Biography:
What's below was published in Contemporary
Authors, Vol. 210 (2003), 121-138. I wrote
it at the beginning of 2003:
A Writer in Spite of Myself
“
You should call it ‘A Writer in Spite
of Himself,’” said my current
therapist – my seventh since I was
a teenager – of this autobiographical
essay. “You know, like Moliere’s
A Doctor in Spite of Himself. Tell how
despite your distractions and your self-doubts,
your lack of confidence and your extreme
self-consciousness – your mishigass,
as we say in New York – you managed
to become and remain a writer.”
We were sitting
in Dr. Koncsol’s
office of The Psych Team in Davie, Florida,
and I had been telling him how I had this
mass (and mess) of “and then this
happened, and then this happened” material
but my that essay needed a theme.
I had been thinking
of calling it “Travels
of an Agoraphobic” – after
a book by another neurotic, Oscar Levant’s
Memoirs of an Amnesiac, because in many
ways I am still that anxiety-ridden 17-year-old
who barely left his room for a year.
But perhaps my
therapist’s idea
is better than mine. After all, his title
does come closer to the sensibility of
the self-conscious fiction I write, about
the impossibility and desperate necessity
of telling stories and the overriding fear
that I’m not going to get it right.
I was born Richard Arnold Ginsberg in
Brooklyn on June 4, 1951, two years after
my parents, Marilyn and Daniel, had married.
When I was six months old, Mom and Dad
changed our Jewish last name to the ethnically
neutral Grayson.
My parents had
met as teenagers in the bungalows of
Rockaway Beach, Queens, where
their parents were summer neighbors and
friends. My grandparents – Nathan
and Sylvia Ginsberg, Herbert and Ethel
Sarrett – had spent most of their
lives in Brooklyn, but all had been born
in the shtetls of Eastern Europe and had
immigrated as children.
Both sets of grandparents
had known each other a long time; as
a boy, Grandpa Herb
lived with his family next door to the
family of Grandma Sylvia, many years before
they would become machetunim (Yiddish for “co-parents-in-law”).
When I was born, my mother was 20, my
father 24, and my grandparents in their
forties.
As the psychologist who interviewed me
at 15 said, first memories are often unreliable
but revealing. My first memory, I told
Dr. Machover, was being held up to the
window and watching cars go by on Ocean
Parkway. I guessed that meant I saw myself
as an observer.
A story my mother tells:
When I was two,
Mom left me alone with the TV on in our
apartment’s “front
room.” She returned to find the word
Tide written in crayon on a piece of construction
paper.
“What’s that?” Mom
asked, startled.
“It’s Tide,” I said. “I
saw it on TV.” I had copied the word
from a commercial for the detergent.
My mother read to me constantly, mostly
little Golden Books like The Tawny, Scrawny
Lion. I would make her read them aloud
over and over until I could interrupt her
and recite the rest of the story from memory.
A neighbor who
was a first-grade teacher brought me
schoolbooks, and somehow I taught
myself to read – or so I was told.
I loved books
and was crazy about maps. My Uncle Matt
Sarrett had given me his
boyhood set of the Britannica Junior Encyclopedia
and a world atlas as big as I was –an
edition published during World War II which
featured a large Nazi Germany which took
up much of central Europe.
I memorized the capitals of the 48 states
and then foreign countries. In restaurants,
Grandpa Herb would show off my talents
to the other diners. He wanted me to go
on the kid quiz show Take a Giant Step,
but I was too nervous.
I was always “nervous.” I
was afraid of school, traveling, dentists,
swimming, vomiting, bridges, airplanes,
suffocation, and getting up on stage. My
problem with anxiety is probably partly
genetic, and partly a result of my overprotective
family. It resulted in a fearful childhood,
panic attacks and agoraphobia in adolescence,
and a diagnosis of generalized anxiety
disorder when I was almost 50.
In the fall of
2000, the nurse-practitioner in Arizona
who diagnosed me said, “I
think you’ve had this your whole
life.”
My two brothers are Marc, born in 1955,
and Jonathan, born in 1961.
Since coming to
America at the start of the twentieth
century, our family had worked
in New York’s garment industry. My
father and Grandpa Nat owned Art Pants
Company, manufacturers of men’s dress
slacks. My maternal grandparents met in
an underwear factory where Grandpa Herb
was the foreman and Grandma Ethel sewed.
My great-grandfather Max Shapiro was a
furrier; my great-uncle Harry Ginsberg
manufactured men’s clothes; and my
first job as a teenager was in The Slack
Bar, a downtown Brooklyn pants store owned
by Uncle Matt and his father-in-law, where
Grandpa Herb worked as a tailor.
We spent summers in at the beach in Rockaway
bungalow colonies, where within one block
I could find all four grandparents, my
step-great-grandmother, several sets of
great-aunts and great-uncles, and various
in-laws of other relatives. After the bungalows
were torn down in 1968, my grandparents
moved from their apartments in Brooklyn
to oceanfront high-rises in another part
of Rockaway, across the street from one
another.
In 1957, my parents
moved us to a small, newly-built brick
row house on East 56th
Street and Avenue O, where we’d stay
for the next 22 years. In 1970, New York
City’s first enclosed shopping center,
Kings Plaza, opened a few blocks away,
and our mostly Italian and Jewish neighborhood
took the name of the mall. My mother worked
there, in The Pants Set, a women’s
clothing store owned by Dad and Uncle Matt.
I went to New
York public schools, first P.S. 244,
then P.S. 203 and Junior High
School 285, where I was in the SPE (Special
Progress Enrichment) program. I met my
friend Linda Konner, an author and literary
agent, in second grade, and we were in
the same classes through our graduation
from Midwood High School in 1968, except
for tenth grade, which I spent at a private
school on Manhattan’s Upper West
Side. Nearly always the shortest boy in
the class, I was considered a gifted student – besting
sixth-graders in geography quizzes when
I was in kindergarten, reading at a tenth-grade
level at age 7, writing a 70-page research
paper in ninth grade – until my emotional
problems caused my marks to slip into the
high 80s.
When I was 15,
I began having severe panic attacks daily.
I would get nauseated, my
heart would beat wildly, I’d sweat
and shake and feel like the world was ending.
The term “panic disorder” was
not then known, but I realized that my
problem was psychological, so I asked my
parents if I could see a psychiatrist.
In the late 1960s,
anxiety disorders and depression were
rarely treated with medication;
instead, psychoanalysis was the norm. Although
I learned a lot about myself in sessions
with Dr. Lippman, my panic attacks kept
getting worse and more frequent. I soon
began avoiding going out in public and
skipped events like family weddings and
my own high school graduation. The traumatic
national events of my last year at Midwood
H.S. – the turmoil of the Vietnam
war, the assassinations of my heroes Martin
Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy – only
made things harder.
I had been accepted
to Brooklyn College, which then had free
tuition like all City
University of New York campuses. I never
considered going anywhere else. I knew
I could not leave my parents’ home,
and BC seemed as safe as any college could
be, since I walked through its campus on
my way to high school.
But as it turned
out, I couldn’t
even handle BC. In late August, after watching
antiwar protestors get beaten in the streets
of Chicago during the 1968 Democratic convention,
I was unable to sleep for days and began
to shake uncontrollably. Mom called my
pediatrician, who made a house call and
prescribed the tranquilizer Librium.
A couple of weeks
later, on the first day of classes, I
just couldn’t face
the nausea and panic I knew I’d have
to endure, and I told my parents that I
wasn’t well enough to go to college.
I then entered a period where I gradually
cut myself from the world. I stopped taking
phone calls from friends, as I was too
ashamed to tell anyone about my panic disorder.
My agoraphobia got more severe as winter
came and I rarely left the house. Yet even
the safety of my little bedroom didn’t
stop the panic attacks from occurring several
times a day. My main refuge from anxiety
was reading.
I had always loved
books. Starting when I was about 9, I
began collecting a huge
number of paperbacks, which were then available
for 25 or 50 cents. On my birthdays my
parents would give me $20, which I’d
take to a bookstore and buy an armful of
Bantam and Signet and Pocket Books. I read
voraciously – everything from books
about psychology and history to trashy
potboilers to classic literary works to
American fiction writers I idolized: Salinger,
Roth, Pynchon, Vonnegut, Updike, Mailer,
Malamud, Bellow, Cheever, Baldwin, Vidal,
Flannery O’Connor, John Rechy, Carson
McCullers.
I also was a big
fan of superhero comic books. I proudly
possessed the early issues
of Justice League of America, Green Lantern,
Spider-Man, and Daredevil. At 11, I would
pretend to be The Flash – Fastest
Man Alive – as I bicycled around
the neighborhood, playing hooky from Hebrew
school. (The one kind of reading I did
not like was in Hebrew, since we were not
given the English translations for the
prayers we had to recite. Reading without
meaning seemed totally pointless, especially
since I was an atheist like Grandpa Herb).
By the end of high school, I outgrew comics,
and Mom threw out my carefully catalogued
collection. I held on to the paperbacks
and the hardcovers from the Book-of-the-Month
Club and The Literary Guild.
I also adored
movies and plays, but my panic attacks
eventually stopped me from
going to theaters. One of the last films
I went to see before that time was Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the adaptation
of Edward Albee’s drama. The movie
was considered so “adult” that
even in those pre-rating days Dad needed
to accompany me to the Canarsie Theater.
Housebound by
agoraphobia, I was forced to get my dose
of dramatic narrative from
TV. Starting in junior high, I got caught
up in the convoluted plots of soap operas,
which have remained a guilty pleasure.
I have watched some daytime dramas for
over 30 years, and as a teenager I developed
the theory that these slow-moving shows
were the form of narrative that most closely
resembled real life – except, perhaps,
for the diary.
My panic attacks
reached a crescendo in February 1969,
and Mom insisted that my
psychiatrist prescribe some medication.
Although at the time it seemed a coincidence,
Triavil – a combination of a tricyclic
antidepressant and a tranquilizer – slowly
helped relieve the anxiety. As spring approached,
I started going out little by little. I
still had panic attacks, but every day
I would force myself to ride buses and
then subways, seeing how far I could go
before anxiety overwhelmed me. Eventually
I could go all the way to Manhattan.
By summer, soon
after my 18th birthday – when
I had to register for the draft – I
was well enough to start college. It was
as if I had been re-hatched into a world
that was new and exciting in the summer
of Woodstock and the Stonewall riot.
Not only did I get an A in Political Science
that summer, but I worked in New York Mayor
John Lindsay’s re-election campaign
and in the Manhattan headquarters of the
Vietnam War Moratorium Committee. I saw
plays like The Boys in the Band, The Indian
Wants the Bronx, and The Toilet. I went
to movies like Easy Rider, Alice’s
Restaurant and Midnight Cowboy. I discovered
Greenwich Village and psychedelic music
and love beads and incense. I read Ramparts,
The Village Voice, and The East Village
Other. My hair grew long and I hung out
with hippies by the fountain in Washington
Square Park. I got my driver’s license
and explored New York’s art museums
and parks. A 23-year-old guy from the neighborhood
fell in love with me. I wore fringed vests
and tie-dyed shirts and a pair of bellbottom
pants that my parents got for me on London’s
Carnaby Street. I was still something of
a nervous wreck, but even that seemed normal
and maybe something to be proud of in the
summer of ’69.
Of all the new things I did that summer,
maybe the most important was to start a
writing habit that would last a lifetime.
On Friday, August 8, 1969, I went with
Jeanette, the 8-year-old daughter of our
Haitian cleaning woman, Jusele Feron, to
watch a young street theater group perform
on the BC campus. As we walked back to
Flatbush Avenue, I saw a red, book-like
1969 diary on sale at a college bookstore.
Because the year was more than half over,
it was cheap.
That evening,
over a cup of tea, I wrote my first diary
entry, and I also went back
over the first seven days of August and
wrote what had happened on those days and
how I had felt about it. For over a third
of a century, I’ve been writing daily
diary entries in the same format. The diary
company has changed hands several times,
but the product is still basically the
same one it was in 1969.
For me, what’s neat about the diary
is that I’m able to go back to any
day and see what happened then and what
I was feeling. Sometimes I use the diary
to work out ideas for stories and article
ideas, though I usually use notebooks,
and more recently, computer files, for
that purpose. In 1980, I experimented for
a while writing my diary entries in the
third person (“Grayson walked across
Miami Gardens Drive to Grandma Sylvia’s
car; he loved being in Florida in January”),
but mostly I’ve kept pretty much
to the style (or lack thereof) I had in
1969. Although I wince at some of the observations
of my 18-year-old or 25-year-old or 42-year-old
selves, the artless, spontaneous writing
in the diaries has been an important part
of my life. Currently I store the diaries – now
totaling over six million words – in
boxes in the walk-in closet in my parents’ house
in Arizona. I will eventually use them
as reference material for a series of memoirs.
It took me a while
to adjust to Brooklyn College, but by
the end of my freshman
year in the spring of 1970, I had gotten
involved with student government and the
newspaper. When the Cambodia invasion and
the killings of student protestors at Kent
State University led to a nationwide student
strike, we took over the BC campus, ending
the semester prematurely and staging a
series of teach-ins and “liberation
classes” about the war in Southeast
Asia, feminism, racism, and the capitalist
system. Things petered out as summer approached
and students fled to the beach and cheap
trips to Europe. Of course, my phobias
prevented me from taking my backpack across
the Atlantic, so I stayed in summer school
that year.
At BC I met many of the people who would
become my lifelong friends. Although it
was a commuter school with no dormitories,
I spent most of the day hanging out in
LaGuardia Hall with other students who
were active in politics, journalism, and
cultural affairs.
For the first
time since junior high school, I had
peers with whom I shared nearly everything – from
my panic attacks to my desire to be a writer,
from tips on how to fail the draft physical
(a letter from the psychiatrist did the
trick for me) to the marijuana we passed
around at gatherings like the Flat Earth
Party, the Safari Awards, and the J. Edgar
Hoover Death Celebration. (Alcohol was
not a big part of our socializing, and
I’ve always been a teetotaler.)
While I learned
a lot and got good grades in my undergraduate
classes, the more important
discoveries I made involved my relationships
with my fellow students and that my peculiarities
were welcome among a community for whom
the word “freak” was a high
compliment. Although I knew I was mostly
attracted to other guys, I found myself
in deep relationships with women – some
as close friends, but others as girlfriends
who didn’t mind having a bisexual
boyfriend as long as he was monogamous,
which I was.
A breakup with
a girlfriend at the beginning of my junior
year put me into a funk – she
left me for a friend she married a few
months later (he, too, would later turn
out to be gay) – but I eventually
recovered from adolescent melancholy and
began dating other people. In my senior
year started seeing a girl I had been friends
with for a while; we dated for two years
before going back to being just friends.
Like many of the
people I hung out with in LaGuardia Hall,
Randy is still very
much in my life – along with her
husband and children. Luckily, my college
friends have never given me too much flak
for appropriating events in their lives
for my fiction. To them, I was “Richie
the writer” even before I’d
published a single word.
When I was in
high school, plays seemed easier to write
than fiction because I
didn’t have to deal with long passages
of description. My stories have never been
heavy on description of people and places.
Rarely do I say what my fictional characters
look like. Except for some stage directions,
plays were pure dialogue and easier for
me to write.
Most of my teenage
plays were outright homages to Albee.
A long one-act play I
wrote at 15, Have You Seen Grandma Since
She Got Rich?, featured a vulgar old lady – nothing
like my beloved but prudish Grandma Sylvia
and Grandma Ethel – and her teenaged
granddaughter and grandson, the latter
a vaguely effeminate intellectual. As a
college senior in 1973, I submitted the
play to the Ottillie Grebanier Drama Award
competition and won first prize and a $150
check. Jack Gelber, the playwright/professor
who judged the contest, said I should think
about getting the play workshopped somewhere,
but I assumed he was only being polite,
and somehow I ended up throwing out my
only manuscript. Other plays I wrote as
a teenager were based on my dreams or on
exaggerations of my family life – with
sons who were afraid to leave the bathroom,
parents who installed velvet ropes so that
no one could come in their living rooms.
By the time I
got to college, I had pretty much abandoned
writing plays for fiction.
In my freshman and sophomore years, I wrote
a series of representational short stories
about an extended family in Brooklyn, which
were mostly autobiographical and mostly
awful. Only one story remains from that
group: “Reflections on A Village
Rosh Hashona 1969,” an early version
of which appeared in Brooklyn College’s
undergraduate literary magazine at the
end of my freshman year. Later, I revised
it, and after garnering 24 rejections,
it appeared in the London-based Transatlantic
Review. It was the only undergraduate story
in which I managed to attain an anecdotal,
conversational, rambling style that was
not dead on the page.
When I took my
first creative writing class in college,
I was so nervous about
the class’s reaction to my work that
I made sure I was absent on the day when
the class was to go over my story. I later
found out that the reactions had been generally
positive, and my professor, Saul Galin,
urged me to continue with creative writing
courses.
Although I remained
a Political Science major, I was soon
taking more literature
and writing courses. My Fiction Writing
class with Jonathan Baumbach introduced
me to the wonderful stories of Donald Barthelme
and the start of my leanings toward “experimental” fiction.
I discarded vague plans to attend law school
and decided to apply for the first class
of BC’s new MFA program in creative
writing, to begin in September 1974.
I decided that in the year between my
graduation with a B.A. in June 1973 and
then, I needed to learn more about literature
if I was going to be a writer. So I became
a student in the MA program in English
at Richmond College, a CUNY school then
located in an office building near the
ferry terminal in Staten Island. Given
a new Mercury Comet for graduation, I learned
to overcome my terror of driving over the
monumental Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.
Richmond, now
part of The College of Staten Island,
was an innovative institution that
didn’t have letter grades – just
Pass, Fail, or Honors. All my courses were
in the late afternoons and evenings, and
during the day I hung out in Brooklyn College’s
LaGuardia Hall, where my girlfriend was
managing editor of the student newspaper
and where my other undergraduate friends
still congregated.
I owed this luxury
of time to Dad, who was still paying
my expenses. Although
tuition for graduate school at CUNY was
not free, my parents told me I didn’t
need to work.
My friend Jerry
Weinberger and I were two of the seven
students in the first
fiction writing class of Brooklyn College’s
MFA program, where Jonathan Baumbach and
John Ashbery were the directors in fiction
and poetry. The first stories I handed
in for our workshop were fairly traditional,
like the ones I’d written as an undergraduate,
but as I became influenced by metafictionists
like Borges, Barth, Barthelme, Hawkes,
Cortazar, Coover, and Gass, my work began
to loosen up, play with narrative, and
comment on the process of writing fiction.
While our workshops and my tutorials with
Baumbach that fall were interesting, what
I loved most about the MFA program was
being in a community of fledgling writers,
where students took their literary aspirations
seriously.
I decided that
to succeed as a short story writer, I
would have to produce a story
a week. Terribly lazy about editing – except
in my head – I wrote most of my stories
in one sitting, on the floor of my little
bedroom, using the Smith-Corona electric
typewriter I’d gotten in high school.
I almost never rewrote my stories, even
if I realized they didn’t work; instead,
I’d just incorporate the best elements
into a new story.
I jumped at the
opportunity when Baumbach asked me to
work as an editorial assistant
at the Fiction Collective, an authors’ book
publishing cooperative he had founded along
with another of our MFA professors, Peter
Spielberg, and such experimental writers
as Ronald Sukenick, Steve Katz, and Raymond
Federman.
At the Fiction Collective I dealt with
everything from handling queries from authors
and writing catalog copy to planning publication
parties and sending out review copies.
Another aspect of my job was running the
system that selected new books for publication.
In order to be published, a manuscript
had to get four “yes” votes
from the various author-members. I sent
the manuscripts out a maximum of seven
times, and sometimes books were published
that had gotten three “yes” votes
and three “no” votes and got
a final deciding “yes.” I read
all the manuscripts myself to find out
what other writers were doing.
I was also the
preliminary judge for the Fiction Collective’s First Novel
Contest. At the Manhattan office of our
distributor, the publisher George Braziller,
I found an office stacked top to bottom
with over 400 manuscripts. My task was
to whittle them down to fifty for the three
final judges. Most of the novels were so
badly written that I could put them aside
after the first few pages, but it took
weeks to cull the manuscripts. A few were
so atrocious that they were actually funny.
Our ultimate winner turned out to be a
woman who’d recently been released
from a mental hospital.
In addition to
working at the Collective that first
year of the MFA program, I also
held a series of minimum-wage “real” jobs
to help my parents defray expenses, as
Dad could no longer afford to be as generous
as he had been. The recession of 1974 had
hit his business hard, and Art Pants ultimately
couldn’t survive in the face of cheap
imports and the trend toward jeans and
casual pants.
I found I didn’t have the patience
to stay in any of these jobs very long,
but despite the bad economy, it was easy
to find work for $2 an hour. I worked in
the law library of the white-shoe Wall
Street firm of Sullivan & Cromwell
and in a Rockaway adult home for the mentally
disturbed; sold pants (the same cheap double-knit
polyester imports that were killing our
family business) at Alexander’s Department
Store in Kings Plaza; was a deliveryman
for Midtown Florist and Canarsie Laundry
and a messenger for the display advertising
department of the Village Voice; and I
shelved books in the Flatbush branch of
the Brooklyn Public Library.
In March 1975,
I was working in the library when I got
a phone call from Eric Spector,
a friend from high school and college,
who said his father wanted to speak to
me. Dr. Spector, chairman of the English
Department at Long Island University in
downtown Brooklyn, explained that a professor
had died a few nights earlier on his way
home from an evening composition class.
Knowing I had finished my coursework for
my MA in English, Dr. Spector thought I
might take over the professor’s class
and asked me to come in for an interview.
Wanting to make
a good impression so I could get the
job, I feverishly did everything
I could to learn about teaching writing,
from rereading Jonathan Baumbach’s
book Writers as Teachers/Teachers as Writers
to consulting Susan Fromberg Schaeffer,
the novelist and poet who was my MFA adviser
that term. But it turned out that I needn’t
have bothered: I already had the course.
When I walked into the chairman’s
office at LIU, Dr. Spector said, “Mr.
Grayson, your students are going to eat
you alive!” That was my introduction
to the main criteria for hiring adjunct
instructors for freshman English: one needed
a master’s degree and a body temperature
approaching 98.6 degrees.
My class met on Tuesdays and Thursdays
after our afternoon fiction writing workshop
at Brooklyn College. My students were all
working adults older than I. At 23, I still
looked very young, but that might have
been a plus: at the end of the semester,
a student told me the class assumed I had
to be brilliant to be a teenaged professor.
Like many college
instructors, I had no training at all
in teaching methods, and
I was incredibly nervous the first few
sessions. At first I sat behind the desk,
needing a barrier between the class and
myself. Gradually I started standing up
in front of the desk and relied less on
The Harbrace Handbook to rule my lesson
plans. Over the next three years, working
at LIU, as I learned to trust my instincts
and that sometimes the best classes came
out of spontaneous “teachable moments,” I
gradually gained confidence and began to
enjoy teaching more than I’d ever
thought possible.
That first semester
of teaching I decided to keep my morning
job at the library although
it was jarring to be treated like a high
school kid at one menial job and respected
as a college professor at another. The
dissonance finally became too much to bear
one Saturday when one of my students came
in to do a research paper I had assigned.
A librarian ordered me over to fetch a
book for my puzzled student. When I quit
later that day, the head librarian said, “I
guess you’re leaving to take a job
at the new McDonald’s.”
LIU never paid
me more than $600 per course, and given
preparation time, office hours,
and time spent grading papers, I sometimes
wondered if flipping burgers actually was
a better deal than being an adjunct. I’m
sure that even today, many part-time college
teachers have the same thought.
In the spring
of 1975, not only did I start teaching
college English, but I also
had my first story published in a literary
magazine, New Writers, which featured work
by students in graduate writing programs.
For weeks, I walked around with the letter
accepting “Rampant Burping,” which
said that the editors liked it “although
it is a bit artsy-craftsy.”
Most of my stories
were from four to twelve pages. From
Writers Market I learned the
format for fiction manuscripts, and from
The International Directory of Little Magazines
and Small Presses, I gathered the names
of places to send them to. Although most
magazines said they did not accept simultaneous
submissions, I figured the odds of two
magazines accepting the same story were
very slim. So, upon finishing a new story,
I’d take it over to the Flatbush
Copy Center near BC, and for a nickel a
page, I’d make five copies, which
I’d then send out in manila envelopes,
including the all-important stamped, self-addressed
envelope.
I often tried
The New Yorker or The Atlantic or Harper’s first, but except for
an occasional handwritten comment on a
rejection notice, I knew my chances of
my getting noticed by the slick magazines
were not good because of the number of
submissions they received and the quirkiness
and quality of my fiction. I have never
fooled myself about my place in the literary
food chain, and I knew I didn’t match
up to “real” writers like those
published in The New Yorker.
My strategy, therefore,
was based on quantity rather than quality.
I’d read how
William Saroyan once had written thirty
stories in a month, sending each one of
them out to a magazine. While I couldn’t
be that prolific, I tried my best. In the
late 1970s there were numerous literary
journals, thanks to generous government
arts funding. Sometimes instead of just
getting copies of the issue my story appeared
in – the usual remuneration – I
received checks of $25 or $50, because
grants from the National Endowment of the
Arts required payment to contributors.
I didn’t distinguish between the
more prestigious university-sponsored journals
and the homemade little magazines of cranky
or brilliant individual editor-publishers.
I got tons of rejections – many form
rejections, others cruel or condescending,
some encouraging – sometimes as many
as ten a day, but eventually there were
a lot of acceptances, too.
So I published in places as relatively
well-known as Epoch, Shenandoah, and Texas
Quarterly and as obscure as Nausea Review,
Street Bagel, and Coffee Break. I had stories
in Webster Review, Westbere Review, and
Westerly Review; Canadian Jewish Dialog,
Mississippi Mud, and Nantucket Review;
Writ, Iron, Mati, and Ataraxia.
By my second year of the MFA program,
I was no longer writing for my classmates.
It took the sting out of negative criticism
of my work when I could end the workshop
by telling my classmates that the story
they had just disparaged had already been
accepted by California Quarterly or Panache.
Within a few years,
I had published over 100 stories in little
magazines and caught
the attention of people in the small press
scene, which in the 1970s was largely a
counterculture movement whose Woodstock
was the annual New York Book Fair, held
in places like the old Customs House downtown,
the Huntington Hartford building on Columbus
Circle, the basement of Lincoln Center,
and the Seventh Regiment Armory on Park
Avenue. I loved these events, as I got
to meet the poets and fiction writers and
editors with whom I’d corresponded
or whose works I’d found in the same
journals I had been published in.
Year-round there
were good places in New York to find
little magazines and small
press books, giving me an advantage over
fledgling writers in other parts of the
country. I would often prowl the shelves
of Frances Steloff’s Gotham Book
Mart on West 47th Street, on a block otherwise
filled with diamond merchants; E.S. Wilentz’s
Eighth Street Bookshop, owned by the father
of a Midwood classmate; and the free library
in the offices of the Coordinating Council
of Literary Magazines, where I worked in
the summer of 1976 as the preliminary judge
of their college literary magazine awards.
Publishing in
obscure magazines gave me a sense of
freedom. I didn’t really
think anyone would actually read my work,
so I could make embarrassing revelations
about myself or avoid changing the names
of my friends and family. I could take
my stories in crazy directions – like
admitting at the end of one that the story
was falling apart and asking the editor
to take pity on me and publish it anyway.
The playfulness and vitality in my naïve
early work would become hard to replicate
once I began thinking of myself as an “author.”
Although I’d
driven to Miami Beach with friends for
the 1972 Democratic convention
and to a Washington, D.C., vacation with
Randy, I still had fears of traveling and
rarely left the New York metropolitan area.
But in 1977 I got a National Arts Club
scholarship to the Bread Loaf Writers Conference
in Middlebury, Vermont. A year out of the
MFA program, I sort of missed writing workshops,
and I was looking forward to attending
classes with famous authors like led by
John Gardner and Stanley Elkin.
However, I got
off to a bad start when, following Elkin’s lecture on the
craft of fiction, I piped up from the audience
of a hundred novice writers to ask, “Mr.
Elkin, does a story need a beginning, a
middle and an end, and if so, should they
be in that order?”
“That’s the stupidest question
I’ve ever gotten in all my years
of teaching writing,” Elkin replied,
and the crowd snickered.
Given the fiction
I’d been writing,
the question had seemed eminently reasonable
to me.
While I thrilled to hear John Irving and
Toni Morrison read from the novels-in-progress
that would eventually become two of my
favorite books, The World According to
Garp and Song of Solomon, I was too socially
inept to make any connections with the
established writers at Bread Loaf.
I felt more comfortable
with my peers in the small press world.
In the summer
of 1978, George Myers, Jr., who had published
one of my pieces in his X: A Journal of
the Arts, wanted to use some grant money
to do a special issue of his magazine devoted
to my work. The magazine – six stories
I called Disjointed Fictions – was
rather raggedy-looking, but I was still
proud of it. A few years later, George
reprinted the issue as a chapbook with
a more professional-looking typeface and
format.
As I was typing
up Disjointed Fictions, I got a letter
from Louis Strick, the president
of Taplinger, a commercial publisher in
Manhattan. He had read one of my stories
in Epoch and asked if I had a book manuscript.
I wrote back that I assumed he was interested
only in a novel and that unfortunately,
I wasn’t a novelist – but that
I did have about 150 stories of varying
quality.
Mr. Strick replied
to what he called my “diffident” letter – I
had to explain to my parents what “diffident” meant – by
asking to see a manuscript. I then sent
him all the stories I’d ever published:
photocopied pages from the magazines, in
different typefaces, plus the typed manuscripts
of the stories I hadn’t yet placed.
Not discouraged with this unprofessional-looking
mass, Mr. Strick told me he’d turn
it all over to his son, Wesley, who had
just graduated NYU’s publishing program
and was joining the firm as an editor.
Wesley Strick
called in September and asked to meet
me. By then I’d left
LIU to teach remedial writing at CUNY schools.
On Rosh Hashona, as I climbed the stairs
to Wes’s Upper East Side apartment,
I had the irrational thought, “This
could be a trap.” At a nearby restaurant,
Wes showed me a paper containing title
With Hitler in New York and Other Stories
and the table of contents for the stories
he’d selected for the book. I was
flabbergasted.
When our waiter
came to take our order, I recognized
him as a former P.S. 203 classmate.
After telling him who I was, I introduced
Wes as “my editor.” I felt
foolish, but saying it made it sound slightly
more real to me.
Over the next
month or so, Wes and I worked on the
manuscript sentence by sentence.
One disadvantage of publishing in little
magazines was that the editors almost always
took the stories as I’d written them.
No one before Wes had pointed out the problems
in my published fiction, like the way I
often didn’t know how to end a story.
During the editing and book production
process, afraid of disappointment, I wouldn’t
let myself believe it was really happening – despite
evidence such as the whimsical cover designed
by Wes’s sister Ivy, the promotional
copy in Taplinger’s spring catalog,
and the payment of my $500 advance in two
installments.
One May afternoon,
after I’d given
my spring remedial writing course at Brooklyn
College its final exam, Wes called to say
that the book was in. I zoomed into Manhattan.
Upon seeing a copy of Hitler, I blurted
out, “It looks like a real book.”
“We’ve cleverly disguised
it,” Wes told me.
The back cover
was blank, because other Taplinger editors
thought my photograph
made me look too babyish – a drawback
at a time when publishers rarely emphasized
the youth of their new authors. Wes gave
me the six author’s copies specified
in my contract, and in my room that night,
I put them on my shelves among books by
what I still thought of as “real” authors.
On June 15, I
went to the beach in Rockaway with some
lesbian friends. “Today’s
the book’s official publication date,” I
told them. “Don’t you think
something should be happening to me today?”
“It is,” one friend said. “You’re
getting sunburned.”
When Hitler came
out in 1979, publishers brought out only
one-third the number of
books published today. The New York Times
then published a listing of “Recently
Published Books” – which now
seems as musty a relic as its daily listing
of ocean liners’ arrivals and departures.
(I’ve been a New York Times reader
ever since ninth grade, when our English
teacher, Mrs. Sanjour, regularly quizzed
us on the Sunday paper’s contents.)
The listing was the only mention my book
got in the Times, but – shy only
in person and not in letters – I
pestered gossip columnists and book editors
at other papers to mention or review Hitler.
Taplinger was not a major publisher, and
I wanted to make sure my book got noticed.
Late one night,
my friend Stephen LiMandri, who ran the
newsstand at the Abbey-Victoria
Hotel, called to tell me I was in Liz Smith’s
column in the next day’s Daily News.
Liz Smith called my book “really
funny” and compared me to Steve Martin.
Quoting my letter, she said she couldn’t
resist an author who said he lived with
in Brooklyn with his family, “poor
but honest and gossip-loving people.” Unfortunately,
the plug didn’t help sales, as Hitler
was not yet in any stores.
When my book finally arrived in the Waldenbooks
in Kings Plaza, my parents kept going into
the store and buying copies, believing
it would somehow stimulate demand.
Following a series
of business reverses – the
demise of Art Pants Company and The Pants
Set stores, bad investments in a racehorse
that constantly needed surgery and a Catskills
hotel my parents had to sell for a dollar
to the Mafia (who made an offer they couldn’t
refuse) – Dad was hired as the Florida
sales rep for a clothing company owned
by the father of one of my friends. Grandma
Sylvia and Grandpa Nat had moved to their
South Florida condo several years before,
and in 1979 my parents decided to sell
our Brooklyn house and buy a townhouse
in Davie, a Fort Lauderdale suburb.
I had to figure
out what to do with my life, as my prolonged
adolescence seemed
over. I applied for full-time positions
as an English professor, but the only job
offer I got was for a one-semester gig
as a visiting writer-in-residence at Texas
Women’s University. I probably should
have taken it, but I was too scared to
go off by myself to Denton, Texas, even
for six months.
I decided to stay
in New York City, where part-time teaching
jobs were plentiful.
In the fall of 1979, I found a studio for
$240 a month right on the boardwalk in
Rockaway. It was far from Manhattan – where
I’d be working at the School of Visual
Arts – but it was in familiar territory,
with Grandpa Herb and Grandma Ethel less
than a mile away. My brother Marc rented
a basement in Brooklyn, near Kingsborough
Community College, where I was also teaching.
Jonathan, who had just graduated from high
school, went to Florida with our parents
to start Broward Community College.
Although I was
28 years old, in many ways I was still
a boy, and it was hard for
me to live on my own that fall. After spending
my Christmas vacation at my parents’ new
townhouse in Davie, I returned to the cold
winter of New York and developed labyrinthitis,
an ear infection, which left me with severe
vertigo for months. Expected courses hadn’t
materialized for the spring term, and I
was teaching only one course each for the
School of Visual Arts and for Touro College,
where my paychecks bounced. Money was scarce,
and as the summer of 1980 approached, I
was dizzy, depressed, unemployed, on food
stamps, and unable to write.
A welcome respite
was a residency for June at The MacDowell
Colony in Peterborough,
New Hampshire. My studio in the woods was
the same one where Thornton Wilder had
composed Our Town. After a rocky start
in which I could not write at all the first
week – and gnashed my teeth so much
that I had to see a local dentist – I
dreamed an 18-page story which later won
a magazine contest and then produced a
story a day for the next seven days. I
also had the stimulating company of other
writers, as well as composers, painters,
sculptors and filmmakers. MacDowell made
me feel like a creative artist and not
a poverty-stricken nobody. Future residencies
at MacDowell and other artists’ colonies
continued to have that nurturing effect.
But the rest of
the summer of 1980 was difficult, and
in the fall, to aid my finances,
I took on as many adjunct courses – all
in remedial writing – as I could.
On Thursdays, for example, I would leave
my apartment in Rockaway at 7 a.m., drive
over the bridge to teach an 8 a.m. class
at Brooklyn College, take the subway to
teach two classes at John Jay College of
Criminal Justice in Manhattan, return to
BC to teach a class in the early evening,
and then drive to a Brooklyn high school
to teach a continuing education course
for Kingsborough, getting home after 11
p.m.
By then I was used to the low level of
my students’ writing – that
term I had to explain the difference between
a, an, and and – but I was constantly
grading papers and did not have time to
write.
By then With Hitler
in New York was long out of the stores,
and Wes was leaving
his father’s publishing company to
work on his own career as a writer. (He
would eventually have great success in
Los Angeles as the screenwriter of such
movies as Cape Fear, Arachnophobia and
Return to Paradise.) On one of his last
days on the job, Wes told me that Taplinger’s
scheduled trade paperback edition of Hitler
had been canceled. That was the day I decided
to leave New York and move to Florida once
the hectic fall semester was over. I needed
a change and I missed my family.
In January 1981, my friend Nina Mule threw
me a surprise farewell party in her Manhattan
apartment. I handed in my final grades,
put my furniture on a truck headed for
Florida, and left Rockaway to join my parents
in the Fort Lauderdale suburbs.
I’d always hated the cold and snow
of winters, so I was thrilled to be in
South Florida. My room at my parents’ house
had a screened-in terrace overlooking a
brace of palm trees. Davie was then more
rural than suburban, an old cowboy town
filled with rednecks and horse farms. Jewish
senior citizens and snowbirds dominated
neighboring towns.
I somehow walked
into a job teaching composition at Broward
Community College, taking over
a class a few weeks after the semester
began. The pay was minimal, but so were
my expenses. I still enjoyed teaching,
but now I also had time to work on the
collection of stories that Kevin Urick – another
writer/editor who’d published my
fiction in his literary magazine – was
considering for his White Ewe Press.
Florida was glorious
in the winter, but the heat and humidity
were less attractive
by May, when the term at BCC ended. I returned
to New York and spent two months at Marc’s
apartment in Brooklyn and Nina’s
on the Upper West Side before a July residency
at the Virginia Center for the Creative
Arts.
I’d been applying to universities
for creative writing jobs, but the only
job offer I had for the fall was as my
friend Tom Whalen’s half-time assistant
at New Orleans’ arts high school,
NOCCA, where I’d guest-taught in
his rigorous creative writing program.
In early August, I returned to Florida,
uneasy about my prospects.
A few days after
my arrival at my parents’ house,
I was reading The Miami Herald at breakfast
and spotted a news item announcing state
arts council fellowship winners. When I
saw “Richard Grayson, Davie, $3000,” I
started jumping around and yelling so much,
Mom thought I was having some kind of attack.
I had forgotten I’d applied for the
Florida fellowship, assuming I’d
have no more success than I had in my many
grant applications in New York State.
I would have to remain in the state to
accept the fellowship money, but giving
up the part-time job in New Orleans was
no problem. After reading a newspaper interview
with me about my grant, the BCC English
Department head offered me a one-year position
as a full-time instructor. With the fellowship
and my $13,000 teaching salary, I could
afford to get my own place, a rented condo
among elderly neighbors in Sunrise Golf
Village.
I stayed on at Broward Community College
for three annual temporary contracts. As
an English instructor, I taught twelve
classes a year, almost all of freshman
composition or remedial writing, with nearly
30 students in each class. I sometimes
felt as if I was constantly grading essays.
I loved the classroom, but marking papers
infringed on much of my free time.
Because I still
thought of myself as a writer, I chose
not to apply for BCC’s
permanent full-time English Department
positions. I lived one year at a time,
with at least part of the summer off, to
spend in New York or at artists’ colonies.
The early 1980s were a fairly stable period
in my life, but the deaths of Grandma Sylvia
and Grandpa Herb made me realize that I
needed to stop thinking of myself as a
kid.
In 1982 White
Ewe Press brought out my second hardcover
collection, Lincoln’s
Doctor’s Dog. Later that year, Jerry
Weinberger’s Grinning Idiot Press
published my satiric chapbook, Eating at
Arby’s: The South Florida Stories.
I provoked some outrage by using my fellowship
money to fund these banal vignettes critical
of South Florida told in the style of a
first-grade primer. Generally, however,
local readers got the joke, and the book
sold out after I appeared on Neil Rogers’s
popular radio show.
The next year,
Zephyr Press – run
by my friends Ed Hogan and Miriam Sagan
from the Boston literary magazine Aspect – published
I Brake for Delmore Schwartz. I flew to
New York in March 1983, staying in Rockaway
with Grandma Ethel, for my first publication
party and reading, at the B. Dalton store
in the Village. Seeing a whole window display
dedicated to my book and having Dad and
so many friends from all different parts
of my life at the party made me feel blessed.
In New York in
the late 1970s, I had started doing what
I called “publicity art” by
sending out press releases commenting on
issues in the news. In 1979, I filed with
the Federal Elections Commission to run
for Vice President of the United States,
a stunt that got me into The New York Times
and The National Enquirer. NBC President
Fred Silverman and Gloria Vanderbilt tried
to sue me when I formed political committees
touting them as candidates for, respectively,
the Presidency and the United State Senate.
Other publicity
stunts followed. When New York Mayor
Ed Koch prevailed on the
city’s public radio station to air “The
John Hour,” in which men arrested
for soliciting prostitutes would have their
names read over the air, The New York Post
printed the story of how I wanted my name
read on the show despite not having been
arrested “because I deserve to be
publicly humiliated.” In another
self-manufactured scandal, The Post supposedly
exposed me as a “literary imposter” trying
to publish a defamatory article about respected
authors called “The Weird Sex Lives
of Jewish-American Novelists.” The
Post’s Page Six gossip column soon
began referring to me as “playful
prankster Richard Grayson.”
While my grandparents
were still alive, I formed “international” fan
clubs for them and sent out press releases
that resulted in media attention. Grandpa
Herb and Grandma Ethel told their life
stories on Barry Farber’s nationally
syndicated radio program. The Miami News
published a story on the Sylvia Ginsberg
International Fan Club on its front page
while The Miami Herald printed a photo
of me kissing Grandma Sylvia – who
hated to be kissed, believing it spread
germs.
Campaigning for
the Davie Town Council in 1982, I advocated
giving horses the
right to vote. My platform consisted mainly
of bad puns, like pledging to vote “neigh” on
everything till horse suffrage was passed,
offering the town a “more stable” form
of government, and in the end forgoing
campaign speeches because I had “become
a little hoarse myself.” I got 26%
of the vote as the media routinely covered
my antics.
In 1983, I registered
as a Presidential candidate, and articles
about me appeared
in dozens of periodicals, from People and
USA Today to Time and The Wall Street Journal.
I churned out one press release after another:
starting the Committee for Immediate Nuclear
War (which for years was listed in the
reference book The Encyclopedia of Associations);
advocating that the U.S. capital move to
Davenport, Iowa; supporting the admission
of El Salvador as the 51st state; proposing
a Devil Broadcasting Network to compete
with religious TV stations. On the Florida
primary ballot as a candidate for delegate
to the Democratic convention (supporting
myself), I received over 2,000 votes – but
Mom, whose name I had put on the ballot
as a candidate for alternate delegate,
got twice as many votes as I did.
As the decade
wore on, my publicity stunts dealt more
and more with the economy. In
1988, I panhandled in front of the New
York Stock Exchange, begging for $27.5
billion dollars so I could launch a hostile
takeover bid for RJR Nabisco; Business
Week called my stunt “social commentary
on Wall Street.” Two years later,
I appeared on CNN and in The New York Times,
touting my Pauper Magazine, the poor man’s
answer to all the “lifestyles of
the rich and famous” publications.
I also got media exposure as the head of
the Donald Trump Rescue Fund, formed to
help out the real estate magnate during
his time of financial difficulty.
A prank in the
spring of 1984 – a
letter I’d written to Florida state
senators on Broward Community College stationery
asking for their participation in an academic
study I called “Legislators in Love” – led
to political outrage, threatened cuts to
BCC’s budget, and a banner headline
in the Orlando Sentinel (“Prof’s
Love Quiz Stirs Only a What’s That?!”).
Knowing I wouldn’t be asked back
to teach at BCC in the fall, I gave up
my apartment in North Miami Beach at the
end of May, put my stuff in storage, and
went to Manhattan to apartment-sit for
Nina for six weeks while she toured Europe.
Those six weeks turned into six years,
as 350 West 85th Street became my part-time
address for the rest of the decade. The
Upper West Side in the 1980s was an exciting
place, and Nina was an incredibly generous
host and roommate. Since she spent most
of the summer at her beach house in Fire
Island, I had the apartment to myself much
of the time. When she was home, I slept
on the living room couch or a futon on
the floor.
Congenitally lazy, I spent the rest of
my thirties like the retired South Florida
snowbirds who came to Fort Lauderdale to
escape the Northern winters but who returned
to New York when the summer heat and humidity
started to get uncomfortable.
I survived financially
by relying on income from adjunct courses,
student loans, unemployment
insurance, state arts council awards from
Florida and New York, and credit card cash
advances. At one time I had over 40 MasterCards
and Visas; I wrote articles about this
(“You’ve Got to Give Me Credit” and “Guess
How I Got Rich Without Working”)
for national magazines under the pen name
Gary Richardson.
I had my New York City life and my South
Florida life. I taught English courses
part-time in both places, more because
I enjoyed teaching writing than because
of the still-pitiful adjunct pay. I even
went back to BCC in 1987, teaching in the
evenings and later as an occasional full-time
substitute instructor for professors on
sabbatical.
My first stint at BCC had given me the
opportunity to learn how to use personal
computers. As my interest in using computers
in education grew, I started taking graduate
courses in the subject. From 1984 to 1990,
I earned over 50 graduate credits in educational
technology from Teachers College at Columbia
University and two Florida universities.
This interest led to a part-time job as
a facilitator of teacher training workshops
in computer education in the Miami public
school district. I traveled to schools
in Little Havana, Miami Beach, Coral Gables,
and Liberty City to instruct teachers on
the use of the Apple IIe and the IBM PC
computers. I taught word processing, spreadsheets,
databases, and educational software as
well as programming in the Basic and Logo
computer languages.
It was a thrill
to empower computer-shy teachers who
started off worried they would
break the machines by turning them on.
These workshops didn’t require me
to mark papers or give final grades, so
I had the pleasure of teaching without
the drudgery.
I took less pleasure
in writing fiction. It seemed easier
and more rewarding to
write a satirical People article on an
alleged celebrity shortage or my humor
column for The Hollywood Sun-Tattler. Still,
I managed to produce occasional stories
when I felt I had something to say. For
a Computers and Writing course at Teachers
College, I wrote a long story about an
AIDS death, “I Survived Caracas Traffic,” which
appeared in The Florida Review and helped
get me a second individual artist fellowship
from the state of Florida in 1988.
That same year I scored a Writer-in-Residence
Award from the New York State Council on
the Arts. Working for the Rockland Center
for the Arts, I went into schools in suburban
Rockland County and experienced the joy
of teaching children. My second-graders
produced delightful, cleverly naive stories
that we collected into a book.
The late 1980s
were fun-filled years. My father was
doing well as a salesman
for such designer labels of men’s
clothing as Sasson, Bugle Boy and Guess.
Mom and Dad bought a large four-bedroom
house. They also followed Jonathan’s
lead and became strict vegetarians and
animal rights enthusiasts who gradually
acquired a dog, three cats, and two rabbits.
When I was in New York, I made regular
visits to Rockaway to spend weekends with
Grandma Ethel, and I was an unofficial
member of Nina’s close Italian family
and got to share in their celebrations
of holidays, birthdays and anniversaries.
But these fun
years were coming to an end. I realized
that my credit card chassis – paying
off one card with a cash advance from another – would
ultimately end and I’d have to declare
bankruptcy during the next recession. I
assumed – correctly, as it turned
out – that I could do so in a time
when so many others were going broke that
my filing would hardly be noticed. Nina
had decided to give up her Manhattan apartment
and move to Long Island. Grandma Ethel
also was moving to Long Island, into an
adult home in the Five Towns where she
lived out her life happily, her lifelong
depression successfully treated with medication.
Watching Grandma Ethel establish new friendships
after age 80 convinced me that it’s
never too late to make a new life.
In the fall of 1990, I moved in my parents
again and declared bankruptcy. My computer
training jobs had dried up, but I got a
full-time position back at BCC, taking
over for a professor on sick leave. I attended
a series of Fort Lauderdale obscenity trials
involving the rap group 2 Live Crew, an
experience which led to an article in New
York Newsday, kindled an interest in hip-hop
culture, and revived an ambition I had
put aside years before: attending law school.
In April 1991,
while I was on my first trip to California,
visiting friends and
teaching at a Long Beach State writers’ conference
coordinated by Linda Konner, Dad called
with the news that the University of Florida
law school had accepted me. Luckily, I
managed to get a scholarship that would
help defray expenses.
I spent one last
summer in New York. Grandma Ethel had
held on to her subsidized apartment
in Rockaway, and I lived there for several
months, visiting her at the adult home
and taking the long subway ride into Manhattan
to visit friends. I was very nervous about
moving to Gainesville in North Central
Florida, but every change in my life – even
short trips – had engendered anxiety.
At dinner at a
sidewalk café in
the Village, I told Linda I had no intention
of ever practicing law.
“Then why are you going to law school?” she
asked me.
“To have fun,” I
replied.
Linda looked dubious,
and frankly, I shared her skepticism.
But I figured I would try
one semester of law school and leave if
I didn’t like it.
Law school turned out to be more fun than
I could have imagined, and somehow I easily
adjusted to life on my own in a classic
college town. The life of a new law student
is so hectic, I had no time to think about
being away from my friends or family or
have regrets about not being a writer anymore.
Law
school courses were harder than any I’d ever taken – often I had
trouble keeping up with class discussions – yet
they provided incredible intellectual stimulation.
I also liked being in a community of students
again.
After the first semester, returning from
a three-week Christmas vacation in New
York, I discovered that my grades were
good. I won book awards, prizes for the
highest grade on a final exam, in Criminal
Law and Jurisprudence.
While
I loved law in a theoretical, intellectual
sense,
this didn’t mean I wanted
to practice law. I didn’t want to
dress up in a suit and tie, putting in
long hours doing what seemed like drudgery.
In spite of myself, I still longed for
the life of a writer.
Near the end of my first year in law school,
in response to a call for stories about
Barbie for an anthology edited by my friends
Rick Peabody and Lucinda Ebersole, I produced “Twelve
Step Barbie” – the first fiction
I’d written in two years. When Mondo
Barbie received enthusiastic reviews, some
of which singled out my story, I realized
I could still be a writer – sort
of.
Publications:
Books:
With Hitler in New York and Other Stories.
New York: Taplinger, 1979.
Paperback reprint:
Lincoln, NE: iUniverse/Backinprint.com,
2000.
"
Where avant garde fiction goes when it
becomes standup comedy." -- Rolling
Stone
"
Grayson is shaking funny ingredients together
like dice." -- Los Angeles Times
"
The reader is dazzled by the swift, witty
goings-on." -- Newsday
"
Really funny" -- New York Daily News
"
Like prose photographs by a paparazzo...quick,
conscious attempts to dazzle....An innovative
(and talented) comedian...." -- Library
Journal
"
....shines with intelligence and even wit." --
Cleveland Plain Dealer
"
Grayson uses more diverse voices than any
writer.... At the same time he maintains
a distinctive quality" -- Washington
Review of the Arts
"
Grayson hashas the wild sense of humor
of a 'Saturday Night Live' regular...laughing
all the way to the analyst's couch." --
Newsday
"
Fictions marked by comic exuberance and
sympathy...a bit of extended tom-foolery...
particularly appropriate for comedy." --
Bellingham Review
"
A dash of New York, a snippet of sadness,
a gaggle of goonies....something to satisfy
even a wacko." -- Harrisburg Patriot-News
Lincoln's Doctor's Dog and Other Stories.
Adelphi, MD: White Ewe, 1982.
Selection of the Small Press Book Club
Paperback reprint:
Lincoln, NE: iUniverse/Backinprint.com,
2001.
"
Grayson is serious and comic, charming,
given to outrageous puns, and a sharp-eyed
observer of and participant in life's absurdities....
These twenty-two fictions display a versatility
which commands attention." -- Best
Sellers
"
Has the character of both parody and the
play that is at the heart of new narrative
technique." -- Small Press Review
"
This writer is not afraid to take risks,
and he can be very funny indeed.... a versatile,
interesting experimenter." -- Publishers
Weekly
" Grayson has a splendid command of language,
he is steeped in literary history, is highly
intelligent."
-- Orlando Sentinel Star
I Brake for Delmore Schwartz.
Somerville, MA: Zephyr, 1983.
Selected for National Endowment of the
Arts
Small Press Exhibit, Frankfurt Book Fair,
1984
" Grayson is a born storyteller and standup
talker...
Highly recommended." -- Library Journal
" Few contemporary American writers have
such a compelling, intriguing voice."
-- Another Chicago Magazine
"
Grayson's stories are full of insanity,
nutty therapists, cancerous relatives,
broken homes, fiction workshops, youthful
theatricals at Catskill bungalow colonies
and the morbid wizardry of telephone answering
machines." -- New York Times Book
Review
" Disingenuous confessions of the writer's
ineptitude
...suffused with the appealing confessional
anxiety of a small-time writer scrabbling
against odds."
-- American Book Review
I Survived Caracas Traffic: Stories from
the Me Decades.
Greensboro, NC: Avisson, 1996.
Paperback reprint:
Lincoln, NE: iUniverse/Backinprint.com,
2002.
"
An underground post-modernist who writes
comic fiction crammed with details adopted
from pop culture and the daily news... “Twelve-Step
Barbie” evokes a middle-aged, post-success
Barbie trying to make it through a spirit-deadening
day. The long title story, a resonant meditation
on the themes of relationships, AIDS, and
mortality, proves him capable of less self-conscious,
more serious (though not less comic) work."
-- Kirkus Reviews
"
Mr. Grayson shows a sense of humor and
an appreciation of the weird. The costs
of survival in the AIDS retrospective title
story, and the isolating entropy of depression
in 'Where the Glacier Stops' manage to
imbue their drained narrators with some
emotional weight. On the whimsical side,
'Twelve Step Barbie' sees the doll in a
midlife crisis, and 'A Clumsy Story' artfully
diagrams and parodies MFA-quality fiction." --
Publishers Weekly
" It's the incessant familiarity of the writer's
secret self that makes his world entertaining
and bizarre.... The dialogue is consistently,
even ingeniously funny.
Mr. Grayson excels at diverting the flow
of action so nothing expected ever happens...bright
and keenly made." -- New York Times
Book Review
"
Swiftly drawn characters rendered in sharp
paradoxical sentences." -- American
Book Review
The Silicon Valley Diet and Other Stories.
Los Angeles: Red Hen Press, 2000.
"
Compulsively talky and engagingly disjunctive,
the 12 stories in Grayson's ninth collection
flash snapshots of gay men in their 20s,
30s and 40s battling it out in an online
world. Lighter and funnier than much gay
fiction, the stories riff on contemporary
consumer culture and introduce sweet, mixed-up
Grayson knows New York City -- where many
of these stories are set --inside and out." --
Publishers Weekly
"
Although memorial services for young men
seem commonplace in Grayson's fiction,
the stories are not tragedies. They serve
up slices of life as we know it right here
and now with hate crimes, weight worries
and easy money for Internet whizzes....Funny,
intelligently written and original. These
stories accurately capture snapshots of
our culture at a very interesting moment.
'The Silicon Valley Diet and Other Stories'
sets out to prove we haven't really lost
our humanity under the deluge of technology.
And we probably never will." -- South
Florida Sun-Sentinel
“
Grayson’s ninth collection of stories
achieves many goals, and he is clearly
a master of the genre....
Wherever Grayson casts his gaze, he manages
to isolate panoramas of city and small
town life in America from the 60s to the
present.... There are many layers to this
detailing of the techno-ridden superficialities
of our contemporary life with its bar codes,
microwave ovens, and cyberspeak.” --
American Book Review
“
Uses computer jargon to access the concerns
of today’s youth” -- Chicago
Tribune
"
Humor as dry as the desert and an assortment
of nerdy-but-likable Seinfeldian characters...will
keep you turning the pages." -- Echo
Magazine
"
Funny, clever, tightly written...balances
neurotic self-awareness with a genuine
sense of empathy and humor." -- Joey
Magazine
Chapbooks:
Disjointed Fictions.
Harrisburg, PA: Cumberland, 1981.
"
These literary morsels and tidbits suggest
a very fine talent." -- Smudge Review
Eating at Arby's: The South Florida Stories.
New York: Grinning Idiot, 1982.
"
A style equidistant between Hemingway and
Dick and Jane." -- New York Times
Book Review
"
A satirist and parodist so timely that
his brothers and sisters may not yet discern
themselves in his mirror." -- American
Book Review
The Greatest Short Story That Absolutely
Ever Was.
New Orleans: Lowlands, 1989.
"
Quite possibly the funniest short story
writer on the literary scene today, Grayson
proves that just being himself, including
all that encompasses his many aler egos
awash with his self-conscious approach
to parody, is enough to keep the reader
in a bewildered state of laughter." --
YU News Syndicate
Narcissism and
Me. New York: Mule & Mule,
1990.
"
Experimental fiction that combines humor
with tragic touches to create sympathetic
characters-- real people who stumble into
the surreal, surreal people who happen
to be real." -- New Pages
“ Along with Barthelme and Barth, Grayson
occupies an important place in the trajectory
of experimental fiction, certainly as it's
currently being practiced. These stories
are endlessly inventive and playful, exhaustive
without at all being tiresome, and pack
gravity where you least expect it. Eggers
owes as much to him as to Foster Wallace.
So does Foster Wallace.”
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