The View From Hemingway's Attic

Culture, politics, literature

William Hazelgrove

William Hazelgrove
Location
chicago, Illinois, usa
Birthday
January 27
Title
novelist
Company
novelist
Bio
Novelist who writes in Ernest Hemingways attic. His latest novel is Rocket Man

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William Hazelgrove
NOVEMBER 13, 2010 4:51PM

The Politics of Obscurity--A writers worst nightmare

Rate: 6 Flag

We live in a age when fame is the ultimate bar of success. John Kennedy Toole – how many people have heard of him? Maybe some. Maybe. He wrote A Confederacy of Dunces. The novel went on to win a Pulitzer. Highly reviewed. A classic. The author. He committed suicide ten years before the book ever saw print. 32. He was just thirty two when in 1968 he decided to cash it in. Written a huge manuscript dog eared and typed and smudged. Sitting down in New Orleans with his mother. Doing nothing. Waiting to be discovered. Eating rejection letters. Waiting to be discovered. Not many people know what that’s like. You spend your best moments. Your heart and soul. Give your best years to this mound of paper filling your desk and then you begin funneling it out to the world at large and it comes back. No one gives a damn.

So you can imagine old John. I personally never knew him but I do know him. Any writer does. You have one horror as a writer. Comes to you at night in your sleep. That you will die in obscurity. That what you have to say will find no voice among your fellow man. You write because you are driven. You write because you have no other way to make sense of your existence publish so you will leave footprints. That no one will see your passage is the knife at your throat as the sands flow. Time. It starts to run you down right after you finish your book. How long will it take to get it in print. Will it ever get in print. Will it stay in print.Will the manuscript ever escape the box, the basement, the attic. Immortality. A flag that you have passed.

And so you press on. Send it out. Send it out some more. And then it comes back just as fast. No one wants it. No one gives a damn that the talent you’ve been given. God palmed to you. Means nothing in the world. Take John. Just written his opus. His reason for living, reason for being. And there it sat. He must have known. You always know in some part of you when you have written your gift to the world. Usually it’s the first novel. Sometimes the second. But you know. This was the one that I came together for. I know it’s good. No one else gives a damn. So you send it out some more. Then again. Then again. Again. No one cares. Worse. No one wants it.

John must have papered his room with rejection letters. He must have decided there was no way to pass that wall. The wall of indifference. The world did not want his testament. He sat in his mothers house with his thousand page manuscript. Typed. Carboned. Smudged. In New Orleans. 1968. Hot. Twilight. Sitting. Obscurity floating in with the night and then it overwhelms. Drowns you like some miasma. I’m never going to beat this thing. It will win. Not me. I will be crushed underfoot by indifference. No one cares. The writer unrealized. Just thirty two. And so he ends it. Snuffs out his life. The wall of indifference falling on him.

Ten years later his mother takes his manuscript to an editor. A genius discovered. Dead genius. Obscure. A Pulitzer. A classic. John Kennedy Toole. You think he didn’t know. Didn’t know that in death his novel might have a chance. Or was it just some black horror coming over him. Swirling him up. The horror of the artist damned to obscurity. To the night.

Maybe he got the last laugh. Maybe.

www.billhazelgrove.com

Rocket Man is due out in January

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Liked the book and the backstory, understand the horror for anyone toiling in obscurity.
*disclaimer: empathize with anyone toiling in obscurity (I am not a writer).
I do enjoy the way you write.

I'm going with " some black horror," because anyone worth his salt is satisfied to create. Fame is a distraction - as Picasso said, " I can only eat 3 meals a day."
7B ppl on the planet. thats a lot of noise.. to rise above..
John and Mark....loved by their mothers
The greatest difference which I find between her and the rest of the people whom I have known, is this, and it is a remarkable one: those others felt a strong interest in a few things, whereas to the very day of her death she felt a strong interest in the whole world and everything and everybody in it.
- "Jane Lampton Clemens"



stop the advance of the 451s
You are perpetuating misinformation about this writer. Toole's mother took his novel to novelist Walker Percy, who recommended it to a university press, which published it. I believe it won the National Book Award, not the Pulitzer, which I don't believe is awarded for fiction.

More impotant is that Toole did have an editor, Gottlieb, as Simon & Schuster, who wanted some changes Toole didn't agree with. Two writers authored a biography of Toole a few years ago, and revealed that he had serious personal problems which underlayed his suicide. His literary struggle wasn't necessarily the trigger, as the myth of his life would have it.
I dont know where you get your information but he did win the Pulitzer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Confederacy_of_Dunces
and to seperate this writer from his work and say the fact he could not get his book published and only through the effort of his mother it saw the light of day 11 years later and had no bearing on his depression or suicide is a hell of an assumption
Really liked your writing style here. Too bad Toole ended up that route. I have a hard cover copy of that book here and never read it. I will think about it differently now.

Most famous people find out fame is not what it is cracked up to be. "Fame ...what's your name, what's your name, what's your name?"
Recognition and money for a job well done, that's good stuff. Best with your book.
" . . . and only through the effort of his mother it saw the light of day 11 years later and had no bearing on his depression or suicide . . ."

I don't think that anything that happened after his death contributed to his depression or suicide.

Also, as an experiment, try using a few complete sentences—it makes things much more enjoyable for the reader.