Flat-out no. If the NYT referred to me as a 'struggling writer' and 'a stateless person whose case seems to be one with real promise', I cannot combine the two to get 'a writer with real promise'. If the XYZ Digest claims that my book is an absolute mess but one with flashes of originality intermixed with dazzling typos, I can't reconfigure that as 'Dazzling originality'. And if an ABC Monthly reporter who hasn't read my work refers to me as an eccentric with interesting opinions, I cannot quote 'Interesting!'
Flat-out no. If the NYT referred to me as a 'struggling writer' and 'a stateless person whose case seems to be one with real promise', I cannot combine the two to get 'a writer with real promise'. If the XYZ Digest claims that my book is an absolute mess but one with flashes of originality intermixed with dazzling typos, I can't reconfigure that as 'Dazzling originality'. And if an ABC Monthly reporter who hasn't read my work refers to me as an eccentric with interesting opinions, I cannot quote 'Interesting!'
REPRISE:
HOME SWEET HOME AT OXFORD
I’ll
always go back to Oxford, my Oxford, when the moon is the right shade of blue.
The day that I stopped slipping out to Stinky Bill’s or Hooters was the day I
became a real writer. While learning how dead languages, in skillful hands,
could live again, I began to understand that all writing is translation. And
the slivers of degrees in difference between shades of tone and sense either
raise or raze our work. This perception became my own great master key.
Well,
it’s one of two keys, actually. The other’s the awareness that the recipe for
happiness couldn’t be much simpler: don’t entertain second thoughts unless
they’re entertaining.
May
your Oxford entertain you as much as mine does me.
Comments
Wikipedia says this:Archer studied for three years, gaining an academic qualification in teaching awarded by the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education. The course was based at Brasenose College, Oxford, although Archer was never registered as an undergraduate student of the College. There have been claims that Archer provided false evidence of his academic qualifications, for instance the apparent citing of an American institution which was actually a bodybuilding club, in gaining admission to the course.[6][7] It is also alleged that he provided false statements about three non-existent A level passes and a US degree.[8] His website includes references to his Oxford 'Principal', yet omits that he was not a full undergraduate at Oxford.[9]
Good stuff, this internet, ain't it!